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GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL WORKFORCE RECRUITMENT PROGRAM FOR TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY-SAN ANTONIO STUDENTS AND RECENT ALUMNI
BY ANNETTE WILSON, DIRECTOR OF CAREER SERVICES
===================================================================
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. HOW THE WORKFORCE RECRUITMENT PROGRAM (WRP) WORKS page 1
II. ELIGIBILITY page 6
III. SCHEDULE A HIRING AUTHORITY page 7
IV. FIVE DOCUMENTS page 8
V. WHAT QUESTIONS MAY I BE ASKED IN THE INTERVIEW? page 11
VI. HOW THE RECRUITER RATES YOU AND page 12
WHAT FEDERAL AGENCIES SEE AND CONSIDER
V. IF OFFERED A SUMMER INTERNSHIP OR PERMANENT JOB page 13
===================================================================
I. HOW THE WORKFORCE RECRUITMENT PROGRAM (WRP) WORKS
A. Overview
1. The Office of Disability Employment Policy under the Department of Labor and the
Department of Defense co-sponsor an initiative that connects eligible college students
and recent graduates who have intellectual, severe physical or psychiatric disabilities
that substantially limit activities of daily living in accordance with the Americans with
Disabilities Amendments Act of 2008 and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended
with full-time paid summer internships and post-graduation positions with federal
employers nationwide.
2. The WRP works with the Texas A&M University-San Antonio (A&M-SA) Career
Services Office (CSO) to make the program available to its eligible students and recent
graduates. All communication from WRP occurs with the CSO. At no time does a
student or graduate contact WRP directly.
3. Interested eligible students and graduates apply and upload documents.
4. A trained recruiter, who is a federal employee (some of them are former WRP
interns), conducts a phone interview and evaluates the applicants. If applicants score at
least a 3 out of 5 on the evaluation, the recruiter's evaluation, the applicant's
application and uploaded documents are then put into a database pool of potential
hires.
5. Representatives from participating federal agencies can view the pool of all potential
hires and contact those who meet their hiring needs to make offers.
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6. A few private sector employers also participate. They contact EARN, the federal
government's contractor, and let EARN know of their hiring needs. EARN finds potential
hires who appear to meet the needs and contacts them to let them know that EARN is
going to release the resumes to the private sector employer. The private sector
employer then receives the resumes and contacts directly the individual(s) to whom it
wishes to extend offers.
B. In the past, over 3,000 students and graduates participate for over 500 summer and
permanent jobs. For demographics of 2013 applicants please visit
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436984419154369-10.100.150.124.pdf
C. Process (You must do this even if you participated in WRP in the past):
1. You must meet the eligibility requirements. See Section II. Eligibility.
2. Between August 26 and October 8, go to https://wrp.gov/registerstudent.
3. Complete the Student Self Registration. Be sure you enter your email address
correctly!
4. The CSO receives an email that you have registered.
5. CSO verifies your student or alumni status and then approves or rejects your
registration.
6. If approved, within 48 hours you receive an automatically system-generated email
from info@wrp.gov with your user name (email address) and temporary password.
a. What if I haven't received the email with my user name and temporary
password?
(1) Check your Junk Mail or Spam file or folder for an email from
info@wrp.gov.
(2) If not in your Junk Mail, try to reset the password by going to
http://www.wrp.gov. Put in your email address as your user name,
click "Forgot Your Password", which is located directly under the Sign In
button. You may then get an email from info@wrp.gov with a new
temporary password.
(3) If you still do not get an email, you may have entered your email
address incorrectly or there may be a problem with the WRP system.
Contact CSO by emailing Annette Wilson at
Annette.Wilson@tamusa.tamus.edu and copying Clarissa Tejeda at
Clarissa.Tejeda@tamusa.tamus.edu and one of us will email a WRP
administrator for assistance.
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7. Go to https://wrp.gov. Log in using your user name and temporary password. (Do a
copy and paste of your temporary password from the email in which you received it to
this site. Make sure there are no extra spaces in front of or after the temporary
password or it won't work.)
