As a computer science professor, Nic McPhee admits it's been a long time since he worked in the "real world."
His last job — before he started teaching at the University of Minnesota, Morris, in 1991 — was before the World Wide Web. In other words, the computer Stone Age.
So this summer, when he turned 50, McPhee decided to find out what he was missing. He became a summer intern for two of his former students — the founders of Kidblog, a Minneapolis start-up.
McPhee's "summer job" — which included crashing in a spare bedroom and writing code in coffee shops — was eye-opening and humbling. "It was a useful reminder of what it's like to be very confused," he said. "And that's a valuable thing for a teacher."
For McPhee, who won the university's 2013 Alumni Association teaching award and co-authored a book on computer science, the idea of competing with undergrads for a summer internship did seem "slightly weird."
But last spring, he started sending out feelers to former students.
"I had to keep myself from laughing," said Dan Flies, a 2004 graduate who once served as McPhee's teaching assistant.
When he realized that McPhee was serious, Flies texted his business partner, Matt Hardy, a 2001 graduate of the Morris campus, and asked: "Do you think we should hire Nic?"