Newsletter 6 - Robertson Foundation for Government
Transcription
Newsletter 6 - Robertson Foundation for Government
Newsletter | ISSUE 2 | VOLUME 2 | June, 2014 Robertson Foundation The Robertson Foundation for Government is a non-profit family foundation founded in the memory of philanthropists Charles & Marie Robertson. The Foundation identifies, educates, and motivates top U.S. graduate students to pursue federal government careers in foreign policy, national security, and international affairs. for Government From the President work and dedication has paid off, and we are confident that you are now better-equipped to pursue government service as you start off your career. Katherine Ernst Dear Fellows & Friends, I first want to congratulate the recently announced new Robertson Fellows from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, and the University of California at San Diego Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies. They are: Fletcher:Jonathan Brands, Mark Hoover, Caroline Ott, Jackie Page IRPS: Andy Furillo, Patricia Wang, Edith Yuh They are all extremely impressive individuals, and the Robertson Foundation for Government is excited to help them achieve their goals. We will announce more new Fellows soon, and look forward to getting to know them all. While we have a new group of Fellows, we also want to congratulate the graduates.Your hard The Foundation recently updated our website, so please take a moment to look over it and email any requested changes to its designer, RFFG Program Manager Robert Liford, at [email protected]. Finally, to the past and present fellows at jobs and internships across the world, we know these experiences will strengthen your nascent careers. Specifically to Fellows in Washington, be sure to stay in contact with Bo Kemper and attend the fantastic events the Foundation will organize this summer. From cookouts to roundtables, we hope they help maximize your time in D.C. Wishing you all the best, Katherine In This Issue: 2-9 Fellows’ News 2: Rosenthal Fellowships 2: New Fellows: Fletcher, Maryland, & UCSD IR/PS 2: ISKRAN Participation 3: Marriage: James Trent 3: Marriage: Katy Lafen 6: Maryland Graduation 8: Cookout Photos 9: Class of 2014 3 5 Tips to Making the Most of D.C. This Summer from Steve Ressler, founder of GovLoop.com 4-5 Two (Related) Approaches to Federal Careers: The Forest and the Trees from Michael Schneider 6 Updates & Photos Lunch: Dean Crocker Boren Fellows 7 April Cocktail Reception 8 Upcoming Events Board of Directors Chairman: Robert Halligan Treasurer: John H. Linnartz Founding Chair: William Robertson Member At Large: Dr. Walter Meier President: Katherine Ernst Secretary: Geoffrey Robertson Member At Large: Robert J. Ernst III Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. Rosenthal Fellows We noted six fellows who received Rosenthal Fellowships in the previous newsletter: Sean Comber, Alexandra Hackbarth, Joyce Kang, Rebeca Orrie, Daniel Rothstein, and Jenny Russell. Established in 1977 in the memory of Harold W. Rosenthal, the Rosenthal Fellowship was created to expose young scholars of foreign affairs to the inner workings of Congress, the U.S. Department of State and other agencies of the federal government. We now have two more to add: Maryland Fellows Andrew ISKRAN Reighart and Andrew Flavin participated in a bilateral negotiation exercise with Russian students from The Institute for the USA and Canadian Studies (ISKRAN). Andrew Flavin was quoted in the summary, which you can read here: http://bit.ly/1kEWers New Fellows: Maryland Class of 2015 Mark Hoover Fletcher ‘15 Andrew Reighart Maryland ‘15 New Fellows: UCSD IR/PS Class of 2016 New Fellows: Fletcher Class of 2015 Andy Furillo Davis, CA Tom Babington Abasha, Georgia Jessica Gottesman Northbrook, IL Jonathan Brands Somerville, MA Mark Hoover Cambridge, MA Patricia Wang Houston, TX Paul Massaro Annapolis, MD Engda Wubneh Silver Spring, MD Caroline Ott Boxford, MA Jackie Page Peabody, MA Edith Yuh Tochigi Prefecture, Japan Contact Information Phone: (202) 289.7700 Fax: (202) 289.6333 Robertson Foundation for Government 1801 F Street NW, #3A Washington, DC 20006 Email: [email protected] Website: http://rffg.org Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. 