Should I say that I am student on the interview if I am on academic leave?












0















I have been invited for the interview (paid internship) this week. I am a bit confused about whether should I say that I am student of X University (technically, I am, but not actively enrolled, but I enjoy all the benefits of being one, and I have the status on the university website and the student ID and etc.) while being on the academic leave.



I am talking on a bachelor's degree.



The reason I am asking this because:




  • I don't want end up like the author of this question.

  • I know the likelihood of the question("Can you tell me a little about yourself?") coming up is high, so should I try to hide that I am in this tricky position or not and face the situation where they may ask me about my studies and it may end up in a bad position.


P.S the job add in the requirements tells that I should be either majoring in CS or in other field OR experienced, so I don't know whether that will be a problem.










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  • but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:31











  • It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:36











  • That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:43
















0















I have been invited for the interview (paid internship) this week. I am a bit confused about whether should I say that I am student of X University (technically, I am, but not actively enrolled, but I enjoy all the benefits of being one, and I have the status on the university website and the student ID and etc.) while being on the academic leave.



I am talking on a bachelor's degree.



The reason I am asking this because:




  • I don't want end up like the author of this question.

  • I know the likelihood of the question("Can you tell me a little about yourself?") coming up is high, so should I try to hide that I am in this tricky position or not and face the situation where they may ask me about my studies and it may end up in a bad position.


P.S the job add in the requirements tells that I should be either majoring in CS or in other field OR experienced, so I don't know whether that will be a problem.










share|improve this question









New contributor




TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:31











  • It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:36











  • That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:43














0












0








0








I have been invited for the interview (paid internship) this week. I am a bit confused about whether should I say that I am student of X University (technically, I am, but not actively enrolled, but I enjoy all the benefits of being one, and I have the status on the university website and the student ID and etc.) while being on the academic leave.



I am talking on a bachelor's degree.



The reason I am asking this because:




  • I don't want end up like the author of this question.

  • I know the likelihood of the question("Can you tell me a little about yourself?") coming up is high, so should I try to hide that I am in this tricky position or not and face the situation where they may ask me about my studies and it may end up in a bad position.


P.S the job add in the requirements tells that I should be either majoring in CS or in other field OR experienced, so I don't know whether that will be a problem.










share|improve this question









New contributor




TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have been invited for the interview (paid internship) this week. I am a bit confused about whether should I say that I am student of X University (technically, I am, but not actively enrolled, but I enjoy all the benefits of being one, and I have the status on the university website and the student ID and etc.) while being on the academic leave.



I am talking on a bachelor's degree.



The reason I am asking this because:




  • I don't want end up like the author of this question.

  • I know the likelihood of the question("Can you tell me a little about yourself?") coming up is high, so should I try to hide that I am in this tricky position or not and face the situation where they may ask me about my studies and it may end up in a bad position.


P.S the job add in the requirements tells that I should be either majoring in CS or in other field OR experienced, so I don't know whether that will be a problem.







interviewing hiring-process internship ethics student






share|improve this question









New contributor




TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 25 at 10:44









Sourav Ghosh

7,98843657




7,98843657






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asked Mar 25 at 8:06









TheFunnySmellTheFunnySmell

245




245




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New contributor





TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






TheFunnySmell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:31











  • It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:36











  • That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:43



















  • but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:31











  • It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:36











  • That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:43

















but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:31





but not actively enrolled...and being on the academic leave...what do they mean? In other words, if someone try to verify you are really "either majoring in CS or in other field"..what would be the university answer?

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:31













It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:36





It would be that I am majoring, but currently I am on academic leave, aka I am a student on paper, who is not attending any classes, doing psets or interacting with university in any way.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:36













That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 12:43





That's the thing, I don't even know if I will.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 12:43










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














Don't leave anything to imagination, say it in full.




"I am a student of X university and currently on academic leave. I'm suppose/ planning to resume my classes / course on Y date."




Given that you have a valid student ID, registration and leave approval, there's no reason to be afraid of lying, because you are not.



Now question is: whether the company will agree to your "student" status - that depends on the company (policies) and there's nothing you can or need do about that. State the facts and let them decide how they want to interpret the facts.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:41











  • @TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:42











  • @TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:44













  • That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:45











  • This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:48



















0














You need to honest and straight forward with them.



The issue you have is that if you are perceived as dodging and weaving around an answer it might just be easier for them to go with another candidate.



Now if they perceive that you were in danger of academic probation, or that you are trying to decide if college is for you, they may decide that your odds of graduating in the next few years are low. And if the goal of bringing on interns is to see if they may be good employees, they are probably not interested in non-students.



