Saturday, May 23, 2020
Student Blog The End of Student Life and Finding a Job What the Graduates Say University of Manchester Careers Blog
Student Blog The End of Student Life and Finding a Job What the Graduates Say University of Manchester Careers Blog Written by Max Ibbotson, Final Year English Language Student and Careers Service Student Blogger I like the pub: itâs warm, thereâs little damp and the beerâs on tap. That makes it better than my student house. On all three counts. Even better, if you go during the afternoon, a beer is cheaper than a Taste the Difference mini pork pie. Belting. Now, imagine my deep horror as I come to the realisation that my idyllic beer-and-pork-scratching haven is collapsing in on me. A life I have loved and cherished and forgotten good chunks of for 3 years is being dismantled. I have to get a job and Iâm terrified. âBut I donât want to!â âNo one would hire me!â âHappy Hour is still on for another two hours!â Try as you might, thereâs no avoiding this one. Sure, you gained a load of friends, debt and transferable skills, but itâs time to face up to the fact that youâre finally at the end of your educational road â" or tether, for those of you who are more than ready to ditch the exams and endless masses of coursework. But life after uni sounds complicated: I have to find a job and a flat, and Iâve not a Scooby Doo what to do and how to do it. Being a student is easy â" struggle to wake up, go to a lecture, go for a nap. Rinse and repeat. And that was acceptable because everyone knows thatâs what being a student consists of. Now I have to become an adult and I donât think Iâm ready. I think Iâve worked out what I want my career to be. For about ten years Iâve been kicking around ideas for what real job to get. All sorts of ideas but none that really stuck, mostly because I never really wanted to do them. As Iâve got to the end of uni, Iâve shaped some sort of idea of what I want to do when I finish but itâs not really filling me with enthusiasm for life in the Real Worldâ¢. Thereâs a good chance I might not like it, or that there arenât many jobs going, or that I just wonât be any good at it. Iâll have finished uni without anything other than an extra two stone and bags under my eyes. Even though I might have decided what I want to do, Iâve no idea what itâs going to entail. If I want to be a copywriter, I could be working in an office 9-5, or I could be working freelance from home. Maybe Iâll end up working for an advertising agency and work with loads of different clients, or I might be just working in-house for one company. There seems to be a never-ending uncertainty with finding and pursuing a career thatâs exciting, but the fear of not knowing is enormous. If that wasnât bad enough, Iâll be homeless in a month. Getting a student house was a walk in the park: nab the first one that pops up on Manchester Student Homes in November and donât worry about it for 8 months. With proper flats in the city, you have to think about how close you are to tram stops, parking spaces, and whether the balcony faces south or north. (Also, no one tells you just how expensive council tax is. Itâs, like, really expensive â" I couldnât believe it.) In a vague attempt to try and cure my neuroses, I asked some friends whoâve graduated â" and actually got a job â" whether things are as bad as I worry they might be. According to Sara, although you lose some of the freedom you had as a student, it doesnât completely disappear. âAccept that your flexibility is gone: you have to go to work. It shouldnât stop you doing things though, you just have to make sure you forward plan a bit more.â Sara is now a staff nurse, so itâs promising that after a year of intense 13-hour night shifts her worldview is still fairly positive! James was in a similar position a year ago to the one Iâm in now. He didnât have a job and if he didnât get one soon he wouldnât be able to pay rent. Besides actually getting a job, Jamesâ advice is to not leave things âtill the last minute because âit causes way more stress.â There doesnât seem to be a solution to finding which job you want to do, but James reckons you should try and go to as many interviews as possible. âItâs good experience. Even if itâs for a job you donât really want, all of the interview processes can be proper different so you can build up more confidence. And when it comes to a job you actually do want, you can know how to prepare and youâll be nowhere near as nervous.â Sara did give one last piece of advice: âdonât age yourself too quickly.â By this, she meant that youâre still young â" getting a job doesnât change that and you should carry on doing the things that 20-odd-year olds do. Obviously youâll have a job and more responsibilities, but youâre still young and you donât have to waste that just because youâre no longer a student. I suppose the thing that is really driving my fear is the fact that I just donât know whatâs going to happen. Iâm sure itâll be fine and things will work out, itâs just the fear of the unknown. What I do know though is that Iâll miss being a student â" I already do. The lie-ins and the pork pies and the pints. But last orders have been rung: itâs time to go to work. If youre a final year in need of some Careers support, visit our website or contact the Careers Service. Remember: you can still use our services 2 years after graduation! All Graduate Graduate jobs careers final year final year students Graduate jobs Graduates graduation well-being wellbeing
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