5 Tips to Making the Most of D.C. This Summer By GovLoop Founder Steve Ressler It’s summertime in D.C. and the energy is great. Current Robertson fellows are working at new, exciting internships, while those who recently graduated are embarking on their first jobs. Here at GovLoop, we’ve been fortunate enough to have hired three Robertson fellows (Sharon McCoy, Adrian Pavia, and Tom Buchanan) so we know first-hand the great talent and training provided by the Robertson Foundation and its partner schools. But while you’re here starting your new gigs, how do you optimize your D.C. experience? Here are my five tips for making the most of D.C. this summer. #1 - Come to Next Generation of Government Training Summit: NextGen is the #1 training conference for 650+ Gen X/Y government employees, held July 24-25th in D.C. Yes, I’m biased as I run it -- but if you do one thing this summer, go to this. Robertson Foundation has graciously offered to pay for tickets for fellows (an $800 retail value, and normally other people beg to go) and past Robertson fellows have gotten job offers from attending, as well as made great connections. As one past recipient said, “NextGen made me fall back in love with public service.” If you’re interested in attending, just email me Steve Ressler ([email protected]) and cc Rob Liford ([email protected]). bosses this summer -- so wow them, and they’ll go out of the way to help you. #3 - Make a Networking Commitment: It’s easy to get overwhelmed with the variety of networking options each week. From Young Professionals in Foreign Policy events to GovLoop to invites from Bo’s network, you could probably go to four events a week. Instead of just taking an ad hoc approach to networking, make a commitment. I will go to two events per week and go to them each week. I will reach out and have two coffee information interviews per week. Make lifestyle changes like going to the gym before work so you’re freed up to networking after work. #4 - Brush Up on New Skills: As a Robertson fellow, we know you’re a strategic thinker who knows about foreign policy, strategic planning, and writing case notes. These are great skills -- but employers are also want some of the key day-to-day practical skills like public speaking, big data analysis, design thinking, acquisition knowledge and more. Use your time in D.C. to firm up on these skills at free and cheap trainings from General Assembly, USA Graduate School, GovLoop, Defense Acquisition University, OPM Innovation Lab, and more. #5 - Start Your Job Search: The government job search takes a long time, so use your time here to begin your search. If you haven’t already, re-read the Robertson/GovLoop guides to getting a government job at pathtopmf.com. Make sure you’re applying to jobs at USAJOBS and also for fellowship programs like Presidential Innovation Fellows and the Presidential Management Fellows Program. #2 - Be Amazing at Your Job: Too often we forget about the basics. Make sure you are amazing at your job. Be the first one in the office and last one there. Every project you do, make sure it’s A+ quality. Ask for more work if it’s slow.You’re most likely to get your next job from your co-workers and Congratulations to Katy Lafen (Maryland ‘15) and Julien Xavier on their recent marriage. Congratulations to James Trent (Maryland ‘12) and Larel Gutenberg on their recent marriage. If you follow these five tips, you’ll really be making the most of your time in this dynamic city. Have a blast in your summer in D.C. -- and hope to see you at NextGen in July. Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. Two (Related) Approaches to Federal Careers: The Forest and the Trees By RFFG Advisor Michael Schneider The Forest President Obama’s May 28 speech at West Point, and the forthcoming update of the National Security Strategy Review will likely highlight several major national security priorities for the United States in coming years.You won’t be surprised; the priorities will include, • Counter-Terrorism - Renewed efforts to weed out terrorists and terrorism, in conjunction with friends and allies, not as unilateral U.S. action. On occasion C-T will link to myriad counter narcotics and human trafficking initiatives because criminal elements will launder funds for terrorists. • Re-Building and Re-Directing U.S. Military - A balancing of needs to rebuild and re-arm our military with specialized focus on cyber defense, the role of military force in a range of SOLIC, special operations and low-intensity, small scale conflicts and humanitarian relief. • Peace-building through Multi-National Cooperation – residual efforts to help Afghanistan and Iraq emerge as stable nation-states, efforts to forge an agreement with Iran to curb its nuclear weapons development, and even renewed efforts to help Israel and the Palestinians achieve a peace treaty and two-state solution. • Trans-National Public Health Initiatives - And continuing initiatives to foster improved public health, indigenous development capacity. • Expanded Energy Activities – A so-called “win-win” emphasis, on reducing coal reliance, earning export revenues while reducing US dependence on international supplies of fossil fuels. These broad priorities