Systems Upgrading: Student Portal Offline (June 30 - July 6)

We’re upgrading our systems to better support you. The student portal will be offline during this process, from June 30th until July 7th. Students will receive more information and next steps directly. If you have questions, please contact your local country office.

Read more: Changes to Student Portal

My PBS Internship

To be honest, the numerous internship opportunities in D.C. are the main attraction of the exchange program for me. I have participated in several internships in China and was mainly responsible for marketing, writing, and new media operation. It is the past internship experience that made me clear I want to work in the media industry after graduation. 

To make my career transition easier, I need a high-quality internship in this industry. Fortunately, after a resume delivery and video interview, I was accepted by PBS's To The Contrary as a spring intern a month before this semester began. Now, after my one-month internship at PBS, I felt in my heart that I had made a great choice.

On the first day of the internship, one producer gave me a brief tour of the studio. We three interns and two producers work in the editing room. Across the hallway, there is the video room with a picture window, through which you can view the beautiful street scene of downtown. After the tour, I was assigned an intern handbook and a work email, and I started my internship. Every day at 9:30, my colleague Emma, who is also a student in WSP, and I would take the metro for half an hour to TTC's studio.

The first time I saw Tenleytown Station, I was taken aback by its depth. Because of its long history, it looks a bit shabby. 10:00 is the time to get to the office. If I get up late and don't have time for breakfast, I can head to CVS on the first floor for a snack. I usually spent the morning searching for news stories and posting them on websites and social platforms. There is an hour for lunch. It’s a good time for us to chat and share the latest tidbits we heard. Sometimes we also discuss the breaking news. 

As for the afternoon, we usually start working at 1:30. The work content varies depending on the weekly broadcasting things. If there's a new women's talk show coming up that week, we'll write newsletters and send them to our subscribers. If there is a panel show for the week, we mainly collect news background materials and write a draft for the host.

I was in charge of writing interview questions for a mental-health interviewee recently and felt my writing skills were improved. Although producers sometimes have to work overtime, interns are allowed to leave at 5:30 PM. At the beginning of February, every time I left the office, the sky was blue and black, and I felt a sense of fulfillment when I looked at the people who came and went after work. Ah, I think this is the happiness of continuous progress towards your goals!

SAF Spring Correspondent Zichen Lin from Ocean University of China is reporting from American University.

Informative Notice