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Education

Science isn't boring, and other lessons from a teen internship

A teenage girl with long dark brown and medium skin tone holds a green barrel like device with a handle. There is a silver, glittery background behind her.
Anaya Camacho aims a blast of air toward the glittery curtain above.
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Mariana Dale
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For more than 30 years, the California Science Center has worked to build a pathway for local teens to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics — and at the very least, show them science isn’t boring.

Listen 3:46
Teen internships pave a pathway to careers — and belonging — in science

The paid Community Teen Intern program is open to students who live or attend school near the center’s Exposition Park campus, and starting their sophomore year of high school.

“A lot of our students from these communities are from under-resourced communities, and so we want to break down barriers and give them access to science,” said Community Program Manager Rosemary Garista.

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Black, Latino and women workers have long been underrepresented in science, tech, engineering and math-related jobs.

The pandemic may have further damaged the educational pipeline to these jobs. Research from the Public Policy Institute of California found the COVID-19 pandemic “derailed science education” because few schools prioritized the subject, provided additional support for students and requested help from county education agencies.

Two teenage girls with medium skin tone and long brown hair stand in front of bamboo plants. Their gray shirts read "Science learning for all" in multi-color letters and they wear nametags that read Ingryd and Anaya.
Community teen interns Ingryd Hernandez (left) and Anaya Camacho. Both say the experience has changed their career aspirations. Hernandez wants to study radiology and Camacho is interested in dermatology.
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LAist
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Finding a sense of belonging in science

Huntington Park High School senior Ingryd Hernandez had never visited the Science Center before someone came to her class to talk about the internship.

“ There were so many, like, other smarter kids than me. I was like ‘Oh my god, I do not belong here,’” Hernandez remembered thinking after she found out her internship application was accepted. “They… made me feel so welcomed and it made me calm down and be like, ‘I did deserve to be here because… they might have seen something that I didn't see in me.’”

Since she started in fall 2022, Hernandez has researched plant growth, air and space, and worked at the center’s summer camp.

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Participate in the community teen intern program
  • Requirements:

    • High school student between grades 10-12
    • Live or go to school within a 3 mile radius of the California Science Center
    • Maintain a 2.0 GPA
    • Legally eligible to work in the U.S. 

    Compensation: $17.28 an hour

The interns also meet with center staff, from the CEO to the marine life veterinarians.

“Seeing the diversity of people that are here, too, with different, like, backgrounds and wanting to go into different fields,” Hernandez said. “It's just mind-opening.”

A girl with dark brown hair in braided pig tails and a light blue shirt reaches toward an inflatable blue globe that is floating above a gray table. There is another girl with her dark blonde hair tied back in a ponytail.
California Science Center summer campers float various objects in the streams of air rising from a Bernoulli table.
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Mariana Dale
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Finding a second home

Some students stick around even after graduation.

Program alumna Julissan Gonzalez is studying mechanical engineering and astronomy at Santa Monica College and mentors other students in STEM. She said working at the Science Center helped her overcome imposter syndrome, the feeling that she didn’t belong in the field.

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A young woman with medium skin tone and dark brown hair smiles and stands in front of a classroom with white chairs. Her nametag reads Julissan.
Julissan Gonzalez joined a program to mentor other STEM students at Santa Monica College. She plans to go to grad school and hopes to one day work at NASA.
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Mariana Dale
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“That's where I started to build my networking, talking to others,” Gonzalez said. “That’s actually where my journey started.”

Gonzalez now works part-time in the center’s education department.

“ I could say this very proudly, I consider the Science Center as a second home,” Gonzalez said.

On an August day during the center’s summer camp, Anaya Camacho explained to dozens of elementary school students how pounding their fists into the bouncy drum-like surface of an air cannon rippled the sequined curtain hanging above them.

“ When I first tried it, I was in awe myself,” Camacho said. “Like, ‘Wow, I can really see the force of the air hitting against it.’”

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Camacho said her internship experience has made her feel more confident in school.

“ I am not afraid to share my knowledge,” Camacho said. “I will help anybody that's confused, and I feel like this program has also taught me how to break down science into simpler terms to make it easier for somebody to understand.”

The community teen interns usually sign on for a year, but can extend for up to three. Camacho is now in her second year.

“I really, like, have never been in, like, such a positive place,” Camacho said. “At school, you don't really look forward to it. But here, it's my Saturday morning. I wake up kind of tired, but I can't wait to go to work on Saturday.”

Listen 0:44
How an LA museum is building career pathways for teenagers
High school senior Ingryd Hernandez says working at the California Science Center changed her mind about science.

Science Center youth programs

Other programs for youth at the California Science Center
  • Summer Camp

    • Age range: pre-K to 8th grade
    • Dates: June to August 2025
    • Cost: Prices to be determined, scholarships available
    • Enrollment: Opens February 2025
  • Field trips 

    • Age range: kindergarten through 8th grade. Maximum of 28 students per session. 
    • Cost: $415 per session. Reservations required at least two weeks in advance. 
    • There are also free virtual field trip materials (videos, activity guides, etc.)
  • Homeschool days 

    • Various days in 2025 where homeschool students can explore the exhibits, classes and hands-on activities
    • Age range: 5- to 13-years-old
    • Cost: $50 non-members, $45 members — pre-registration required

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