
A nonpartisan, student-led affiliate of the Haas Center for Public Service
EPIC: National Park Service - Yosemite National Park, California
Job Title: Interpretive Education Intern
Department/Team: Tuolumne Meadows Interpretive Team at the National Park Service
Location: In-person at Yosemite National Park, Tuolumne Meadows (housing provided, see Logistics section for details)
Duration: 40 hours per week for ten weeks over the summer
Reports to: Karen Amstutz, Supervisory Park Ranger Naturalist
Areas of Interest: Natural history, poetry, nature writing, immersion in wilderness, community outreach and education
*Please include two references and their contact information with your cover letter
Summer 2023 Fellows:
Summer 2024 Fellows:
Summer 2025 Fellows:
Tesfa Madhin
Office Description
The National Park Service Organic Act is a federal law that established the National Park Service (NPS) in 1916. The act's mission is to conserve the scenery, wildlife, and natural and historic objects of the parks, and to provide for their enjoyment in a way that leaves them unimpaired for future generations.
About Yosemite National Park, Tuolumne Meadows:
This internship will be in-person at Yosemite National Park, Tuolumne Meadows, one of the largest high-elevation meadows in the Sierra Nevada at 8,600 feet, with the Tuolumne River meandering quietly through its meadow channel against a backdrop of rugged mountain peaks and glacially carved domes.
Tuolumne Meadows embodies the high-country of the Sierra Nevada, with its broad sub-alpine meadows and granite domes and peaks. The Tuolumne River, Lyell Fork, and Dana Fork flow through the vast, colorful meadows bursting with seasonal wildflowers. The meadows are surrounded by stands of western white pine, mountain hemlock, and lodgepole pine.
Tuolumne Meadows is accessible due to the park roadway that crosses the southern edge of the meadow. From this point all the way to the south of Mt. Whitney, no other roads cross the High Sierra. Thus, this roadway marks the northern end of the largest contiguous roadless wilderness in the continental United States.
Within Tuolumne Meadows, visitors see the Tuolumne River meandering quietly through its meadow channel and cascading over the granite river bottom against a backdrop of rugged mountain peaks and glacially carved domes. The river, declared by Congress a Wild and Scenic River in 1984, originates in the high country near the east side of the park.
Description of the Work
The intern will work alongside the park ranger naturalist staff at the visitor center desk offering answers to questions, guidance and trip planning for visitors to Yosemite National Park. Other duties will include roving popular trails and talking with visitors on trails, helping with projects like setting up for programs at Parsons Memorial Lodge, helping write up descriptive summaries of Parsons programs, creating a "pop-up" program to be offered to visitors and developing and offering a 15-minute interpretive talk about Tuolumne Meadows for visitors. The intern will have training and coaching throughout the season.
The intern will be an integral part of the Park Ranger Naturalist team, living and working in community and doing work that enables the programs to reach visitors to the park. The team consists of the supervisor, park ranger staff of 7-10 rangers, and other volunteers (2-4). This is an in-person internship with 50% field work and 50% indoor/office work. The intern will work a “flex” schedule with a bi-weekly 3-day weekend.
List of Projects/Activities:
Interact professionally with the public at busy visitor center front desk
Rove the campground, scenic viewpoints and trails in uniform, providing information and insights to visitors
Help with relevant projects as needed
Attend most Parsons Memorial Lodge Summer Series programs, take notes and write 1-page summary essays for each program.
Help with Parsons programming
Create and present a 15 minute interpretive talk
Research, develop and present longer walks and talks if and when ready
Develop and present a training for a staff meeting, on topic of choice
Benefits:
Live and work in Tuolumne Meadows
Training in interpretive skills, public speaking and natural history and related topics
Observe and experience firsthand the work of interpretive park rangers
Help accomplish the National Park Service mission (Organic Act of 1916)
Pursue natural and cultural history education/experience and passions
Gain interpretive skills
Expand abilities and knowledge
Find a new work/life balance
Be an intrinsic member of the Tuolumne interpretive team
Meet and help visitors from around the world
Desired Skills
Flexibility! Being adaptable is imperative in this role.
Excellent communication skills
Ability to work independently
Willingness to help as needed and work as a team member
Desire to learn to give high quality interpretive programs
Open to coaching
A passion for natural and cultural history
Open to community living and working
The successful intern will also be required to complete a background investigation in order to have access to the program’s government-networked computers
First aid certification and a driver's license are also required
Two years of college education (Junior, Senior, Co-term are preferred)
Logistics:
EPIC fellows are required to work full-time (40 hours per week) for 10 weeks over the summer, and will receive a stipend of $8,000 - $9,500, depending on financial need. This stipend is intended to help cover living and transportation expenses during the fellowship, which the student is expected to arrange and coordinate.
Ideal start date is June 22, 2026.
Simple housing accommodations (a tent cabin or campsite shared with one other staff member) is provided at no cost to the intern.
Transportation: It would be very helpful for the intern to have a car. It is 30 minutes to the nearest grocery store and 30 to 50 minutes from the nearest towns.
You will be asked to include two references and their contact information with your application.