Job opening: PATHWAYS STUDENT INTERN (Law Clerk)
Salary: $53 105 - 84 441 per year
Published at: Jan 09 2024
Employment Type: Multiple Schedules
To qualify for this Law Student Internship under the DOT Pathways Internship Program, you MUST be a continuing Law Student enrolled or accepted for enrollment for the current/upcoming semesters for the duration of the internship as a condition of employment, taking at least a half-time course load. You will be required to provide documentation to support eligibility. Students will be employed throughout the academic year and can work full time in the summer. This is NOT a summer only position.
Duties
The Pathways Student Intern (Law Clerk) will:
Requirements
- You must be in Law Student Status for the full internship.
- You must be a U.S. Citizen and meet the requirements of the program.
- You must be at least 16 years of age.
- Required documents must be submitted by the closing date.
- Submit application and resume online by 11:59 PM EST on the closing date.
Qualifications
Applicants must meet all qualification requirements by the start of the internship. Note that if you are graduating at the end of this current semester, and not continuing your education, you are not eligible for this internship. You must be enrolled as a Law student while employed as an intern.
Law Student Status: An eligible student is an individual who is enrolled in law school pursuing a Juris Doctor Degree or a LL.B Legum Baccalaureus Degree and is taking at least half-time academic course load in an American Bar Association accredited university. Successful candidates must have outstanding academic records, superior writing skills, and be in good academic standing at his/her university.
To meet the minimum qualifications for this position, you must be a current second or third year law student whom has met the education requirements below for each grade which you are requesting consideration for. Transcript(s) are required for verification.
GS-07 - Completion of one academic year of graduate level education (above a bachelor's).
GS-09 - Completion of two academic years of graduate level education (above a bachelor's), or awarded a master's degree or equivalent graduate degree.
Academic year definition: For qualification purposes, an academic year of graduate education is considered to be the number of credit hours that the school attended has determined to represent 1 academic year of full-time study. This determination is made based on normal course loads for a full year of study in the graduate program. If that information cannot be obtained from the school, 18 semester hours or 27 quarter hours should be considered as satisfying the 1 year of full-time study requirement for the GS-07; and 36 semester hours for 2 years of full-time study should be considered as satisfying the GS-09 requirement. Part-time graduate education is creditable in accordance with its relationship to a year of full-time study at the school attended.
When academic credit is expressed in contract months, units, or other terms that differ from conventional semester or quarter hours, it is the responsibility of the applicant to provide an interpretation of such credits from the appropriate institution in order to equate them to the semester or quarter hours specified in the standard.
NOTE: If your law schools' definition of "academic year" differs from above, you must submit proof of this difference (e.g., copy of course catalog that defines an academic year). Absent this documentation, you will screened for academic qualifications based on the academic hours as defined in the bullets above.
KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES (KSAs): Your qualifications will be evaluated on the basis of your level of knowledge, skills, abilities and/or competencies in the following areas:
Written Communication - Writes in a clear, concise, organized, and convincing manner for the intended audience.
Oral Communication - Makes clear and convincing oral presentations. Listens effectively; clarifies information as needed.
Research - Perform legal research with little or no direction.
Legal, Government, and Jurisprudence – Basic knowledge and/or research of laws, legal codes, court procedures, precedents, legal practices and documents, federal legislation and regulations, executive orders, agency rules, Government organizations and functions, and the democratic political process.
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; spiritual; community, student, social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.
For additional information about applying to Federal Pathways Internship Positions, please click on the following link: https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/hiring-information/students-recent-graduates/#url=Program-Fact-Sheets
Education
Refer to the Qualifications and Requirements section for information pertaining to the Pathways Internship Program.
Contacts
- Address DOT, FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION
Submit Application and Documents Online
1200 New Jersey Ave SE / HAHR - 50
Washington, District of Columbia 20590
United States
- Name: Automated Staffing Office
- Phone: 000-000-0000
- Email: [email protected]
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