Position Summary: The Health Justice Intern will work as part of a 6-person Advocacy Team (including the Executive Director, YHEP Program Manager, 2 Training Associates, Communications Coordinator, and two additional interns) and 125 youth educators-organizers. Fall interns will contribute to four areas of work; 1) Train and engage youth through weekly training on mental health & wellness, sexual health, educational equity & school safety; 2) Develop curricula, training materials, and planning documents on these topics; 3) Conduct research on models, policies, and best practices in one program area involving school based mental health, reproductive justice, sexual violence, or other issues; and 4) Increase the visibility of youth as health experts, trainers, advocates and educators in DC through social media, video projects, and other communication. Because this internship focuses on youth work and engagement, the Health Justice Intern must be available to work with youth 2 nights a week from 3:30-6:45 to work with youth. YWP is currently operating on a hybrid schedule with two days of in-person office time and 4-12 hours of in-person youth training time (depending on the position). YWP’s core operating hours are 1030-645 (M-TH) and 10-430 on Friday. Youth trainings are conducted in person at libraries and the YWP office located at Dupont Circle.
YWP Mission: The Young Women's Project (YWP) builds the leadership and power of young people so that they can transform DC institutions to expand rights and opportunities for DC youth. YWP programs engage youth on three levels – as organizers (educating, engaging, mobilizing their peers, working as teams to make decisions), as advocates (presenting testimony to city Council, advocating with Agency leaders, developing and passing policies) and as system rebuilders (developing programs, creating new peer-led systems, integrating youth into decision making). Our work engages under-resourced BIPOC youth ages 14-21 from all DC Wards and most public high schools. The vast majority of your youth identify as women, 20% identify as LGBTQ. Last year, we hired and trained 242 young people from 25 DC public and charter schools. All YWP youth staff work 5-6 hours a week, develop a portfolio of products, build cross-neighborhood friendships, earn $10-17.95/hr and receive more than 100 hours of training & work management. Founded in 1994 as a Collective, YWP has a staff of 6 adults and 150 youth and a budget of $650,000. We are value-driven, anti-racist, feminist, grounded in youth development and partnership, and work every day to dismantle oppression and rebuild institutions.
YWP Program: YWP's work is organized into two program areas, driven by long-term-system-change-focused goals. The Youth Health Educator Program (YHEP) develops youth as sexual health advocates and educators who work to expand reproductive rights, reduce unintended pregnancy, distribute condoms, and connect youth to sexual health services. Recent projects include the 2023 Sexual Education Centers that provide sexual health information, resources, and services, conducting a Youth Sexual Health Survey taken by 650 youth across 24 DC High Schools (Results are here) and presenting 22 testimonies to DC Council. The Youth Justice Campaign (YJC) develops youth as advocates and organizers to advance a bold agenda and leverage their power through collective action. In response to the youth mental health crisis and the need for school based services, YJC youth started the Mental Health Campaign, aims to strengthen school-based mental health programming, connect youth to services, reduce stigma, expand access to mental health education, and advocate for stronger school based programming and funding. Since 2019, YJC Youth Advocates conducted 3 Annual Youth Mental Health Surveys with more than 2,000 students, presented 72 Performance Oversight and Budget Testimonies to DC Council, helped create the School-Based Behavioral Health Student Peer Educator Pilot (P2P Pilot) that codifies the essential role of peer educators into law, and created the Student On-line Support (SOS) Virtual Wellness Centers in 16 schools (and in Spanish). connect youth to services, reduce stigma, and expand access to mental health education.
Responsibilities: Responsibilities will include but are not limited to the following:
Youth Staff Training & Support Main objective: Increase the capacity of our youth staff and the ability to serve as trainers, advocates, educators on a range of issues.
Campaign Development & Research: Main objective: Working with youth leaders, develop and implement youth-led campaigns that address specific assist in the data collection, analysis, and policy research for YJC.
Communications & Social Media
Main objective: Increase the visibility of youth as health experts, trainers, advocates and educators in DC through social media, video projects, website management, and other avenues
Qualifications
Position Summary: The Health Justice Intern will work as part of a 6-person Advocacy Team (including the Executive Director, YHEP Program Manager, 2 Training Associates, Communications Coordinator, and two additional interns) and 125 youth educators-organizers. Fall interns will contribute to four areas of work; 1) Train and engage youth through weekly training on mental health & wellness, sexual health, educational equity & school safety; 2) Develop curricula, training materials, and planning documents on these topics; 3) Conduct research on models, policies, and best practices in one program area involving school based mental health, reproductive justice, sexual violence, or other issues; and 4) Increase the visibility of youth as health experts, trainers, advocates and educators in DC through social media, video projects, and other communication. Because this internship focuses on youth work and engagement, the Health Justice Intern must be…
To Apply: Please email a cover letter, resume, and 3 professional references to: Nadia Gold-Moritz
(nadia.gold-moritz@youngwomensproject.org). Please write “Health Intern” in the subject line. Applications will be accepted through 9.15.2025. However, we encourage applicants to send materials ASAP. Interviews will be granted on a rolling basis and the position will remain open until filled. The start date for this position is 9.29.25. The Young Women's Project is committed to affirmative action. See
www.youngwomensproject.org for more information.
To Apply: Please email a cover letter, resume, and 3 professional references to: Nadia Gold-Moritz
(nadia.gold-moritz@youngwomensproject.org). Please write “Health Intern” in the subject line. Applications will be accepted through 9.15.2025. However, we encourage applicants to send materials ASAP. Interviews will be granted on a rolling basis and the position will remain open until filled. The start date for this position is 9.29.25. The Young Women's Project is committed to affirmative action. See
www.youngwomensproject.org for more information.
To Apply: Please email a cover letter, resume, and four professional references to: Nadia Gold-Moritz (nadia.gold-moritz@youngwomensproject.org). Please write “Health Intern” in the subject line. Interviews will be granted on a rolling basis and the position will remain open until filled. Summer internships begin 6.1.25 The Young Women's Project is committed to affirmative action. See www.youngwomensproject.org and our 2023-24 Program Summary or link tree for more information.