Concussion Education and Advocacy Internship Program
Apply to our internship program
The application cycle for our Summer 2024 Education & Advocacy Internship is now closed.
About our internship program
Our Concussion Education & Advocacy Internship Program is an internationally recognized remote internship that trains students from colleges and universities across the US and Canada. Our program is the only undergraduate professional development program in mild brain injury; we gave a presentation about our novel service-learning program at the 2021 Virtual World Congress on Brain Injury.
The summer internship program runs 8 weeks, with 240 hours of service-learning experience, and the winter program runs 3 weeks, with 90 hours of service-learning experience. Each year, we educate up to 30 interns from as many as 10 institutions, including small liberal arts colleges and large public universities. We recruit a diverse group of undergraduates for each cohort and prioritize creating an equitable, inclusive working environment with the interns.
Interns come to us to help them prepare for careers in research, healthcare, and public health, and they leave as informed concussion advocates. We engender their growth in research literacy, science writing and communication, professionalism, and advocacy through our holistic, unique, and in-depth program structure.
We have created a unique, multi-media concussion curriculum that interns study daily. We host weekly guided discussions and a twice-weekly Expert Guest Speaker Series. We pair our interns with professional mentors, who oversee the interns' work to create and update accessible, evidence-based, patient-facing resources for our website and newsletter to benefit concussion patients, clinicians, and advocates. The professionals who volunteer their time to be mentors or guest speakers are leading experts in the field.
These resources are read by 12,000 monthly visitors and 2,800 newsletter subscribers, educating healthcare providers and patients in up-to-date concussion care. Patients use these resources to learn about their injury, discover and understand treatment options, and find providers to help them.
One project for our Winter 2023 internship cohort was to interview alums from earlier internship cohorts to learn how their internship experience has impacted their lives going forward. Click through to see these blog posts, each of which includes a video of the interview and a written transcript.
Our primary goal is to educate the next generation of researchers, healthcare providers, and public health professionals. Medical schools, for example, dedicate approximately one hour to concussion education over four years, so our internship graduates will be far ahead of their graduate student cohorts.
Another goal is that our undergraduate interns return to their campuses as informed advocates for proper concussion care, whether that be with fellow athletes on college teams or friends who get concussions from accidents such as falls or auto accidents. Most colleges lack an integrated policy for concussion management of their students, particularly non-athletes, so it is beneficial for the college health and safety environment to have students on campus who are educated about concussion management. Many of our graduates have reported that they have also provided information to non-college-related friends and family when they have sustained a concussion.
A third goal is to give the undergraduates a positive experience of a professional remote work environment, specifically focusing on developing camaraderie, enjoyment, and respect in remote environments that have become ubiquitous in the past several years but are often dissatisfying and alienating. In addition, we provide mentorship that strengthens interns’ ability to manage their time, work efficiently, and take responsibility for projects in a remote environment with limited supervision.
Our final goal is to support our interns in advancing their careers. We provide letters of reference to intern alums as they apply for other internships and fellowships during their college years and to professional positions when they graduate. We have also provided letters of reference for intern alums’ medical school applications.
Internship Alum Interviews
Aamy Woldesenbet, an internship alum, said, "We were exposed to a bunch of literature and experiences as well, anecdotes from people who gave panels as well as fellow interns. I realized concussion has had a huge impact on people's lives." His interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Zachary Napora, an internship alum, said, "I had a long-term concussion, was looking for answers, and just stumbled upon the website and got a lot of help from Concussion Alliance. When I recovered, I went back on the website, saw they had an internship program and applied from there.” His interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Arthur Onwumere, an internship alum, said, "It opened a lot of doors for me in terms of internships later on." His interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Andy Pham, an internship alum, said, "I think it was a great foundational step in moving forward as a future public health leader.” His interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Amanda Cheney Zitting, an internship alum, said, "The highlights were gaining a better knowledge and feeling more confident in my skill set, as well as my knowledge around concussion and mental health." Her interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Kira Kunzman, a two-time intern alum, said, "It was the first internship that I really felt comfortable expressing my opinion. A lot of internships don't really give you the opportunity to create your own materials and add to the organization in a meaningful way." Her interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Caroline Saksena, an internship alum, said, "I think what was really valuable for my internship experience was when they had guest speakers come in.” Her interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Melissa Brown, an internship alum, said, " If people are trying to get into the internship, do the internship. That's my 2 cents." Her interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Padmini Konidena, an internship alum, said, "I think the mission of Concussion Alliance is really great, just spreading knowledge to people who may not know as much about concussion." Her interview was one in a series about how Concussion Alliance impacted interns' lives going forward.
Summer 2024 Interns
Carleton College ‘26
Summer 2024 Science Writer Intern
December 2023 Organizational Historian Intern
Carleton College ‘25
Summer 2024 Communications & Media Intern
Summer 2023 Science Writer Intern
College of Wooster ‘24
Summer 2024 Science & Technical Writing Mentor
Summer 2023 Science Writer Intern
2023 Guest Speakers
December 2023 Interns
Carleton College ‘26
Summer 2024 Science Writer Intern
December 2023 Organizational Historian Intern
Summer 2023 Interns
Carleton College ‘25
Summer 2024 Communications & Media Intern
Summer 2023 Science Writer Intern
College of Wooster ‘24
Summer 2024 Science & Technical Writing Mentor
Summer 2023 Science Writer Intern
December 2022 Interns
2022 Expert Guest Speakers
Summer 2022 Interns
Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine
Summer 2022 Science & Technical Writing Mentor Intern
Winter 2021 Interns
Applied Health Research and Evaluation PhD program, Clemson University
Volunteer, Winter 2021 Science Writing and Research Mentor Intern