Interested in working for the EU?

Rebecca Melzer 
		 © WWU - privat
Rebecca Melzer © WWU - privat
Rebecca Melzer, a 21-year-old student at the University of Münster, has been internationally-minded almost all her life: from holidays in the Netherlands as a child to work placements in France during her school and university years. For Rebecca Melzer, who is studying Political Science and Law in Münster, a job at the European Commission is what one might call the crowning achievement of her career and the pinnacle of her internationality. As a possible stepping-stone to a future career in Brussels, she worked for one year as a voluntary ambassador for the administrative centre of the EU, which employs 55,000 people working for the European institutions and the European Commission. Where did you get the idea to become an ambassador for a EU career? The idea had not crossed my mind before I found out about it on Facebook, through news posted by the "Europäische Bewegung" (European Movement). Since these EU Careers Ambassador positions already existed at several universities but not yet at the University of Münster, I decided to apply. You could say that I am the first EU Careers Ambassador at the University. What kind of training did you have to undergo? Together with other ambassadors from many different EU countries, I underwent a short training course during which we learned above all about the customs and traditions of the European Personnel Selection Office (EPSO).
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