• About
    • This Site & ENVS
    • ENVS Site Navigation
  • Communications
    • Communications Archives
      • ENVS Announcements Archive
      • ENVS Alum Email Archive
      • ENVX Newsletter Archive
    • Contact ENVS/DS SAAB Tutors
    • Instagram Feed
    • Make an Appointment
    • Nominate Your Post/Project/Site
    • Opportunities Posts
    • Poster Design
    • Share/Read/Display DS Site Post RSS Feeds
  • Major/Minor Info
    • The ENVS Major & Minor
    • ENVS Core Courses
    • ENVS 244/295/499
    • Future Courses
    • Your Student Record
    • Your Concentration
    • Your Projects
    • Your Senior Capstone
    • Related PSU/PCC Courses
  • Course Resources
    • Doing Situated Research
      • Situated Research Details
    • ENVS Course & Project Portfolio Templates
      • Course Portfolio Template
      • Project Portfolio Template
    • ENVS Records: Scoring Rubrics
    • Interdisciplinarity and Concept Mapping
    • Mapping Actors & Processes
    • Models of Environmental Communication
    • New York Times Environment Articles
    • Resources for ENVS Topics
      • ENVS Topics Glossary
    • Share Spatial Data
    • Style Reminders for ENVS Students
    • Styling Citations via Chicago Author-Date
  • Databases
    • About Student Databases
    • ENVS Students
    • ENVS Concentrations
    • Senior Capstones
    • Student Projects
    • Map of All Projects
  • Other Sites
    • ENVS LC Site ➤
      • Events
      • News
      • Symposium
    • Bridges (ENVS 295)
    • DS Multisite Home ➤
      • DS Help Site
      • DS Training Site
    • EcoTypes Site
    • Environmental Action LLC Site
    • ENVS 160 SP18 (Login Only)
    • ENVS Facebook Page
    • ENVX Site
    • Overseas Site

ENVS Program

Lewis & Clark Environmental Studies

March 2, 2015 5:11 pm

Paid Internships at the National Center for Science Education

Science Education and Activism Interns

The National Center for Science Education is seeking one part-time and one-full time summer interns to work on science education activism, with a particular focus on climate change education. These are temporary positions based in Oakland, CA.

About the National Center for Science Education

The National Center for Science Education (NCSE) is a not-for-profit organization that defends and promotes the teaching of science in public schools. We provide information, resources, and support related to areas of science that are often attacked on social or political grounds—such as climate change and evolution. Our mission is to ensure that these topics are presented in a scientific, engaging, and accurate manner in the classroom.

Science education in America is under attack and science teachers are at the forefront of this challenge. There are many topics in the sciences that are scientifically sound, but politically and socially controversial, leaving educators at risk of being challenged anytime they try to address these issues. The most prevalent challenges appear when teachers attempt to teach climate change and evolution, but other issues have arisen around genetically modified foods, and the Big Bang. It is NCSE’s position that socially controversial science topics must be taught appropriately in the science classroom, and we work with educators to ensure that they are supported to do this.

Summer Internships

We are looking for two interns (one full-time and one part-time) for three months (June-August 2015) to help with NCSE’s launch of a new teacher engagement campaign to support and defend educators as they teach these topics, with a particular focus on climate change education. This is a unique opportunity for someone with a science background to learn about science advocacy to support one of the most important groups: science teachers.

The selected candidate will receive training in:

  • Climate change science and education
  • Common denial arguments and tactics
  • Writing for a public and educational audience
  • Developing a large scale, national campaign to engage educators
  • Using social media and web technologies to connect with educators
  • Helping to defend and support science educators who teach these topics

The interns will work at the NCSE headquarters located in Oakland, CA.

Qualifications:

  • Must have a basic understanding of and interest in science, science education, and science advocacy.
  • Good writing and computing skills are required.
  • Timeliness and follow-through are a must.
  • Preference for background or degree in Biology, Earth Science, or Environmental Sciences.
  • This is an ideal position for a recent graduate, but we will review all applicants equally.

Salary and benefits:

There are two paid positions, one full-time (40 hours a week) and one part-time (16 hours a week) at the NCSE offices in Oakland. The internship mentor will meet with each intern on a weekly basis, and be present while the interns are working. The internship will last for the entire summer: June–August. Due to the short nature of the internship, there will not be an opportunity for the intern to take a vacation during this time, though we do have July 4 off. The full-time position pays $6,000 for the summer; the part-time position pays $2,000. No benefits are associated with either position. NCSE is an equal-opportunity employer.

