Guidelines for Internships
Department of Criminal Justice
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- The student must be within two semesters of completing the program, and
have been
advanced to candidacy for the degree, The student and chair
collaborate on potential internship sites, and contact the agency.
- He/she should develop a list of objectives for the
internship, which are submitted to the chair of the committee. The
student should discuss and develop these objectives consulting the
supervisor at the internship site. See the information under Chapter 1
below in developing the objectives.
- The student should develop a 1-2 page memo addressed to the Graduate Dean
that clearly indicates the name of the student, degree sought, the
date of submission, and the internship objectives. The objectives
should be well-written. A concluding paragraph should indicate the
committee chair and the second committee member from the department (selected by the student and
the committee chair). This memo should be submitted to the committee
chair for approval before submission to the Graduate Dean. The memo,
including the objectives and the name of the second committee member, are sent to the Graduate Dean for appointment of the third committee
member.
- During the semester of the internship the student enrolls in CJ 699. The internship is
120 hours. The student writes an internship paper consisting of the following chapters:
(1) introduction; (2) literature review; (3) description of the internship; (4) discussion
and conclusions; and (5) bibliography. Appendices are optional, but may be required by the
committee. Prior to enrolling and participating in the internship, the student must have
the permission of the committee chair. The chair may require that chapters 1 and 2 have
been written and approved before enrolling. If the paper involves research with human
subjects, a proposal must be submitted to the Human Subjects Committee. The cover sheet
and format for this proposal can be obtained from the Graduate Coordinator.
- At the completion of the internship, the student writes the paper. The internship
supervisor at the site is asked to complete a form, which is sent to the graduate office
verifying that the 120 hours has been completed.
- When writing the paper, certain errors should be avoided. The student should consult
with the committee chair frequently. As each chapter is written, it should be given to the
committee chair. The chair can then be reading that chapter while the student is writing
the next chapter. Do not write the entire paper and then give it to the chair. You should
expect that the paper will be revised a number of times. In planning for your degree,
allow a minimum of two to three months for writing and revision of the paper. Do not
expect to write it and have it approved in two weeks; it never happens. Be
sure that any portion of the paper given to any committee members include
page numbers. The faculty may return unread any materials submitted
without page numbers.
- During the
semester the student anticipates completing the paper, he/she should enroll for GR 699
Oral Exam.
- The paper should be in its final form and acceptable to the committee chairperson at
least two weeks prior to the date of the oral examination. The entire committee needs a
minimum of ten working days to review the paper prior to the oral exam.
- At the conclusion of the oral exam, the student is responsible for obtaining the
committee members signatures on the acceptance sheet. The acceptance sheet must be
received in the Graduate Office by the deadline stated in the schedule of classes for that
semester.
Content of the Internship Paper
Chapter 1
This chapter should describe the objectives of the internship and their
rationale. The background of the agency of the internship site should also be discussed,
and how the objectives of the internship fit with the needs of the agency.
The objectives of the internship are important, and should take some thought. Some of
the ideas tried in the past include:
- The development of a jail training program for jail personnel
- A study to determine whether parolees use prison vocational training after release from
prison
- A comparison of the organization and management of a state agency with a branch of the
military
- An evaluation of an alcohol awareness program in a probation agency
- The implementation and evaluation of a program in a halfway house
- The functioning, communication patterns, and moral level in a mental health center as
related to a particular intervention strategy
Most of the successful internships have had a specific goal in mind, such as an
evaluation, or a comparison, or a study. Internships with vague goals (i.e., "observe
the functioning of an agency") are more difficult to write.
Chapter 1 should thus discuss the objectives, how or why they were selected, a
background of the internship site, and how this internship will help the agency and the
student. This chapter should be at least 10-15 pages.
Chapter 2
Chapter 2 is a literature review, a summary of the relevant theory and research related
to the research question. It should be a scholarly review of the literature, and should
meet certain requirements.
- Most of the citations should be recent (i.e., probably in the last five to seven years).
Earlier studies should only be cited if they appear to be classic, landmark studies. When
conducting the literature search, start with recent sources and work back.
- To review literature, the Criminal Justice Abstracts and computerized databases such as
SADIE, PSYCHLIT, and those on the Internet. Remember that you may have to try a variety of
key words to access works that are relevant. Committee members will be most skeptical if
they are told that there is not research on the topic. If the journal or book is not in
our library, and you think it is important, you can obtain a copy for a small fee through
interlibrary loan, which usually takes about two weeks.
- Literature reviews should cite works from journals, books, or government documents. They
should not extensively cite work from agency manuals, popular
magazines, or newspapers.
- A quick way to locate sources is to obtain a recent textbook on the topic, which will
often summarize the research and provide references in the footnotes. Of course, this will
not provide the most recent information, as there is publication lag. Recent journal
articles will often have a summary of research in the introduction section.
- Students frequently want to know how many sources they should have. A thorough review of
literature could easily have fifty or more. For purposes of the internship paper, a
minimum of twenty-five is expected. Ordinarily, most of these sources would be scholarly
journal articles.
- When reviewing the literature, organize the articles under subheadings (i.e., if one
were reviewing alternatives to juvenile institutionalization, one might have subheadings
under "history of institution" "problems of institutions"
"de-institutionalization" and diversion movements" "alternatives"
"evaluation of alternatives").
Be sure to summarize the review. It is desirable to include a discussion section at the
end of the literature review, in which the implications of the previous studies are
described, and the direction you will be taking in the third chapter is indicated. This
chapter should be a minimum of 15-20 pages. The review should be relevant to the
internship.
APA style should be used, such as: Smith (1999) stated that...
Several studies have found that halfway houses are less expensive than
traditional incarceration (Smith & Jones, 1997; Black, 1995; Jones, Smith
& Dexter, 1998).
Chapter 3
This chapter is a description of the internship. It can be relatively brief. Do not
include such matters as when you went to lunch. The committee will assume that you ate,
slept, etc., during those three weeks. You do not need to log activities by the hour, but
rather by the day. There should be an indication of the amount and time spent at each
activity, the sequence of each activity, and the nature of the activities themselves. It
should include descriptions of relevant events and reactions to those events. If results
from a study were obtained, they should be included in this chapter.
Chapter 4
This chapter involves discussion and conclusions. It should generally be seen as the
most difficult chapter to write. This chapter should discuss how the objectives were met.
If results were obtained, they should be described and analyzed. What do they mean? The
chapter should discuss what was observed in the internship, and what the writer concluded
from those observations. If a comparison of two agencies was to be made, they should be
compared and contrasted (i.e., how they are alike and different).
It should also tie observations or results and conclusions to what was found in the
literature review in chapter 2. Were the observations and conclusions similar to those in
the literature? Were they different, and if so, how? How is the agency typical and/or
different from other similar agencies described in the literature?
The following questions should also be addressed:
- What did you learn from the internship?
- What implications does this havefor the agency, the field, etc.?
- What overall conclusions and recommendations would you make for the agency, in light of
your observations?
Finally, there should be an overall summarization. The chapter should be a minimum of
12-15 pages.
Bibliography
The bibliography should follow APA style. All studies cited in the text must appear in
the bibliography. All references in the bibliography should be cited in the text.