8. You will be prompted to change the temporary password. Your new password,
which is case sensitive, must:
a. Be at least 8 characters long.
b. Have one lower-case alphabetic character.
c. Have one upper-case alphabetic character.
d. Have one numeric character.
e. Have one of these special characters: !, @, #, $, %, ^, &, *, (, ).
f. Have non-numeric characters in the first and last positions, i.e.,
19Password!56 is wrong; Pass1956word! would work. Do not use this example
as your password; please create your own.
g. Not be the same or contain your user name.
9. What if I forget my new password?
a. Go to http://www.wrp.gov. Put in your email address as your user name,
click "Forgot Your Password", which is located directly under the Sign In button.
You may then get an email from info@wrp.gov with a new temporary
password.
b. Go to https://wrp.gov. Log in using your user name and temporary
password. (Do a copy and paste of your temporary password from the email in
which you received it to this site. Make sure there are no extra spaces in front
of or after the temporary password or it won't work.)
c. Change the temporary password to a new one following the above guidelines.
d. If, for some reason, you are unable to follow this procedure when you forget
your new password, then contact CSO. Call Annette Wilson (210) 784-1342 or
Clarissa Tejeda (210) 784-1339 or email Annette.Wilson@tamusa.tamus.edu or
Clarissa.Tejeda@tamusa.tamus.edu. We can reset your password by clicking
on the green dot with the arrow next to your name under the Approve/Reject
student screen on the Administrator's page; then a reset button in the next
window pops up.
10. Complete application. To review a sample application visit
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635435387760596897-10.100.150.124.pdf
a. You do not have to complete the application all at one time. You can save
information and go back later without information being lost.
b. On the application you are asked for disability information but it is for
statistical purposes only. It is not made available to the recruiter or the federal
or private sector employers. The choice whether to disclose your specific
disability to employers is yours.
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c. On the application you are asked for your Job Preferences. You must choose
from this list. Go to
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436960353699041-10.100.150.124.pdf to review the categories.
d. CSO can access and edit your application if you need help; CSO can also see if
you have completed your application.
e. If you have not completed your application by October 8, you will not receive
an interview.
11. By no later than October 8, upload up to five documents on the Manage Documents
page of the application. See Section IV. Five Documents.
a. Whatever documents you have uploaded by October 8 is what will be
available to the recruiter and ultimately to the federal employers. You cannot
add any documents after October 8.
b. If you do not have the required documents uploaded by October 8, you will
not receive an interview.
12. Once you have completed the application and uploaded your documents, your
information will be available to the recruiter.
13. Shortly after October 8, CSO will be contacted by the recruiter to set an interview
date(s) between October 20-November 19.
14. You will be contacted by CSO to set your individual 30-minute phone interview time.
15. The phone interview will be held in the interview rooms in the CSO office, Central
Academic Building, Room B103, unless you inform CSO at the time you set your
interview time that you need a reasonable accommodation that requires a different
location.
16. What do I do if I know I can't make my interview or if I miss my interview?
a. Contact CSO IMMEDIATELY. Call Annette Wilson (210) 784-1342 or Clarissa
Tejeda (210) 784-1339 or email Annette.Wilson@tamusa.tamus.edu or
Clarissa.Tejeda@tamusa.tamus.edu.
b. There is no guarantee that the interview can be rescheduled so make every
attempt to make your appointed time.
17. Show up at the CSO office, Central Academic Building, Room B103, at least 10
minutes before your phone interview so that we can get you set up.
18. Your interview will be 30 minutes and you will not be interviewing for a specific job.
See Section V. What Questions Might I Be Asked In The Interview?
19. After the interview, inform a CSO representative that you are finished.
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20. Within five (5) business days of your interview, you must turn in to CSO a thank you
note or letter addressed to the recruiter, thanking him or her for taking the time to
interview you. CSO will deliver it to the recruiter.
