"Even to" or "To even"?
I am not sure which one is grammatically correct. It could be both or none. Could you select which sentence would be grammatically correct?
The only difference between the sentences is even to vs. to even:
Students over the age of 16 who are considering to be employed by business companies should be incredibly concerned; it is extremely difficult to even get an opportunity for an interview.
Students over the age of 16 who are considering to be employed by business companies should be incredibly concerned; it is extremely difficult even to get an opportunity for an interview.
First of all, this must be corrected (thanks, tchrist):
who are considering to be employed --> who are considering employment
Now, to your choices: none of the two is the best.
The way to do it: Go to Google Books (not vanilla Google); select and test your critical cores.
The best (and the most natural) is at the top here:
"difficult to get even an" About 1,990 results
"difficult even to get an" About 246 results
"difficult to even get an" About 127 results
Grammatical reason: it is considered best for clarity's sake to place the emphasizer ("even," here) closest to the entity of interest.