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Students feel unprepared for world of work

Image: In this April 4, 2012 photo, college students attend a job fair for students in Manchester, N.H. The class of 2012 is leaving college with something t...
College graduates say their school hasn't adequately prepared them for work. In this April 4, 2012 photo, college students attend a job fair for students in Manchester, N.H.Jim Cole / AP

A college education is no guarantee of a job and even if they secure internships, a quarter of college students feel unprepared for the working world, according to a survey released on Tuesday.

Graduates face the reality of unemployment among 20- to 24-year-olds at over 13 percent and many potential employers who won't hire them full-time even if they serve as interns for little or no pay.

"We found that a bachelor's degree is the new high school diploma," said Dan Schawbel, founder of Millennial Branding, which released a study of students' views on the job market. The online survey, conducted May 16 with Internships.com, polled 1,345 college students across the country.

It found that while 57 percent think internships will be extremely important in helping them learn real world skills and land jobs, almost as many think colleges aren't providing them the access to internships that they need. "Internships help because it's evidence that you've done work," Schawbel said.

(Read More: Weak U.S. Labor Market Awaits Class of 2013)

Unfortunately, for many students, the world of internships is not that simple.

In a 2012 survey by Millennial Branding, 91 percent of the employers responding said students should have one to two internships before graduating, but only half had hired interns in the previous six months. Also, a solid majority of companies said they hired no more than 30 percent of their interns for full time jobs, and 87 percent offered internships that were shorter than they liked to see on resumes.

Labor Department rules say that if internships are unpaid, they have to resemble vocational education, and interns cannot be asked to do work that paid employees could perform. But companies may not always follow these rules. In fact, some have been sued by former interns claiming labor rule violations.

Camille Olson, who chairs the complex discrimination litigation practice group at Seyfarth Shaw, says a number of companies have taken steps to beef up their internships.

"A number of them have revised their programs to ensure that they are conforming to the 'benefits to the interns' part" of the rules on internships, she said. And she adds that potential interns can gather intelligence on the quality of internships using social media, or seek out current interns to hear about their experience.

But even if internships are improving, there is the matter of who can afford to seek them out. With tuition at many private colleges running close to $50,000 a year, many students are working while they are in school, and have little time for an unpaid gig.

Olson points out that some colleges offer financial aid or subsidies for students taking internships with nonprofit organizations.

For his part, Schawbel recognizes the potential shortcomings of internships, but says they still offer invaluable training.

(View more: Interns: A Peek Inside the Tech World)

"You can't prove yourself by taking a college course. You can prove yourself by getting internships," he said, adding that he himself has had eight. "A lot of students have loans, and to do an internship while working in a restaurant to pay the bills—there is a lot of pressure right now. But that's the the game you have to play. It's the 'do whatever it takes' model."

Memo to Mom and Dad: you might want to get your child's bedroom ready for a returning tenant.