21. The recruiter ranks your interview answers on a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being the
best. Your overall rating must be a 3 or higher to be included in the secure online WRP
database. If it is not at least a 3, your application and documents will not be put in the
database, and federal and private sector employers will neither see your credentials nor
consider you for positions.
22. In December, the database of applicants and their information is released to
participating federal agencies.
a. What are the participating federal agencies?
(1) Currently enrolled agencies. See WRP Employers Registered by State
as of July 2014 go to
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/P
df-635436968185249761-10.100.150.124.pdf. Check https://wrp.gov,
under Resources frequently for updates.
(2) Past participating agencies. Each year the participants may change
but in the past the following agencies have been among those
participating: The Department of Defense, the Department of Labor, the
Department of Labor, the Department of Homeland Security, the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Communications
Commission, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of
Justice, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National
Labor Relations Board, the Office of Personnel Management, the
Department of State, the Department of the Treasury, the Department
of Agriculture and the Department of Veterans Affairs. For more
agencies visit
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/P
df-635436967245994945-10.100.150.124.pdf to see 2013 Past
Participating Registered Federal Employers.
b. What information does the federal agency see? See Section VI. How the
Recruiters Rate You and What Federal Agencies See and Consider.
23. In December, resumes may be sent to private sector employers through EARN, the
federal government contractor.
a. You may get call or email from EARN before they release your resume.
b. Who are the participating private sector employers?
(1) Past participating agencies. Each year the participants may change
but in the past the following private sector employers have been among
those participating: Deloitte, Fairfax County Government, General
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Dynamics, IBM, the Institute for Human Centered Design, the John J.
Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, Prudential, Space
Systems/Loral, VW of America, Herzog Railroad Services, Underwriters
Laboratory and Vanguard.
24. Where are the internships and jobs located? Candidates have worked in 38 states,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and as civilian employees on military bases in
Germany and South Korea.
25. The database of information remains open for 12 months for federal agencies and
private sector employers to access.
26. Summer internship offers are generally made before June 15; permanent jobs can
be offered any time during the year.
27. If a federal agency or private sector employer is interested in you, they will call you.
See Section VII. If Offered A Summer Internship or Permanent Job.
a. Make sure you have a professional sounding voicemail message on your
phone.
28. Not everyone will get an offer.
a. Agencies and private employers do not send out rejection letters; if you have
not heard by June 15 for a summer internship offer or after a year for a post-
graduation position, then you probably are not getting an offer.
b. Can you get any feedback from the recruiter or an agency or employer?
Unfortunately, no.
c. Reasons why you may not have received an offer:
(1) You may have not received an overall rating of 3 or higher after your
interview.
(2) There may not have been a match between the location you
requested or the type of job you preferred and the skill set you have
and what federal agencies and private employers are seeking.
(3) The supply of applicants just greatly exceeds the number of positions
available.
II. ELIGIBILITY
A. Must be seeking a degree if you are a student.
B. Must be a US citizen.
C. Must be an A&M-SA graduate from December 2013, May 2014 or August 2014 (must not
have graduated prior to October 2013)
OR
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D. Must be enrolled full-time at A&M-SA for the fall 2014 semester as an undergraduate or a
graduate student (or enrolled part-time only because it is your final semester and you will
graduate in December 2014).
E. No minimum GPA is required. However, if yours is lower than 2.5 the recruiter can ask you to
explain the circumstances; you can choose not to answer the question.
F. You do not have to be registered with the Disability Support Services Office.
G. You do not have to have earned credit hours already at A&M-SA.
H. You must be eligible for hiring under the Schedule A Hiring Authority. See Section III.
Schedule A Hiring Authority.
I. You must have completed the federal resume or Form OF 612 and had it reviewed and
approved by CSO. See Section IV. Five Documents.