are likely to shape USG spending in national security and foreign affairs, and are keys to deduce the long-term job market. Understanding these broad trends might frame your thoughts about a career. However in the current extraordinarily tight federal job market, that’s hardly enough to find a job in national security and international affairs. Most analysts see a double whammy – far fewer retirements among eligible senior officials, with a much smaller trickle-down post-sequestration effect on hiring, and agencies reluctant to hire more than one person for every two vacancies. My own guess – another two-three years will be required before large scale new hiring resumes. Even then, the trend to bring in contractors, side-by-side, will continue. Therefore, it’s all the more important to assess your aspirations and approaches and start early to prepare for the slimmed down federal job market. The Trees Each broad region of global engagement includes multiple, somewhat overlapping sub-fields. Just to see for myself how available information might lead to a few possibilities, I registered with USAJobs; reviewed the excellent advice provided by the GovLoop/Robertson publication, “Getting Into Government,” and went about scrolling through page after online page of position announcements and descriptions, with very mixed results. Your experience would be welcomed in navigating the system, including USAJobs Application Manager, http://help.applicationmanager.gov/ApplicantHelp/index.php/Application_Manager_Features It’s not easy; for one, common terms we would use to describe a field are either too colloquial or straightforward for the system, which seems to prefer broader terms, e.g. “national security.” Finding the signs to open the pathways and reading the fine print with regard to experience, KSAs (Knowledge, Skills and Abilities) can leave one bleary. No, I didn’t set up the system to group other positions in my interest area for me, but I did multiple searches and investigated the announcements further. The devil is in the details, especially whether education and internships can equate to experience levels that meet the criteria of the posting. And specifically whether one has enough of both to equal prior service that qualifies to compete for the announced position. My search of USA Jobs turned up several possibilities. In the national security field, the FBI seemed most active in recruiting junior intelligence analysts. See https://fbijobs.gov/121.asp for info and links. Among the hundreds I looked through, three seemed to hold special interest: One, a Foreign Affairs Officer in State for a GS-13 would focus on “...energy markets and energy security in Iran reporting on...energy markets, energy security and energy infrastructure...oil exports under the National Defense Authorization...Departmental efforts to advance national security goals, particularly... “ The Bureau is apparently staffing up in a critical area and might have additional openings. A GS-13 is not easy to come straight out of grad school, but some Robertson Fellows would probably qualify for the job in terms of education and internship experience. The challenge is demonstrated knowledge of Farsi, and to prove that one has worked for a year at, or equivalent to, a GS-12. A second opportunity would be more approachable. In the Treasury Department, an Intelligence Research Specialist (Watch Officer) needed to help identify continues on page 5 Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. continued from page 4 “...proliferators, and other key national security threats and to provide timely...warning functions along with national security communications and administrative...monitoring incoming intelligence and national security information….” The GS-9 is surely appropriate for a Robertson grad, excepted service with no prior government experience required. A third is equally approachable, Researcher/Policy Analyst, Middle East and Africa in the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a Congressional body, with a pay level equivalent to a GS 9 or low GS 11, “…. gathering...maintaining relations with U.S. and foreign government...international media and State Department reports/statements...improvement in the exercise of freedom of religion...recommendations for U.S. government policy...incorporation into State Department and Administration [reports and policy consideration]” Another Forest/trees approach is to go first to the departments or agencies of interest and meticulously review the lists of openings. For example I selected counter-terrorism, counter-crime and trafficking, and looked over a number of sites, with very mixed results. Some sent me back to USAJobs; almost all linked to it. Above