Internship Hunt Starts Earlier as Students, Parents Stress Over Jobs
AI and a tough entry-level job market are pressing more university students to apply for internships in their freshman and sophomore years.
As a new cohort of college freshmen settles onto campuses, many students aren’t just thinking about classes and dorm life. Aiming for an edge in a tough job market, and anxious about how artificial intelligence will reshape entry-level work, they’re racing to land internships — armed in some cases with early-career coaches provided by their parents.
What was once a rite of passage after junior year has shifted earlier. According to new data from Handshake, a career site for students, almost 15% of the class of 2028 had applied to at least one internship by the midpoint of their freshman year. That compares with less than 3% of the class of 2024 at the same stage, and it builds on a multi-year trend.