J. You must obtain and submit an A&M-SA transcript. See Section IV. Five Documents.
III. SCHEDULE A HIRING AUTHORITY
A. Schedule A is a hiring authority that federal agencies may use to hire qualified individuals
with disabilities into positions non-competitively without going through the often lengthy
traditional hiring process. It is not a quota system.
B. You are eligible for a Schedule A appointment if you are a person with an intellectual
disability, severe physical disability, or psychiatric disability, and meet the qualifications of the
job in question. There are no specific definitions as to what qualifies as an “an intellectual
disability,” a “severe physical disability,” or a “psychiatric disability,” under schedule A, so
federal agencies are free to interpret to interpret the requirements broadly.
B. You are eligible to use the Schedule A hiring authority if you did at least one of these:
1. You ever registered with and/or received accommodations through the A&M-SA
Disability Support Services Office.
2. You ever received Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits.
3. You have been diagnosed with a medical condition that is treated by a mental health
professional such as a learning disability, attention deficit disorder, anxiety disorder, etc.
4. You were ever identified as needing services through the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA).
5. You received services in elementary, middle or high school through an Individualized
Education Program (IEP) or a 504 plan in school.
Page 8
6. You fit under the Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act of 2008 (ADAAA)
and/or the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended definition of an individual with a
disability.
7. You ever received vocational rehabilitation services.
C. You must obtain documentation that states you are an individual with a severe physical,
intellectual or psychiatric disability.
1. See Schedule A letter template at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436961029349985-10.100.150.124.pdf
2. You do not have to upload the Schedule A letter as one of your five documents and
you do not have to have it before your interview; however, you will have to have it
before you are hired. We recommend you get it as soon as possible so that there will be
no delay in hiring.
3. The letter must be on letterhead and must be signed.
4. Provide a copy of the Schedule A letter template to your provider to use as a guide in
writing his or her letter.
5. The letter should not give specific information about your disability, your medical
history or your accommodation needs. The simpler the letter is, the better. It simply
needs to say that you have an intellectual disability, severe physical disability, or
psychiatric disability.
6. Who may sign the letter?
a. A licensed medical professional such as family physician, nurse practitioner,
physician's assistant, psychologist, psychiatrist, audiologist, or other licensed
specialist.
b. A state or private licensed vocational rehabilitation specialist or licensed
vocational rehabilitation counselor.
c. Any federal, state, District of Columbia, or US territory agency that issues or
provides disability benefits such as the Social Security Administration or
Veterans Administration.
7. The federal agencies reserve the right to ask for additional information if they have
questions about your eligibility.
8. If you are hired for a post-graduation position under the Schedule A hiring authority,
your probationary period is two years instead of the one year probationary period used
for competitive hires.
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9. See the Schedule A Checklist at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436961845787585-10.100.150.124.pdf
IV. FIVE DOCUMENTS
A. All the ones you choose must be uploaded on the Manage Documents page of the online
application no later than October 8.
B. You are required to submit the Federal Resume or the Form OF 612 and a transcript. You
optionally may submit up to a total of three more of your choosing.
C. REQUIRED: Either Federal Resume See http://www.usajobs.gov OR Form OF 612 See
http://federalgovernmentjobs.us/forms/of612.pdf
1. For the Federal Resume, create an account, go to My Account, choose Resumes from
left column, scroll to bottom and choose What to Include, read the information, close
the page, choose Build A New Resume. Although the information mentions the job
description, you will not have a specific job description to follow.
2. Make sure the resume or form reflects the type of work you would like to do for
federal agency.
3. You may upload more than one federal resume if you have more than one type of job
preference. For example, if you have a bachelor's degree in chemistry and have worked
for a number of years in that field but you are at A&M-SA to pursue your MBA, you may
want to have one resume reflecting your Science job preference and one reflecting your
Business job preference.
D. REQUIRED: Transcript
1. Either unofficial or official is acceptable for the interview. An agency may require an
official transcript before hire.