and beyond my online job search I would use the terms above to seek people in the organizations below who could walk me through the maze: • The Intelligence community – CIA, DIA, Military Service, NSA, and State/INR • DoD/SOLIC • State CT, INL for drugs and crime links • DHS for homeland security, immigration and human trafficking • Treasury for money laundering • State’s Center for Strategic Counter-Terrorism Communication (CSCC) • Justice/FBI/Interpol • DEA • White House ONDCP • NGA for mapping trafficking; arms flows, military movements, para-military and terrorist movements • NSA for mapping communication flows • DoD – building military capacity Lessons Learned Start your job search from the very first day you enter grad school – if not before. If you can discern a forest – a field of endeavor – then move onto the trees – the subfield, the actual programs/projects/activities in actual agencies that will lead in the direction you might want to head.You can change your mind, but it’s worthwhile building toward a job goal at the outset, not the end of your MA program. Learn early on what mundane skills organizations seek for those specific fields: SPSS, SAS, STATA, GIS, social media design or management, advanced critical languages... Find the internships that will give you the practical experience and the contacts and the authenticity that will engage your potential employer Network relentlessly throughout the two years toward the people in the federal agency/ies you would like to work for. It will really help your cause if the team leaders engage the HR folks on your behalf. For all employment possibilities, master the ability to write concisely. Start with a succinct cover letter that focuses on the essential you for the particular job, not all the details already covered in the resume. Look at whom the office of interest works with within the Department or Agency and in other agencies, because if there isn’t an opening in office A they might know someone in Agency B who needs help and has a vacancy. True, many federal agencies are only slowly returning to new hires, and in some cases still filling only one slot for every two vacancies. But why not you. Advice from one contact with regard to the CBO: “ ….It seems to me that at a minimum, a junior staff person needs to have strong analytical and writing/communication skills. It really is a position that requires a unique set of skills: being able to read and interpret legislative language, assign a quantitative cost to that language (and know how to ask the kinds of questions that will get you to that cost), be able to do some level of quantitative analysis with good attention to detail, and be able to communicate your results in a written product, via email, and over the phone. And all of this in a time sensitive environment with congressional staffers who may strongly disagree with your results. … Interested applicants should probably focus their attention on openings in the Budget Analyst Division, which tends to hire more of the masters candidates. Other divisions focus more heavily on PhD candidates.” “ …. On a positive note, I believe they are even offering *paid* internships again this summer after 2-3 years period of unpaid internships, so I believe their situation may be improving. And well, it's a very good time to be a less expensive junior staffer seeking employment. BTW, have you seen some of the positions that CRS has been advertising? They've had a relative abundance of junior staff positions available, including a new line of "research assistant" positions. …” Bottom Line: personal contacts and networking remain the best way to find the best pathways through the forest and the start of a fruitful public service career. Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. Boren Fellows Congratulations to the three Robertson Fellows who were selected to recieve the Boren Fellowship: Kent Boydston IRPS ‘14 Language: Korean Location: South Korea Project: NGOs in North Korea: Opportunities and Challenges for U.S. Policy Maryland Graduation photos.Top, L-R: Rep. Steny Hoyer, Aurite Werman ‘14, Dean Kettl, Bo Kemper, Andrew Reighart ‘15. Quinton Jones Bush ‘14 Language: Swahili Location: Tanzania Project: Swahili Language Study and Academic Research on Gender Security in Swahili Countries Eli Yani IR/PS Fellows give a jersey to outgoing career services director Tamara Golden. L-R EliYani ‘14, Kent Boydston ‘14, Joyce Kang ‘14,Tamara, JordanWilson ‘13, Shannon Morrison ‘14, Dan Rothstein ‘15 IRPS ‘14 Language: Mandarin Location: China Project: Regional Variation in Chinese Media Institutions and Implications for U.S. National Security Bush School Dean Ryan Crocker recently held a luncheon at the Metropolitan Club with