Information for Students
Developing Your Career Flight Plan
Planning a career path can be challenging and puzzling. It’s never too early to visit Career Services for help in building your career plan. Understanding and articulating the relationship between your major, interests, skills and experiences will allow you to maximize your opportunities upon graduation and to showcase your talents effectively.
Career Assessment
Career Services offers tools to help you identify your personality preferences, work interests, skills and strengths. You can meet with a career counselor one-on-one or attend a workshop. These assessments can provide you with information needed to identify and establish a path for your career.
Co-operative Education
Opportunities are available to gain on-the-job experience, earn income and/or receive academic credit - all while working in a job related to your major. In collaboration with the academic departments, these can be tailored to fit your needs and abilities.
Career Closet
The UHCL Career Closet serves as a free resource for students to obtain new or gently used professional attire to wear for professional interviews, career fairs, employment site visits, presentations, banquets, etc.
Job Fairs and Networking Events
If you’re a current student, alumni or a community member, you are encouraged to attend our our job fairs. These fairs can be extremely advantageous for job-seekers, as there are often numerous prospective employers in attendance, making it easy for you to make contact with more recruiters in a single day. It’s a great opportunity to formally introduce yourself to an employer and make an excellent first impression as you personally hand them your resume and other credentials.
Throughout the year, Career Services hosts various networking events specific to academic majors and industries. These events are typically less formal and more intimate than job fairs. These are great opportunities to interact with industry professionals and practice your networking skills. Additionally, Career Services partners with many student organizations and other university offices/departments and offers career-related workshops and programs.
First Generation Career Resources
Career and Major Exploration
What Can I Do With this Major? - Features 100 major profiles with information on common career paths, types of employers that hire in the field, and strategies to maximize opportunities. Scroll to the bottom of each profile for links to professional associations, occupational outlook information, and job search resources.
Focus 2 is a career, major, and education planning system where you can explore in an online, self-directed environment:
- Career possibilities
- Map your traits to specific career possibilities. Then, research the career options using the site's database of occupational information.
- What I can do with a major from UHCL? Discover occupations you can pursue with your chosen major here at UHCL
Texas Reality Check: Texas Reality Check will show you how much your living expenses will cost, and the amount of money you will need to earn to pay for them.
Job/Career Research Guide: UHCL Alfred R. Neumann Library
Job and Internship Resources
Jobs4Hawks Powered by Handshake: Find full- and part-time job postings on and off campus.
Job Search Guide: Career Services UHCL offers a number of resources to help you succeed while you're a student and after you graduate. Our office collaborates with program faculty and key university departments and is connected to other valuable campus resources to support you on an academic and personal level.
Grad School
Career Advice for First-Generation Grad Students: Inside Higher Ed article that offers six key pieces of advice from a First-Generation graduate student on transitioning from academe to the world of work.
Additional Career Resources
Career Closet: Free resource for students to obtain new or gently used professional attire to wear for interviews, career fairs, employment site visits, presentations, banquets, etc.
Qualified Applicants Only: Don't Be Intimidated By A Job Description: Article From Ivy Exec, that will help explain why you shouldn't be intimidated by job descriptions.
How to Build Your Network as a First-Generation Student: Article Harvard Business Review discussing that one of the reasons students, especially those from underrepresented and low-income communities, struggle to end up in good first jobs is the lack of access to a strong network.
Career Development For First-Generation Students: NACE Journal survey conducted in March 2021 among 300 first-generation students who took part in the First-Generation Career Leadership Experience event identified three critical skill areas that should be integrated into career and leadership development programs to position first-generation students for post-graduation career success: relationship management skills, virtual work skills, and leadership skills.