Syracuse University

News Archive


iSchool students explore energy plant, careers at GE facility

November 13, 2008


Margaret Costello Spillett
mcostell@syr.edu





Students in the School of Information Studies' (iSchool) Women in Information Technology
(WIT) organization recently visited the General Electric plant in Schenectady, N.Y., to tour
the facilities and learn more about opportunities at the company. GE is one of the iSchool's
top employers, and the visiting students had the opportunity to network with a number of
iSchool alumni currently employed by the plant. The event was also supported by the GE
Women's Network.


A number of undergraduate and graduate students from various backgrounds attended the
event, which included a tour of the turbine manufacturing plant, networking opportunities
with industry professionals, and presentations by GE representatives. The presenters
discussed different aspects of the company, including the affinity groups at GE such as the
Women's Network, African American Forum, Hispanic Forum and Asian-Pacific American
Forum; job opportunities available; and the GE Leadership Programs available to students
at the corporation.


GE's Undergraduate Leadership Programs provide students with a broad overview of their
options at GE by allowing them to rotate through several assignments in one field. Students
from information management, communications, engineering, human resources and
finance backgrounds can all find opportunities within the GE Leadership Programs. Several
iSchool students have begun their careers through these programs.


After the business end of the tour, the students were introduced to the more technical side of
GE. They heard a presentation by the chief of GE's project on renewable resources and GE's
work in this field. He explained that research at the company has been shifting toward wind
and solar energy production; GE is in the process of constructing a new building to house its
renewable energy project.


The students also toured the actual turbine manufacturing plant and learned how copper
wire, silicon steel, large pieces of machinery and physics came together to create functional
turbines-and how those turbines produced electricity. One student described the experience
as "almost like witnessing the heart of energy."


For more information on GE Leadership Programs, visit http://www.gecareers.com and
click on the Undergraduate Leadership Programs or Masters and MBA Leadership
Programs link. WIT is an SU student organization dedicated to advancing the presence and
strength of women in the information management field. Membership in WIT is open to all
iSchool students.