Internships and Fellowships


The Brookings Institution

Brookings offers three types of internships – paid, academic for credit, and external sponsorship.  Internships are offered during the Summer, Fall and Spring semesters. Internships are usually 10-12 weeks and located in Washington DC.

Specifically for unpaid Internships, Brookings has partnered with several colleges, universities and external sponsors to provide students’ academic credit or funding to ensure there is a purposeful learning program structured into the experience.

Openings posted beginning the week of Oct 6th.

Rethink Priorities

Established in 2018, Rethink Priorities works to find tractable and neglected opportunities for impact across different cause areas, including animal welfare, global health and development, global catastrophic risks, artificial intelligence, and more. We address the world’s most pressing issues by empowering our team and partners to create meaningful, lasting change.

Georgia Tech Research Institute

Undergraduate and Graduate student internship/fellowship job board spanning research & innovation disciplines.

National Cancer Institute: Innovation Fellowship

TTC is responsible for negotiating agreements, promoting research partnerships with NCI scientists, and the patenting and licensing of NCI technologies. Along with supporting current TTC programs, Innovation Fellows learn to develop, test, and implement new ideas that have the potential to dramatically improve technology transfer processes. This experience prepares the Fellow for technology transfer, project/program management, and innovation-related positions within universities, industry, and the federal government.

Stanford BioDesign Innovation Fellowship

The Biodesign Innovation Fellowship is a 10-month experience that equips aspiring innovators with a proven, repeatable process to identify important health-related needs, invent novel health technologies to address them (including medical devices, diagnostics, digital health, drug delivery, and biotechnology solutions), and prepare to implement those products into patient care through start-up, corporations, or other channels. In addition, the Innovation Fellows become part of the Stanford Biodesign community, which is a life-long, worldwide network of innovators passionate about improving healthcare.