Published: Aug. 18, 2020 By

The coronavirus pandemic has thrown a wrench into the internship and job plans of many CU engineering students and recent graduates. Even so, these steadfast Buffs have been able to overcome all the extra logistical hurdles and uncertainty caused by the novel virus.

ProReady resources can help engineering Buffs overcome delayed start dates, rescinded job and internship offers, unexpected swaps to remote work and everything in between.

鈥淵ou shouldn鈥檛 have to navigate this alone,鈥 says Ben Weihrauch, senior director of student professional development for the college. 鈥淏eing persistent and resilient, along with widening your job search targets, will be key in navigating the current hiring market.鈥


Ahmed FerjaniAhmed Ferjani was studying abroad in Spain when the coronavirus pandemic reached the United States.

Ferjani, now a fourth-year CU mechanical engineering student with a minor in business and biomedical engineering, was gearing up for an in-person internship at L3Harris Technologies in Rochester, New York. But the pandemic had other plans.

While he was still in Spain, Ferjani got word that the company was moving his material science internship online. He returned home to Denver in July, then booted up his laptop and got to work.

Though Ferjani was bummed he wouldn鈥檛 get to meet any other L3Harris interns face to face or explore the company鈥檚 Rochester facilities, he says he鈥檚 grateful to have an internship at all.听

鈥淚t was bittersweet,鈥 he says.听

Though he鈥檚 disappointed, he鈥檚 choosing to focus on the positives. For starters, interning remotely is much safer and will help prevent the spread of the virus. The internship is also an opportunity to try something new and prove to future employers that he鈥檚 nimble and up for anything.

鈥淚鈥檓 thinking of it as a new challenge,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 new challenge to sell myself out there, prove my worth. Being able to say I can work from home, that I鈥檓 flexible 鈥 it鈥檚 a different skill set. We have to adapt, especially nowadays.鈥