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ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ students on campus

Internships and Opportunities

Things to Consider:

Environmental Studies (ENVR) students can gain valuable experience in the field—and fulfill the Environmental Experiences component of the major—through internships. Internships provide an opportunity to learn in a work setting. A time commitment of 45 hours of on-site work per credit hour is required. Therefore, a three-credit internship typically requires supervised work of approximately 10-12 hours a week for 14 weeks during a regular semester, or 135 hours of work in a summer or winter term. Students may sign up for three, four, five or even six credits, if it fits their schedules.

An internship is not the same as a research project or a directed study – an internship must involve student placement with a supervisor in a work setting, learning new material and skills. In the past few years, ENVR students have interned at organizations as diverse as the Colorado Sierra Club, National Park Service, National Forest Service, Maryland Coastal Bays Program, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Chesapeake Bay Foundation, MD Department of the Environment, Horn Point Laboratories, Chesapeake Bay Trust, Sussex County Preservation Office, Montgomery County Department of the Environment, Old Growth Forest Network, Adrenaline High (an eco-tourism company), Bienvenidos a Delmarva (an immigrant outreach consortium), and the ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ Zoological Park, among others. ENVR students have also taught environmental education in a Peruvian orphanage, worked at environmental education camps, and interned on several organic farms.

Students can set up internships in the ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ area during the fall or spring, or literally anywhere in the world during the summer. Internships are student-generated - with the assistance of Environmental Studies faculty, ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ Career Services staff, and a little research, there are a myriad of possibilities in addition to the organizations mentioned above.

To create an internship,

  1. Think. Internships can provide many benefits—an experiential learning opportunity, a way to explore possible jobs, a way to fill in holes in your own learning, a way to develop a network of like-minded people. Consider your own interests: What are you passionate about? What piques your interest? What type of job do you think you’d like to have? What area of learning would you like to learn more about?
  2. Search. We recommend a number of avenues:
    • Keep your eye out for (mostly) weekly internship/volunteer/ENVR news emails that we sends out to majors and minors
    • Talk to your ENVR Studies professors
    • If you have specific organizations in mind, contact them directly and see what you can set up.
    • Contact ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ Career Services
  3. Define/plan. Talk with the sponsoring organization and ENVR's Project Specialist to work out a plan that spells out hours, expectations, and potential final products. An internship has to involve educationally productive work – not just filing papers, stuffing envelopes, or mopping floors, for instance. To help get you started, Career Services provides general ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ guidelines for internships.
  4. Commit.

Internships Close to ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½/Better Suited for Fall and Spring

Organic Farm Internships

Summer Appropriate Internships