Internships and Fellowships
Join a Network of Changemakers
As an undergrad, you can join a powerful network of changemakers and help shape the future our country. TFA can help you take your leadership to the next level through unique professional development opportunities.
Fellowships and Internships
We offer paid internships for undergraduates from all majors and colleges across the country. Each opportunity prepares you for a career of impact, while giving you the chance to explore social issues affecting our nation.

Ignite Fellowship
Make an immediate impact by leading small group learning experiences for students in a virtual setting with the support of veteran educators. As an Ignite Fellow, you’ll build meaningful relationships with youth, accelerate student learning, and gain skills that propel forward your own leadership. This is a virtual, part-time, paid opportunity.
Applications for the next cohort open on August 1.

Ambassadors
Ambassadors champion the Teach For America brand. They invest their community in the cause of educational equity, and they inspire others to explore TFA. Learn more by emailing your campus recruiter or Ambassadors@teachforamerica.org.
Why You Should Get Involved Now
Challenge Educational Inequity
- Make powerful change through hands-on experiences in your campus community or a TFA region
- Participate in a variety of opportunities that intersect with inequity, including working with students and brainstorming solutions alongside community members
Elevate Your Leadership
- Strengthen strategic thinking and communication skills
- Learn how to leverage your skills on your campus
Expand Your Personal Network
- Network with students from across the country and TFA’s diverse network of nearly 65,000 leaders
- Connect with influential leaders like Forbes’ 30 Under 30 honorees and social innovation CEOs

Additional Opportunities with TFA’s Partners
Breakthrough Collaborative offers high school and college students the opportunity to experience the realities of the classroom while planning and teaching their own academic courses to small groups of students from under-served areas. Repeatedly named a Princeton Review Top Ten Internship, Breakthrough Collaborative positions are available in 25 U.S. cities and Hong Kong.
Children’s Defense Fund Freedom Schools Program
The Children’s Defense Fund Freedom Schools Program trains college students to become servant leaders to provide care and nurturing for children. Using integrated reading curricula, interns serve as facilitators in the classroom and as leaders of parent workshops and community outreach activities.
CollegeSpring
CollegeSpring helps high school juniors from low-income backgrounds tackle the SAT and college admissions. As an undergraduate mentor, you’ll coach students through difficult concepts and plan lessons in math, reading, and writing. You’ll also serve as a near-peer mentor, helping students gain confidence. CollegeSpring offers paid mentorships in the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles.
Center for Black Educator Development
We seek talented Black men and women—from high schoolers and college students to career changers—to join us in rebuilding the national Black teacher pipeline to ensure more Black students reach their full potential. Explore our fellowship and education pathways.
Congressional Internship Program
The Congressional Internship Program is a Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute effort to expose young Latinos to the legislative process and strengthen leadership skills, ultimately promoting the presence of Latinos on Capitol Hill. Interns participate in a community service project and receive professional development. Internships are offered in the spring, summer, and fall and are paid 12-week programs.
Idealist.org
Idealist.org is an international organization that aims to help individuals act on good intentions through volunteering, community engagement, national and international service, social-impact careers, and further education. College students can sign up on the site to search for opportunities and learn more about nonprofit organizations around the country.
Latinos on Fast Track
A Hispanic Heritage Foundation program, Latinos on Fast Track (LOFT) was created to identify, prepare, place, and mentor emerging Latino professionals on a management track to bolster America’s workforce. Programs include internships, full-time positions, community service projects, and more. LOFT has provided hundreds of candidates to Fortune 500 companies.
Management Leadership for Tomorrow
Management Leadership for Tomorrow is a national nonprofit whose goal is to diversify senior business, entrepreneurial, and nonprofit leadership. Black, Latino, and Native American sophomores are encouraged to apply to the Career Prep program. Career Prep uses one-on-one coaching, exclusive exposure to leading companies, national networking with young professionals, and four all-inclusive leadership development workshops to help students realize their full career potential.
Practice Makes Perfect
Practice Makes Perfect (PMP) was conceived on the belief that all children have equal potential to compete intellectually in our society. Each year, PMP offers college students the opportunity to experience the challenges and realities of the classroom while planning and teaching low-income students from under-served areas over the course of an eight-week intensive summer internship.
Sponsors for Educational Opportunity
The Sponsors for Educational Opportunity program’s mission is to prepare young people of color to lead by example in their families, communities, and careers. The SEO Career Program has placed more than 5,000 black, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American students in competitive business, banking, law, technology, and philanthropic internships. SEO has been featured in The Princeton Review’s “The Best 109 Internships.”
Camp Ramapo
Camp Ramapo provides a traditional summer camp experience for children who have difficulty building and maintaining healthy relationships with peers and adults. Counselors are specifically selected based on experience, patience, and commitment to children with special needs. Counselors are emerging professionals in the fields of special education, social work, psychology, or related areas. This is a great opportunity to begin working in the field of special education.
Habitat for Humanity
Habitat for Humanity’s Collegiate Challenge is a year-round alternative break program, which offers groups of five or more students the opportunity to visit one of the 250 U.S. Habitat host affiliates. Students spend one week working with a local Habitat organization, a community, and partner families to increase the availability of decent, affordable housing in the area.
Jumpstart
Jumpstart recruits and trains motivated college students to work one-on-one with preschool children for a full school year. Corps members partner with children from low-income backgrounds to help them build skills crucial to school success. Responsibilities include participating in weekly sessions and planning meetings, serving in a preschool classroom during the regular school day, and communicating and strategizing with families.
Kids & Chemistry
As Kids & Chemistry volunteers, college students teach elementary and middle school students important science concepts while showing them that science is cool, interesting, and something that they can do. Kids & Chemistry is run through the American Chemical Society (ACS). ACS provides volunteers with free presentation tips and hands-on activity ideas.
Let’s Get Ready
Let’s Get Ready expands access to higher education by mobilizing, equipping, and empowering a movement of college students to help high school students get to college. Let’s Get Ready site directors and volunteers provide underserved students with the intensive SAT preparation, college advisement, and powerfully relevant role models and mentors they need to succeed.
Tau Beta Pi
Tau Beta Pi offers engineering majors the opportunity to volunteer and help K-12 students through the MindSET Program. This initiative gives members and volunteers the opportunity to increase the number of students who successfully complete high-level math and science courses prior to graduating from high school.