2. Current A&M-SA students order free transcripts here:
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cdeleon1/Pdf/Pdf-
635318748227475133-10.100.150.124.pdf
3. A&M-SA graduates order free transcripts here:
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadFile/folders/cdeleon1/Pdf/Pdf-
634986020675604091-10.100.20.116.pdf
a. Turn the form into the Welcome Center in the Multipurpose Building on the
Main Campus.
b. Please allow 3-5 business days for processing of transcript requests. Extra time may be required during peak periods (registration, end of semester, commencement).
Page 10
c. Original signature must be included on any Transcript Request Forms, thus transcript orders cannot be accepted by telephone or email. Computer generated signatures are not valid. d. Courses/grades from other colleges/universities appear on the A&M-SA transcript if they were accepted and brought in; if they were not brought in, you can include transcripts from other colleges/universities, too; however, put all transcripts together in one accessible PDF.
e. Do not send your high school transcript. f. Do not have the transcript sent to the Workforce Recruitment Program. Have them issued to you. You can upload them to the WRP directly in one accessible PDF.
E. OPTIONAL: Civilian Resume
1. Follow the sample at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/kfrank/Pdf/Pdf-
635339332914749454-10.100.150.124.pdf
2. For this purpose, more than one page in length is acceptable.
F. OPTIONAL: Cover Letter
1. Follow the sample at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/kfrank/Pdf/Pdf-
635273593699259181-10.100.150.124.pdf
2. See tips and a sample at http://www.jobs.irs.gov/downloads/CoverLetterTips.pdf
Keep in mind, however, that you are not responding to a specific job description or
applying to a specific job.
G. OPTIONAL: Application for 10-Point Veteran Preference Standard Form 15 See
http://www.opm.gov/Forms/pdf_fill/SF15.pdf
1. Make sure that you put Form 15 and any accompanying documents such as a death
certificates, the DD Form 214 and DD Form 1300 together in one accessible PDF. For DD
Form 1300 see
http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/infomgt/forms/eforms/dd1300.pdf .
H. OPTIONAL: Schedule A Letter See Section III. Schedule A Hiring Authority.
1. Sample Schedule A Letter
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436961029349985-10.100.150.124.pdf
I. OPTIONAL: Letters of Recommendation
1. You can share tips and samples with your references.
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a. An Introduction to Writing Reference Letters. See
http://www.naceweb.org/legal/writing_reference_letter/
b. Guidelines for Reference Givers. See http://www.naceweb.org/public/reference1.htm
c. Tips for Providing References. See http://www.naceweb.org/public/reftips.htm
d. Sample Reference Letter if you are a Faculty Member for the Requestor. See http://naceweb.org/about/public/formfacref.htm e. Sample Reference Letter if you are a Former Employer of the Requestor. See http://www.naceweb.org/about/public/formemprec.htm f. Sample Reference Letter if you are a Current Employer of the Requestor. See http://www.naceweb.org/legal/employer_reference/
2. Ask your references not to seal the letters or mail them but to share them in MS
Word or PDF format directly with you for you to upload.
J. OPTIONAL: Writing Sample
K. You no longer have to submit a Statement of Work Readiness.
L. Upload specifications.
1. The system can accept the following file types: Word, Word 2007, Word 2010, Excel,
Excel 2007, Excel 2010, PDF, text, rich text, open office document and most graphic
formats.
2. Document size cannot exceed 1 MB.
3. PDF must be accessible (not scanned). See Discover How to Use Adobe Acrobat X to Ensure PDF Accessibility http://www.dm.usda.gov/oo/target/node/60.html
4. Ways to condense PDF over 1 MB:
a. Scan at a lower resolution; instead of 300 dpi you can choose something such
as 72 dpi or lower.
b. Get compression to be lower quality (higher compression).
c. If multiple pages, break into smaller files. For example, Transcript 1 of 3,
Transcript 2 of 3, Transcript 3 of 3.
WARNING: Know that each file counts as one of your five allowed documents
though.
5. Since you can submit an unofficial transcript, copy and paste your transcript into a
Word document. Word documents are usually less than 1 MB.