They may not care that you have an college email address and an ID. Most schools don't disable them for 1+ years after your last class, and I have never known for an ID to be confiscated. Unless they can scan the id and tap into the university database the ID doesn't tell them if you are an active student this semester. Many universities scan the ID before a sporting even, or when entering the library, or using the gym. They want to stop non-students who still have the ID.



Many of these internship programs ask students To prove enrollment. They do this by asking for a printout from the university system showing their completed classes and current enrollment. This is usually done as part of the application/interview and then again on the first day of work. They also do this if they have a GPA requirement, or one for number of credits, or enrollment in a specific class.



You don't want to risk being dismissed from the internship on the first day because you successfully dodged their questions, only to discover they really want to focus on active students.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for your answer

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 11:57











  • But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:00














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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Don't leave anything to imagination, say it in full.




"I am a student of X university and currently on academic leave. I'm suppose/ planning to resume my classes / course on Y date."




Given that you have a valid student ID, registration and leave approval, there's no reason to be afraid of lying, because you are not.



Now question is: whether the company will agree to your "student" status - that depends on the company (policies) and there's nothing you can or need do about that. State the facts and let them decide how they want to interpret the facts.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:41











  • @TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:42











  • @TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:44













  • That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:45











  • This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:48
















3














Don't leave anything to imagination, say it in full.




"I am a student of X university and currently on academic leave. I'm suppose/ planning to resume my classes / course on Y date."




Given that you have a valid student ID, registration and leave approval, there's no reason to be afraid of lying, because you are not.



Now question is: whether the company will agree to your "student" status - that depends on the company (policies) and there's nothing you can or need do about that. State the facts and let them decide how they want to interpret the facts.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:41











  • @TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:42











  • @TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:44













  • That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:45











  • This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:48














3












3








3







Don't leave anything to imagination, say it in full.




"I am a student of X university and currently on academic leave. I'm suppose/ planning to resume my classes / course on Y date."




Given that you have a valid student ID, registration and leave approval, there's no reason to be afraid of lying, because you are not.



Now question is: whether the company will agree to your "student" status - that depends on the company (policies) and there's nothing you can or need do about that. State the facts and let them decide how they want to interpret the facts.






share|improve this answer















Don't leave anything to imagination, say it in full.




"I am a student of X university and currently on academic leave. I'm suppose/ planning to resume my classes / course on Y date."




Given that you have a valid student ID, registration and leave approval, there's no reason to be afraid of lying, because you are not.



Now question is: whether the company will agree to your "student" status - that depends on the company (policies) and there's nothing you can or need do about that. State the facts and let them decide how they want to interpret the facts.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 25 at 9:41

























answered Mar 25 at 8:38









Sourav GhoshSourav Ghosh

7,98843657




7,98843657













  • Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:41











  • @TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:42











  • @TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:44













  • That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:45











  • This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:48



















  • Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:41











  • @TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:42











  • @TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

    – Sourav Ghosh
    Mar 25 at 8:44













  • That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:45











  • This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 8:48

















Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:41





Yes, I that would be the ethical & right way to do it, but the thing is more questions may come from this, like why, when and etc and I preferably would avoid steering the interview to that direction.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:41













@TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:42





@TheFunnySmell It's always better to state the truth rather than lying, because then you would not need to spin up another 10 lies to save the first lie.

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:42













@TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:44







@TheFunnySmell Moreover, you can try to put the reasons in a way that sounds beneficial for you (and potential employer). However, if this is something personal and you're not comfortable disclosing it, you can say so. Usually, it's not a concern on the "why" part for the company, as long as they can comply with their policies for the leave period.

– Sourav Ghosh
Mar 25 at 8:44















That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:45





That's correct, but I wouldn't say that I would be lying(aka saying false information) rather not saying more than I should.As we have figured out it, technically I am a student?

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:45













This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:48





This is debate of whether referring to a word "student" people think of one actively studying and attending classes or the one in general, just enrolled in university?

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 8:48













0














You need to honest and straight forward with them.



The issue you have is that if you are perceived as dodging and weaving around an answer it might just be easier for them to go with another candidate.



Now if they perceive that you were in danger of academic probation, or that you are trying to decide if college is for you, they may decide that your odds of graduating in the next few years are low. And if the goal of bringing on interns is to see if they may be good employees, they are probably not interested in non-students.



