Internships provide incredible
opportunities for high school students to gain significant work experience and
make decisions about future career goals.
And winter break is a great time to pursue options for next summer.
Although college students are usually first in line for internship opportunities, businesses and organizations are increasingly holding opportunities open for students currently in high school or those transitioning to college.
Although college students are usually first in line for internship opportunities, businesses and organizations are increasingly holding opportunities open for students currently in high school or those transitioning to college.
Why intern?
Going through the internship application process will teach you much-needed job search and employment skills. Preparing a resume, asking for recommendations, landing an interview, and understanding what it means to be a responsible employee are all skills that will give you a big advantage in college and beyond.
Going through the internship application process will teach you much-needed job search and employment skills. Preparing a resume, asking for recommendations, landing an interview, and understanding what it means to be a responsible employee are all skills that will give you a big advantage in college and beyond.
And it’s no secret that internships strengthen college applications, as these opportunities introduce students to career fields or potential majors and strengthen valuable research or lab skills.
An internship will help you understand how a professional
organization functions in the real world. While learning and working, you have
the opportunity to refine career goals. In fact, you’ll find that a summer
internship can serve as a “trial period” to test ideas about professions and
industries—entertainment, nonprofit, technology, health—without making you
commit more than a few months.
Where are the internships?
Businesses and organizations sometimes have formal internship programs designed specifically for high school students. For the most part, these programs do not offer housing and are usually limited to students in the region.
Businesses and organizations sometimes have formal internship programs designed specifically for high school students. For the most part, these programs do not offer housing and are usually limited to students in the region.
For example, here a few of the many organizations making
internships available to high school students in the Washington, DC area:
- American Chemical Society
- Bank of America
- Department of Defense/Georgetown University
- Department of the Navy
- Environmental Protection Agency
- George Mason University
- J. Craig Venter Institute
- Library of Congress
- Montgomery County Police Department
- NASA
- National Air and Space Museum
- National Cancer Institute
- National Eye Institute
- National Gallery of Art
- National Genome Research Institute
- National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
- National Institute of Health
- National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
- National Institute on Aging
- National Institutes of Standards and Technology
- National Marine Sanctuaries
- National Museum of Crime & Punishment
- National Science Resources Center
- National Security Agency
- The Smithsonian Institution
- US Department of Agriculture
- US Department of State (Pathways Program)
For a great list of opportunities outside of the DC area,
check the webpage
maintained by the Rochester Institute of Technology for high school students.
Note that some of these are “salaried” positions and some
are strictly volunteer. They are all highly competitive, and some deadlines may
already be past.
Be aware that many organizations don’t advertise the
availability of summer internships. This is when you have to do a little
investigative work on the internet and through newspaper listings. Use your
networks—parents, relatives, family friends, teachers—anyone who may have
contacts in businesses or organizations of interest to you.
It’s not too early to begin thinking about next summer. An
internship, particularly for students at least 16 years of age, is a great way
to get to know yourself a little better while building skills that will make
you competitive for the future.
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