6. Still no luck? Contact A&M-SA's ITS Helpdesk, Main Campus, Room 307, Brooks City-
Base Campus, Room 144, helpdesk@tamusa.tamus.edu, (210) 784-HELP (4357).
Page 12
V. WHAT QUESTIONS MAY I BE ASKED IN THE INTERVIEW?
A. Tell me about yourself. This is your "elevator speech". It should include who you are, what
your goal and aspirations are, what has been your education and experiences and how have
they helped get you further toward your goal.
B. What workplace accommodations do you need in order to perform the essential components
of the position?
Know that some accommodations are appropriate: telecommunications devices, screen
readers, accessible workspaces, facilities for a service animal. Some are not appropriate: a
personal assistant, a service animal.
C. What agencies would you like to work at in the future? Be able to articulate two or three
reasons why you are a good fit for these agencies. Researching the agencies ahead of the
interview may help strengthen your answer.
D. Be able to confidently talk about:
1. Yourself.
2. Your work experiences.
3. Your skills.
4. Your strengths.
5. Your goals.
6. Where you want to work (by state).
7. The type of work you want to do in the future.
VI. HOW THE RECRUITER RATES YOU AND WHAT FEDERAL AGENCIES SEE AND
CONSIDER
A. On what does the recruiter rate you after the phone interview?
1. The recruiter rates on a 1-5 scale with 5 being the best, in the following areas:
a. Communication-how well you can articulate what you want and who you are.
b. Direction-an idea of what you wish to do, your goals. Your level of
preparedness and drive. Your level of preparedness toward your goals.
c. Qualifications-mainly based on your work experience, your transcript, your
courses taken.
d. Your overall rating-you must receive at least a 3 to be included in the WRP
database.
e. The recruiters no longer rate the area of Maturity as they did in past years.
f. Be sure to address "soft skills"-communication, teamwork, critical thinking
during your interview. See "Skills to Pay the Bills: Mastering Soft Skills for
Workplace Success," http://www.dol.gov/odep/topics/youth/softskills/
Page 13
g. Although your disability is asked about on the application, that information is
not shared with the recruiter or the federal agencies; however, if you choose to
disclose your disability to the recruiter, the disability can be put in the
recruiter's notes. You do not have to disclose. For guidance on disclosure, see
“The 411 on Disability Disclosures” http://www.ncwd-youth.info/411-on-
disability-disclosure
B. Federal employers view information that is released into the database. See what Federal
Employer view at http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436956354951745-10.100.150.124.pdf
C. The information in the database includes:
1. Name.
2. Contact information. (Be sure to keep this up to date so an employer can reach you
to make an offer.)
3. School.
4. Veteran status.
5. Social security number.
6. Degree.
7. Major(s).
8. Credits.
9. Graduation date.
10. GPA.
11. Whether you've previously served as a WRP intern.
12. Up to 5 location preferences you've put on your application.
a. See currently enrolled agencies at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu:80/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436968185249761-10.100.150.124.pdf. Check https://wrp.gov, under
Resources frequently for updates.
b. Candidates have worked in 38 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico,
and as civilian employees on military bases in Germany and South Korea.
c. Department of Defense does have opportunities abroad although over 20%
of hires are in the Washington, D.C. area.
d. Do not put "Anywhere" or "Open" or "All States" unless you are truly ready
to accept a position in rural Alabama or remote Alaska or the backwoods of
Maine.
e. If your skills are unique or are in high demand, agencies from locations other
than where you have listed could contact you and attempt to lure you to work
for them.
13. Location restrictions (such as need for public transportation or a regional part of a
state or area, such as South Texas or DC/Northern VA metro area).