some Fellows and Foundation friends. L-R: Jessica McCann, Craig Cohen, JudgeWilliamWebster, Josh Bolten, Ambassador Nancy McEldowney, Dean Ryan Crocker, Kerri Eisenbach (Bush ‘13), James Trent (Maryland ‘12), Chris Caine, David Ernst, Marci Robinson,Tom Buchanan (Bush ‘13) Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. April Cocktail Reception A number of Fellows and RFFG Board members were in Washington during the first week of April, so the Foundation hosted a cocktail reception at the DACOR Bacon House. Here are some photos from the event. All names L-R. John H. Linnartz, Diana McKibben, Andrew McKibben Dr. Walter Meier & Katherine Ernst Bo Kemper, Michael Schnieder, John H. Linnartz Quinton Jones (Bush ‘14), EliYani (IRPS ’14), Rebeca Orrie (Bush ‘15), Jenny Russell (Bush ’15), Mark Niegelsky (Bush ‘14), Joyce Kang (IRPS ‘15), Rob Liford, Andrew Ericson (Bush ’15),Taylor Moore (Maryland ‘13) Andrew Reighart (Maryland ‘14), Christopher Lee (Maryland ’15), Maryland Dean Kettl,William Robertson A number of Fellows take a photo with Fox News SeniorWhite House Correspondent Ed Henry Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. Upcoming Events Cookouts at DACOR Bacon Details TBA DACOR Bacon House 1801 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20006 We had a fantastic cookout in May, and look forward to having more throughout the summer. Thanks to all those who attended the first one, and we look forward to seeing more of you in the future! Roundtable with Dan Yergin Tuesday, July 8th, 6:30-8:00pm Brookings Institution 1775 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20036 Free and Open Admission GovLoop NextGenGov Conference July 24th-25th Crystal Gateway Marriott 1700 Jefferson Davis Hwy, Arlington, VA 22202 Info at: www.nextgengovt.com | RFFG will pay Fellows’ registration. Register via email: [email protected] & [email protected]. The Next Generation of Government Training Summit educates, inspires and promotes innovation for new and rising leaders in government. Since 2010, the two day summit has enhanced the working and personal lives of 2,000+ Generation X and Y government employees excited to learn new skills needed to innovate. Thanks to Marjorie Rapp, who notes another good reason to attend: those who stayed for the entire event and filled out the evaluation forms were eligible for CPE credits. Daniel Yergin, IHS Vice Chairman, is a Pulitzer-Prize winning author of “The Prize” and leading authority on energy, international politics and economics. Roundtable with R. David Edelman Roundtable with Mike O’Hanlon R. David Edelman is Senior Advisor for Internet, Innovation, & Privacy Policy at the Office of Science and Technology Policy and the National Economic Council. Tuesday, July 22nd, 6:00-7:30pm Brookings Institution 1775 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20036 Free and Open Admission Michael O'Hanlon is a senior fellow with the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence and director of research for the Foreign Policy program at the Brookings Institution. The Southerlands and Elliotts enjoy the May Cookout Thanks to Taylor Moore for the photo! August 12, 6:00-7:30pm The White House Roundtable with General Brent Scowcroft Details TBA Brent Scowcroft served as the National Security Advisor to both Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush, the only individual in U.S. history appointed to the position under two different Presidents. Fellows in deep discussion at the May Cookout Thanks to Andrew Reighart for the photo! Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C. Congratulations, Class of 2014! Congratulations to the Robertson Fellows who graduated in 2014. Your hard work has finally paid off, and we look forward to seeing the great work you do over your careers! Oliver Elliott Kate Simma Maxwell Maxwell Allison Hutchings Stephane Laroche Dan Mingrone Justinas Sileikis Fletcher Fletcher Fletcher Fletcher Kent Boydston Shannon Morrison Eli Yani Drew Flavin K. Nadine Rada Marjorie Rapp Aurite Werman Quinton Jones Ken Krupa Emily Mullins Mark Niegelsky Rebekah Redden IR/PS IR/PS IR/PS Bush School Graduation L-R Mark Niegelsky, Emily Mullins, Quinton Jones, Bo Kemper, Dean Ryan Crocker, Rebekah Redden, Ken Krupa Thanks to Mark for the photo! Fletcher School Graduation L-R Justinas Sileikis, Stéphane Laroche, Dan Mingrone, Allison Hutchings Thanks to Dan for the photo! Maryland Maryland Maryland Maryland Bush Bush Bush Bush Bush UCSD IR/PS Graduation L-R EliYani, Shannon Morrison, Kent Boydston Thanks to ArpitaVerghese for the photo! Have news or photos to share? Email [email protected] to be in the next newsletter. Robertson Foundation for Government | 1801 F Street N.W. | Washington, D.C.