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Summer Internship: Emma Slonim '22

August 5, 2020
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Name: Emma Slonim
Class Year: 2022
Major: Growth and Structure of Cities
Hometown: New York City

Internship Organization:
Job Title: Intern
Endowed Internship Funding Award: Class of 1964 Internship Fund
Location: Online


What鈥檚 happening at your internship?

Currently at Greenfutures, we鈥檙e preparing for a three-day online workshop to develop how Philadelphia district school teachers educate around climate change and sustainability. Aside from that, I鈥檓 helping keep track of a registry for existing district school greenscapes/aquaponics, as well as a guide to help interested schools develop useful, educational greenscapes in their communities.

Why did you apply for this internship?

I applied for this internship because I鈥檓 extremely interested in green infrastructure, and was excited about seeing the avenues through which sustainability is incorporated into public institutions and structures鈥攅specially public schools. I鈥檝e also done a good deal of work with urban community gardens, so working with school green spaces seemed like a new extension of terrain I鈥檓 somewhat familiar with. 

What has been your favorite part of this internship?

My favorite part of this internship has definitely been the people I鈥檝e found myself working with. Of course, with current circumstances, it was (and still is) a little hard to follow some of the current goings on when my main mode of contact is Zoom calls, but all of my supervisors and coworkers have been extremely helpful and understanding in navigating my work. It鈥檚 also very exciting to think about the kinds of work that can be done when (if) the school green spaces and gardens can safely open again, and that the work I鈥檓 doing now might support future efforts.  

What is something you have learned from your internship that you didn鈥檛 expect?

Maybe this isn鈥檛 entirely unexpected, but I鈥檓 learning a lot about the frustrations that come with working in a large public system like the school district. It comes with a lot of obstacles and stagnation, which seems to be a common observation among people who have been working there for very long. What I鈥檝e learned from this is that these kinds of red-tape roadblocks are often inevitable, especially in a system with so many layers of organization, and such a large aspect of dealing with that is all in communication. Again, this is hard to do in a very layered system, but going through the process and finding people with similar goals, similar experiences, and other perspectives is extremely rewarding outright.


Visit the Summer 2020 Internships page to read more student stories.

Growth and Structure of Cities