To apply:

Please specify if you are applying for the full- or part-time position. Include a cover letter, three references, and a résumé. E-mail all three to Minda Berbeco PhD, Programs and Policy Director: berbeco@ncse.com. Applications must be received by April 1, 2015. Link to position: http://ncse.com/about/jobs#interns

—

Minda Berbeco, PhD
Programs and Policy Director
National Center for Science Education
420 40th Street, Suite 2
Oakland, CA 94609-2509
Phone: 510.601.7203 or 800-290-6006
Fax: 510-601-7204
http://ncse.com/climate
http://ncse.com/blog
Tweeting as @MindaBerbeco
Region 2 Director
California Science Teacher Association
http://www.cascience.org/
Tweeting at @cascience

Related

Filed Under: Internship Opportunities

Opportunities Post Categories

  • Opportunities (520)
    • Education Opportunities (205)
    • Funding Opportunities (54)
    • Internship Opportunities (91)
    • Job Opportunities (114)
    • Off-campus (245)
    • On-campus (99)
    • Study Abroad Opportunities (25)
    • Volunteer Opportunities (53)
  • Post (23)

Recent ENVS Posts

Who is she?: Gaia and other Big Words
16th May 18By KT Kelly
Prioritization of Conservation: Intersections of the Peruvian Amazon and the Andean Mountain Range
8th May 18By Jon Hosch
Capstone 3
5th May 18By Alannah Balfour
Capstone #2
5th May 18By Alannah Balfour
Capstone #1
5th May 18By Alannah Balfour
Kokuritsukouen: The Past and Future of Japan’s National Parks
4th May 18By Rachel Aragaki
Investigating Climate Change: Understanding the Effects of Increasing Sea Surface Temperature (SST) on Arctic Fish Populations
3rd May 18By Marissa Weileder
Analyzing Anthropogenic Influence: A Look into How Humans Have Shaped the Perceptions of Climate Change
3rd May 18By Marissa Weileder
Freshwater & Fish: A Case Study of the Effects of Melting Permafrost on Arctic Freshwater Species
3rd May 18By Marissa Weileder
If You Die in the Game, You Die in Real Life: Video Game Environments and Disaster Preparedness
3rd May 18By Rachel Aragaki
Knickpoint Retreat and Stream Channel Morphology in the Columbia River Gorge
3rd May 18By Shawn Bolker
Barriers to Justice: Environmental Litigation in Hawaii
3rd May 18By Kassie Kometani
Satoyama Services: Historical versus Modern Roles of Japan’s Hybridized Landscapes
3rd May 18By Rachel Aragaki
Development Indicators for Fostering Development in Cambodia
3rd May 18By Nick Sievers
Building Flood Resilience in Urban Australia
3rd May 18By Curtis Hall
Choosing Direct Trade: Combating Vulnerability of Smallholding Coffee Farmers
3rd May 18By Evan Howell
Home-Based Water Recycling in Urban Australia
3rd May 18By Curtis Hall
The Sinking of Christchurch: Increased Flood Vulnerability after the 2011 Christchurch Earthquake
3rd May 18By Curtis Hall
Implications of a Growing Middle Class and Increased Consumption Patterns in India
3rd May 18By Nick Sievers
Alleviating Marginalization with Your Wallet: Investigating Fair Trade Coffee Consumer Behavior in Portland, Oregon
3rd May 18By Evan Howell
Religious Pilgrimage and Tourism on Mt. Fuji, Japan
3rd May 18By Shawn Bolker
Situating National Environmental Policies Within a Global Market (Proposal 3)
3rd May 18By Jonas Miller-Stockie
Using Trees to Alleviate the Coffee Crisis: Investigating Farmers’ Knowledge of Ecosystem Services in Veracruz, Mexico
3rd May 18By Evan Howell
Energy Security in South Korea: Methods of Reducing Foreign Fossil-Fuel Dependency
3rd May 18By Nick Sievers
Capstone Proposal #3: The Role Of Environmental Lobbying Firms Towards Progress In Environmental Policy In the U.S.
3rd May 18By Sabrina Cerquera
How the American People Conserve Energy: Can they Do Better?
3rd May 18By Jack Kamysz
Mediation of Climate Change in the U.S.
3rd May 18By Jack Kamysz
Assessing the Impacts of Waterfall Tourism in the Columbia River Gorge
3rd May 18By Shawn Bolker
Violence in Colombia: Illegal Gold Mining Leaves Indigenous Colombians at Risk
3rd May 18By Grace Boyd
The Interactions between hard and soft law in the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
3rd May 18By Jack Kamysz

Recent Opportunity Posts

Eco Practicum Catskills – application deadline extension

Eco Practicum Catskills – application deadline extension

May 2, 2018

Actionable Climate Science Skills-Building Webinar Series

Actionable Climate Science Skills-Building Webinar Series

April 26, 2018

Lewis and Clark Summer Geospatial Project Assistant Student Position

Lewis and Clark Summer Geospatial Project Assistant Student Position

April 26, 2018

More Opportunity Posts

Digital Scholarship Multisite © 2018 · Lewis & Clark College · Environmental Studies Program · Log in