NASA will host a variety of events and interactive opportunities celebrating the agencyโ€™s interns and their contributions to its missions in recognition of National Intern Day, held this year on Thursday, July 29.

Through social media takeovers and question-and-answer sessions, podcast episodes, and more, NASA is offering a behind-the-scenes look at how interns participate in agency projects and the best routes to a NASA internship. Current interns, mentors, and internship coordinators from across the agency will share their experiences and advice for those interested in pursuing a career in STEM.

Via NASAโ€™s internship program, interns gain hands-on experience in agency missions from Earth science research to planetary missions to the Artemis Moon missions, which will land the first woman and first person of color on the lunar surface.

โ€œBehind every successful NASA mission, there are interns making meaningful contributions. Our interns today truly are the Artemis Generation,โ€ said Mike Kincaid, associate administrator forย STEM Engagementย at NASA. โ€œTheyโ€™re helping us to reach new heights and to send humans back to the Moon and on to Mars.โ€

Internships help prepare students to become part of the future workforce for the nation and at NASA, which the Partnership for Public Service recently named the โ€œBest Place to Work in the Federal Governmentโ€ for the ninth year in a row. There are many ways students canย get involved with NASA, includingย Artemis Student Challenges,ย NASAโ€™s App Development Challenge, and building tools to be tested in the astronaut training facility through theย Micro-g Neutral Buoyancy Experiment Design Teams (Micro-G-NeXT) challenges. For students to connect to NASA regionally, theย National Space Grant and Fellowship Projectย has a national network of 52 consortia with more than 1,000 affiliated colleges and universities across the country.

NASAย intern Sarah Adewumiย offered advice for students currently considering applying for internships. โ€œDefinitely go for it,โ€ said Adewumi, a four-time NASA intern currently working in project management and cybersecurity at the agencyโ€™s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. โ€œBeing a NASA intern is one of my favorite experiences and truly has changed my life forever.โ€

The number of interns working at NASA has steadily increased as virtual internships opened the door for students who otherwise may have been unable to participate. The agency welcomed 2,495 interns in 2020 and is on track to exceed that number in 2021. During the summer 2021 term, 1,837 virtual interns worked remotely for NASA, a 14% increase over the previous summer. This yearโ€™s class of summer interns represented every state in the country, as well as Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia.

โ€œIโ€™m really grateful for the opportunity to take part in a virtual internship,โ€ said Timothy Denego, a student at Haskell Indian Nations Universityย who currently is interning with Goddard through NASAโ€™sย Minority University Research and Education Project for American Indian and Alaska Native STEM Engagementย activity. โ€œItโ€™s meant a lot to me to be able to stay with my community while handling my duties as an intern and contributing to NASAโ€™s mission. And since Iโ€™ve been working from home, Iโ€™ve been able to share the work Iโ€™m doing with family and friends and talk to younger family members about what they can do if they want to pursue a NASA internship someday.โ€

Former NASA interns have gone on to becomeย astronauts, engineers, and more, building careers on the foundations of their earliest experiences at the agency.

The full listing of NASAโ€™s National Intern Day activities is as follows (all times Eastern):

Wednesday, July 28

1:15 to 1:45 p.m. โ€“ U.S. Federal Agencies Internships Downlink

Students participating in internships at NASA and four otherย federal agencies in a downlinkย with NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Akihiko Hoshide aboard the International Space Station.

Thursday, July 29

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.ย โ€“ Instagram story takeover and Twitter threads

Interns from across NASA will be joined by Abel Morelos, an internship coordinator, to participate in anย Instagramย story takeover, while an Instagram carousel post will highlight 10 interns from several NASA centers.

Onย Twitter, interns will post threads sharing their experiences with NASA.

3 to 3:30 p.m. โ€“ NASA Science Live

Agency interns and internships will be the focus of NASA Science Live, a monthly show that connects viewers directly with agency experts. Use #AskNASA to ask questions about the NASA internship experience and learn about upcoming student opportunities. Watch the episode live at:

https://www.nasa.gov/nasasciencelive

4 to 5 p.m. โ€“ Reddit Ask Me Anything

Redditors are invited to ask NASA interns about their own stories and experiences and get advice and application tips from intern coordinators. Bring your questions to the โ€œAsk Me Anythingโ€!

Houston We Have a Podcast: How to Be a Successful Intern at NASA

Interns Jaden Chambers from Kennedy and Leah Davis from NASAโ€™s Johnson Space Center in Houston will join mentor Kelly Smith in this episode examining the highly effective habits of successful interns. This episode will be available at:

https://www.nasa.gov/johnson/HWHAP

For more, listen to the collection of intern takeovers forย Houston We Have a Podcast.

The Invisible Network Podcast: 2021 Interns

Each year, NASA’s Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Internship Project welcomes students of all levels to develop projects of real benefit to the agency while earning real world experience in their fields. This episode of The Invisible Network podcast will speak with members of 2021’s intern cohort at three different NASA centers. This episode will be available at:

https://www.nasa.gov/invisible

Small Steps, Giant Leaps Podcast: Intern Takeover

Interns take over the Small Steps, Giant Leaps, podcast from NASAโ€™s Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership Knowledge Services. The episode will be available at:

https://www.nasa.gov/podcasts/small-steps-giant-leaps

Friday, July 30

Launch Viewing Opportunity for NASA Interns

Agency interns will attendย NASAโ€™s Boeing Orbital Flight Test-2 launchย to the International Space Station from Kennedy and tour the centerโ€™s iconic facilities. A behind-the-scenes look at their activities at the Florida spaceport will be shared viaย Instagram stories. The space station remains the springboard to NASA’s next great leap in space exploration, including future missions to the Moon and eventually to Mars. Students and educators are encouraged to tune in via NASA Television, theย NASA app, and the agencyโ€™sย websiteto watch launch and prelaunch coverage.

11 a.m. โ€“ Gravity Assist Podcast with NASAโ€™s Chief Scientist

Recent NASA intern with NASAโ€™s Science Mission Directorate Felicia Ragucci dives into the history of the Neutral Buoyancy Simulator, a former training site for astronauts at the agencyโ€™s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. NASA Chief Scientist Jim Green, who was once a diver there, will share his memories on this special episode of Gravity Assist.

To learn how students can get involved with NASA and its missions at any grade level, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/stem

NASA will begin accepting applications for spring 2022 internships on Oct. 1, 2021. To learn more about NASA internships, or to apply, visit:

http://intern.nasa.gov

Follow NASA Internships onย Instagram,ย Twitterย andย Facebook.