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14. Job preferences--you must choose from this list. See Job Preference Categories at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu:80/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635436960353699041-10.100.150.124.pdf
15. Recruiter's interview notes.
16. Recruiter's ratings.
18. Your submitted documents.
19. Any request for job accommodation.
D. The federal agency can check out your Facebook page so clean it up! For tips see AC Online:
College Student Guide to Professional Social Profiles
http://www.affordablecollegesonline.org/spotlight/college-students-clean-up-your-online-
profiles-now/
V. IF OFFERED A SUMMER INTERNSHIP OR PERMANENT JOB
A. If you receive a call from an agency or a private sector employer, you need to keep track of
all offers. You do not need to accept the offer right away. You must:
*1. Get the name of the person calling, their phone number and email address.
*2. Get the name and location of the agency.
a. It is required that you get this information. The WRP and CSO personnel do
not know who has chosen you so if you do not get this information, they
cannot help you.
3. Get the salary, the hours, the duties, and the training opportunities.
a. The agency sets the salary based on the agency; the grade and band, which is
determined by your experience and the number of credits completed in
addition to the part of the country where the job is located (higher pay is in
more urban areas where the cost of living is greater).
b. What does the grade level mean and what is an idea of the salary or wage
that accompanies a grade level? See 2014 Guidelines to GS Grade Level
Equivalencies at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu:80/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635435391264481441-10.100.150.124.pdf
c. Some agencies will allow candidates to work flex time or part-time hours. The
work schedule is at the discretion of the supervisor.
4. Get suggestions for accessible, affordable housing and transportation to and from
housing and work.
a. You must pay relocation expenses from San Antonio to the worksite and
summer housing, unless otherwise stated by the employer.
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(1) If it is provided for by employer, be sure to get details about what is
included.
b. See Housing Information 2014 at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu:80/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635435391815440097-10.100.150.124.pdf
c. See Public Transportation Document 2014 at
http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu:80/uploadfile/folders/cetejeda210/Pdf/Pdf-
635435392529998785-10.100.150.124.pdf
5. You must inform the employer of your need for reasonable accommodations such as
adaptive services and equipment as soon as you have accepted an offer so they can be
in place when you start your job.
a. You must pay for attendant care, if necessary; employer will provide
workplace accommodations.
b. Resources to help with reasonable accommodations.
(1) Job Accommodation Network-free and confidential service
http://askjan.org/
(2) Computer/Electronic Accommodations Program (CAP)-provides
services for WRP interns--contact cap.assessment@mail.mil and see
http://www.cap.mil
(3) For information or to apply for an assistive technology
accommodation, go to http://www.cap.mil or call the CAP office at
(703) 681-8811 (Voice/TTY).
B. Offer may be contingent on criminal background check.
1. Having a record is not an automatic disqualifier but many (especially Department of
Defense) require security clearance.
2. If you have a record, you must ask whether you will need security clearance. If told
yes, then you need to ask whether your offense will prevent you from getting the
security clearance. If so, it is best to decline the offer.
3. If asked by a federal agency, you must be honest.
C. Do not hang on to multiple offers. Decide on one and inform all employers of your decision
as soon as possible. Do not accept multiple offers.
D. Go into Jaguar Jobs through Jagwire and report your hire.
1. Go to http://www.tamusa.tamus.edu/jagwire. Go to Jaguar Jobs.
2. In the left-hand column, click on the down arrow next to I want to…
Choose Report a Hire from the drop down menu.
Page 16
3. Choose the Other tab. Complete the Job Title and Organization Name and Save.
4. Complete the additional information and Save.
E. If an issue arises that prevents you from keeping your commitment after you have accepted
an offer, inform both the employer and the CSO immediately.
F. At end of your summer internship, give your employer the address to which you want your
W-2 form to be mailed in January. Also, change your address online with the US Postal Service
at https://www.usps.com/realmove/.
ANY QUESTIONS? CONTACT ANNETTE WILSON AT ANNETTE.WILSON@TAMUSA.TAMUS.EDU OR (210)
784-1342 OR CLARISSA TEJEDA AT CLARISSA.TEJEDA@TAMUSA.TAMUS.EDU OR (210) 784-1339.
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