Summer Jobs for Youth in America’s Great Outdoors

· Opportunities
National   Wildlife Refuge System Bulletin
 
 

Summer Jobs for Youth in   America’s Great Outdoors

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which manages the country’s 556   national wildlife refuges, hopes to hire more than 2,300 young people this   summer, as it did in 2011. Apply now to work on a national wildlife refuge or   other public land. Start here to   learn about 2012 job opportunities for young people in the National Wildlife   Refuge System. Scroll down to “Student Employment Opportunities” to learn   about jobs through program partners such as the Student Conservation Association (SCA) and AmeriCorps. For other opportunities on   refuges, such as those through the Youth Conservation Corps (YCC), contact   your local refuge (using the “Find Your Refuge” feature on the Refuge System homepage). For young people, jobs on national wildlife refuges can stimulate learning   and personal growth. In some cases, the experience can even be life-changing,   say some with firsthand experience:
  • Kiara Ford, a        sophomore at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, was a summer 2011        Career Discovery Intern at Eastern Neck National        Wildlife Refuge in Maryland. Among the agriculture/business major’s        responsibilities: greeting visitors, building a trail and monitoring the        growth of marsh plants used by tundra swans— a measure of sea-level        rise. “I loved everything about [the experience],” she said. “It really        broadened my horizons.”
   
  • Lionel D. Grant, who        works as a park ranger at Crab        Orchard National Wildlife Refuge in Illinois while earning a masters        degree in forestry at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, first        crossed paths with the Service in 2008 as an SCA intern at Cape May National Wildlife        Refuge in New Jersey. He tagged horseshoe crabs, surveyed bats and        helped visitors. The experience got him thinking: “I really like working        with animals, I love working with people and I love being outside. With        a career with the Service, I can do all three.” He has pursued that        since, as a Student        Career Experience Program (SCEP) hire at Minnesota Valley National        Wildlife Refuge (summer 2010), Prairie Wetlands Learning Center in        Minnesota (summer 2011) and Crab Orchard Refuge (fall 2011-2012). “The Student        Temporary Employment Program (STEP) is a great way to get your foot        in the door,” he says. “SCEP is a great way to secure your        career.”
  Learn about other 2012 conservation jobs and internships with the   Department of the Interior (DOI) at http://www.youthgo.gov/   and http://www.youthgo.gov/employment-program/internships.   Read about DOI’s Youth   in the Great Outdoors program. Listings are for both permanent and   temporary jobs. DOI manages the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National   Park Service and other bureaus and offices. Youth job candidates are considered without regard to race, color,   religion, sex or national origin. Most internships include a stipend, and   others are volunteer positions.
 
Lionel D. Grant, a Student     Career Experience Program (SCEP) hire with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife     Service, at the Prairie Wetlands Learning Center in Minnesota where he     worked as a park ranger in summer 2011. (Photo by Russ Aguilar, Student     Conservation Association intern)
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