Jordan Dotson has reviewed legal cases at Best Buy, won an in-house competition with her "octopus-with-a-briefcase" logo for the recently merged "legal and risk group" and earned appreciation in the department for her poise and "emotional intelligence," according to her supervisor.
She also was competitive in last summer's weekly department trivia competition.
Not bad for a 17-year-old senior at Minneapolis South High School.
"My first summer at Best Buy, I did a lot of filing in the real estate [section of the] law department," Dotson said. "I like organization.
"I also got to read some of the cases and learned about real estate law."
The 3.9-GPA student who rises early every morning to take two city buses to South High School in Minneapolis heads home late after a day of classes, usually topped by participation in debate, orchestra or theater, where she specializes in costume design and sewing.
Dotson, who got her first internship the summer after eighth grade, is a recent star of Minneapolis Step Up.
That's the tremendous internship program that has created 28,000 summer jobs for mostly Minneapolis students, between the ages of 14 and 21, with Twin Cities employers in 15 industries. It's a partnership among the city; AchieveMpls, the nonprofit support organization of Minneapolis Public Schools; CareerForce Minneapolis and Project for Pride in Living.