
Links:
[1] http://www.iesabroad.org/study-abroad/programs/rome-summer-internship
[2] http://www.oecd.org
[3] http://www.unive.it/media/allegato/DIP/Economia/Working_papers/Working_papers_2007/WP_DSE_coro_micelli_06_07.pdf
[4] http://www.demogr.mpg.de/Papers/workshops/000906_paper01.pdf
Internship Seminar
This weekly seminar is part of the IES Abroad internship program in Rome. Specifically targeted to interns, it offers them some keys to understand the Italian organizational culture, in order to make their experience on the field richer and more valuable. The seminar analyzes the impact of the Italian culture on the way organizations are managed (micro view), as well as on the education system and the labor market (macro view). Some of the weekly meetings are dedicated to sharing experiences, opinions, problems and solutions to help interns face the challenges of living and working in an intercultural environment.
By the end of the course, students are able to:
Lectures, class discussions, student presentations, field visits.
Active class participation and presentation (30%); weekly journals (20%); final paper (20%); on site evaluation by work supervisor (30%).
Details of Required Work
Final exam: students are required to write a 10-page final paper following the seminar leader’s instructions.
Weekly journals: during the seminar, the participants will have to write a weekly journal about their internship. The instructor might assign a specific theme for some weekly essays. One of the last weekly journals will take the form of a photographic report.
Presentation: the last sessions of the seminar will be dedicated to students’ presentations about their placements and internship experiences.
Session 1: Interning Italian style
Readings (in the course reader)
“Cultural differences in bodily communications”, by Michael Argyle
“Cultural Intelligence”, by Christopher Earley and Elaine Mosakowski
Session 2: The Italian education system
Readings
“Highlights from Education at a Glance 2011” (www.oecd.org [2])
“Mistakes in classrooms and at the dinner table: a comparison between socialization practices in Italy and in the United States”, by Laura Sterponi, Rossella Santagata (in the course reader)
Session 3: Guest lecture - Teaching in Italy
An Italian high school teacher will speak to the class about his/her experience in the Italian education system.
Session 4: The Italian labor market: problems and prospects
Readings (in the course reader)
“The Constitution and social and labor rights in a changing Italy”, by Massimo Paci
“The difficult transition from employment regulation to welfare policies”, by Manuela Samek Lodovici, Renata Semenza
Session 5: Made in Italy
Readings
“Industrial districts as a local system of innovation”, by Giancarlo Corò, Stefano Micelli (http://www.unive.it/media/allegato/DIP/Economia/Working_papers/Working_p... [3])
Session 6: Guest lecture - Business in Italy
An American citizen with a long experience in Italy will present his/her view about the Italian working environment.
Session 7: Unequal Italy
Readings
“Gender and generations: social change, inertia and potential”, by Giovanna Altieri (in the course reader)
Adele Menniti, Maura Misiti, Miria Savioli, “Italian stay at home children: attitudes and constraints” (http://www.demogr.mpg.de/Papers/workshops/000906_paper01.pdf [4])
Session 8: The role of immigrants in the Italian labor market
Weekly assignment
Students will visit Piazza Vittorio, a multicultural neighbourhood where they can observe how the various ethnic groups have settled and integrated in the Roman urban environment. They will prepare a photography report of their visit, with personal comments and questions to be discussed in class.
Session 9: Class discussion
Readings (in the course reader)
“Drift” and “Illegible”, by Richard Sennet
Session 10: Field visit
The class will visit one of the IES Rome’s internship placements. A guided visit will be prepared and delivered by the intern who has worked with the organization for the semester.
Sessions 11 - 12: Final internship presentations
Students will have to present their internship experience, following the instructor’s guidelines. Each presentation will be evaluated by the instructor and by the class in terms of clearness and quality of content, communication effectiveness, originality.
This course is offered during the regular semester and in the summer. For summer sections, the course schedule is condensed, but the content, learning outcomes, and contact hours are the same.
Silvia Zanazzi graduated in Economics from Bocconi University (Milan, Italy) and in Education from La Sapienza University in 2009. She also earned a Master degree in Human Resources Management. She’s worked as a training coordinator for a leading business school in Milan, being responsible for management programs, for the development of the school’s network with companies and for the improvement of placement services. Then, she moved to Rome where she’s worked in the fields of labor policies and professional training for the Italian Government.