They may not care that you have an college email address and an ID. Most schools don't disable them for 1+ years after your last class, and I have never known for an ID to be confiscated. Unless they can scan the id and tap into the university database the ID doesn't tell them if you are an active student this semester. Many universities scan the ID before a sporting even, or when entering the library, or using the gym. They want to stop non-students who still have the ID.



Many of these internship programs ask students To prove enrollment. They do this by asking for a printout from the university system showing their completed classes and current enrollment. This is usually done as part of the application/interview and then again on the first day of work. They also do this if they have a GPA requirement, or one for number of credits, or enrollment in a specific class.



You don't want to risk being dismissed from the internship on the first day because you successfully dodged their questions, only to discover they really want to focus on active students.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for your answer

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 11:57











  • But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:00


















0














You need to honest and straight forward with them.



The issue you have is that if you are perceived as dodging and weaving around an answer it might just be easier for them to go with another candidate.



Now if they perceive that you were in danger of academic probation, or that you are trying to decide if college is for you, they may decide that your odds of graduating in the next few years are low. And if the goal of bringing on interns is to see if they may be good employees, they are probably not interested in non-students.



They may not care that you have an college email address and an ID. Most schools don't disable them for 1+ years after your last class, and I have never known for an ID to be confiscated. Unless they can scan the id and tap into the university database the ID doesn't tell them if you are an active student this semester. Many universities scan the ID before a sporting even, or when entering the library, or using the gym. They want to stop non-students who still have the ID.



Many of these internship programs ask students To prove enrollment. They do this by asking for a printout from the university system showing their completed classes and current enrollment. This is usually done as part of the application/interview and then again on the first day of work. They also do this if they have a GPA requirement, or one for number of credits, or enrollment in a specific class.



You don't want to risk being dismissed from the internship on the first day because you successfully dodged their questions, only to discover they really want to focus on active students.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for your answer

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 11:57











  • But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:00
















0












0








0







You need to honest and straight forward with them.



The issue you have is that if you are perceived as dodging and weaving around an answer it might just be easier for them to go with another candidate.



Now if they perceive that you were in danger of academic probation, or that you are trying to decide if college is for you, they may decide that your odds of graduating in the next few years are low. And if the goal of bringing on interns is to see if they may be good employees, they are probably not interested in non-students.



They may not care that you have an college email address and an ID. Most schools don't disable them for 1+ years after your last class, and I have never known for an ID to be confiscated. Unless they can scan the id and tap into the university database the ID doesn't tell them if you are an active student this semester. Many universities scan the ID before a sporting even, or when entering the library, or using the gym. They want to stop non-students who still have the ID.



Many of these internship programs ask students To prove enrollment. They do this by asking for a printout from the university system showing their completed classes and current enrollment. This is usually done as part of the application/interview and then again on the first day of work. They also do this if they have a GPA requirement, or one for number of credits, or enrollment in a specific class.



You don't want to risk being dismissed from the internship on the first day because you successfully dodged their questions, only to discover they really want to focus on active students.






share|improve this answer













You need to honest and straight forward with them.



The issue you have is that if you are perceived as dodging and weaving around an answer it might just be easier for them to go with another candidate.



Now if they perceive that you were in danger of academic probation, or that you are trying to decide if college is for you, they may decide that your odds of graduating in the next few years are low. And if the goal of bringing on interns is to see if they may be good employees, they are probably not interested in non-students.



They may not care that you have an college email address and an ID. Most schools don't disable them for 1+ years after your last class, and I have never known for an ID to be confiscated. Unless they can scan the id and tap into the university database the ID doesn't tell them if you are an active student this semester. Many universities scan the ID before a sporting even, or when entering the library, or using the gym. They want to stop non-students who still have the ID.



Many of these internship programs ask students To prove enrollment. They do this by asking for a printout from the university system showing their completed classes and current enrollment. This is usually done as part of the application/interview and then again on the first day of work. They also do this if they have a GPA requirement, or one for number of credits, or enrollment in a specific class.



You don't want to risk being dismissed from the internship on the first day because you successfully dodged their questions, only to discover they really want to focus on active students.







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answered Mar 25 at 10:35









mhoran_psprepmhoran_psprep

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  • Thank you for your answer

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 11:57











  • But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:00





















  • Thank you for your answer

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 11:57











  • But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

    – TheFunnySmell
    Mar 25 at 12:00



















Thank you for your answer

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 11:57





Thank you for your answer

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 11:57













But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 12:00







But the company has the "Experienced or majoring" part, so maybe the student part is not THAT important, but I will tell the truth anyways.

– TheFunnySmell
Mar 25 at 12:00












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