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HomeCompaniesEducationunlimitedEngineering Instructor - One week Summer Camp - 2026

Engineering Instructor - One week Summer Camp - 2026

Educationunlimited · Palo Alto, CA, 94305 · Active · JazzHR / ApplyToJob

Job facts

FieldValue
CompanyEducationunlimited
TitleEngineering Instructor - One week Summer Camp - 2026
Normalized title-
Department / team-
LocationPalo Alto, CA, United States
Work model-
Employment typeTemporary
SalaryUSD
Statusactive
ATS providerJazzHR / ApplyToJob
Posted / first seen2026-04-09 / 2026-05-30
Changed / last seen2026-05-30 / 2026-06-06

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Linked records

CompanyEducationunlimited
Source46bcf12e-b573-4e7a-b140-4df2c25ab909
ATS providerJazzHR / ApplyToJob

Description

Education Unlimited® provides academic summer camps & pre-college summer programs for students entering grades 4-12. Our summer programs include public speaking camps, college admissions prep programs, science camps, summer acting camp, writing camps, computer camp, leadership camp, video production camp, and college tours. Enginering Camp Instructor Education Unlimited seeks energetic and experienced science instructors for our fun, activity-based summer program. Available sessions:  Please indicate your availability on your application.  Instructors may be hired for one or more sessions based on availability.   Housing, meals, salary and travel stipend provided for correct candidate. UC Berkeley (Grades 9–12) June 28 – July 4, 2026 Stanford University (Grades 4–6) July 19 – July 24, 2026 July 26 – July 31, 2026 Stanford University (Grades 9–12) August 2 – August 8, 2026 Education Unlimited offers two levels of Engineering Courses: * Intro to Engineering for rising 4th to 6th graders * Engineering 9th - 12th for rising 9th to 12th graders Course descriptions can be found below for both courses. Intro to Engineering Course Description: In Intro to Engineering, students will learn the basic principles of engineering design and use this process to solve a variety of build challenges, which must survive performance trials and unexpected obstacles along the way! Students will work collaboratively with one another and our amazing instructors to study the principles of force, energy, mass, and other fundamental properties in Newtonian physics. Using real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. Students learn how engineers have to build with earth's forces in mind; from gravity, to air resistance, to friction, to buoyancy and even centripetal force, students will be learning how scientists both work against and with those forces in their designs. As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! Students will learn how to use air resistance to create windmills and helicopters as well as fight against that force when they create rockets and planes. They will even learn how to keep a top spinning as they create their own toy that uses centripetal force. The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure?sing real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure? High School Engineering Course Description This immersive camp gives students a hands-on introduction to diverse fields of engineering, guiding them through the full design process across multiple specialties. The week begins with a human-centered design challenge — creating a functional wallet — and progresses into electrical engineering with basic circuitry involving switches and light bulbs. Midweek, students tackle an environmental challenge by designing and building water filtration systems, followed by a biomedical engineering project where they construct a prosthetic hand and explore biomechanics. Mechanical engineering is next, with rubber band-powered car builds that emphasize force, motion, and design iteration. The camp wraps up with an exciting Engineering Olympics — a friendly, fast-paced competition that brings together all the skills students have built throughout the week. Along the way, students practice budgeting, build bills of materials, and present their projects, gaining skills that extend far beyond the classroom. RESPONSIBILITIES In-person Camp Responsibilities include teaching the Education Unlimited curriculum, supervising campers both in and out of the classroom, organizing and leading classroom labs, and executing a finale showcasing student work at the end of camp. Instructors will also be responsible for tracking student work and handing in any deliverables to the camp director and EU home office. In addition to teaching responsibilities, instructors should be available and willing to assist the camp director with active supervision, recreational activities, and some administrative tasks. Instructors should be mature, reliable, and able to work well with fellow staffers. Instructors are also expected to act as mentors and will be asked to assist with field trips and guide students on excursions. With the support of the entire staff, instructors are responsible for the health and safety of students, in addition to fulfilling instructional objectives. At all overnight programs, instructors have the option of commuting to camp each day or staying overnight on campus. Overnight staff members will receive full room and board and will be expected to help with evening supervision duties. Qualifications: Instructors are usually year-round science teachers, are studying science at the graduate level, or have some other significant teaching/mentoring experience in the area of cardiology. 2+ years experience teaching experience or significant subject matter knowledge. Experience working with middle, high school  or college age students in an academic setting. Preference given to those with an advanced degrees. A passion for science education. A calm and professional demeanor. Self-motivation and follow-through. Strong organizational skills and attention to detail.

Full job record

Job ID938bafe3878e03b2f933a0970d3ec48c874e11cf
Org ID213a103e-3084-4448-a0cd-c3ee4fe1e7f8
Source ID46bcf12e-b573-4e7a-b140-4df2c25ab909
Board ID46bcf12e-b573-4e7a-b140-4df2c25ab909
Providerjazzhr
Provider Job KeyBKZNno4LXB
TitleEngineering Instructor - One week Summer Camp - 2026
Normalized Title
Statusactive
Activeyes
Location TextPalo Alto, CA, 94305
Department
Team
Employment Typetemporary
Workplace Type
Remote Policy
CountryUnited States
RegionCA
CityPalo Alto
Salary RawUSD
Salary Min
Salary Max
Salary Currency
Salary Period
Source URLhttps://educationunlimited.applytojob.com/apply/BKZNno4LXB/Engineering-Instructor--One-Week-Summer-Camp-2026
Apply URLhttps://educationunlimited.applytojob.com/apply/BKZNno4LXB/Engineering-Instructor--One-Week-Summer-Camp-2026
First Seen At2026-05-30 05:47:28Z
Last Seen At2026-06-06 20:07:32Z
Last Checked At2026-06-06 20:07:32Z
Last Changed At2026-05-30 05:47:28Z
Inactive At
Source Posted At2026-04-09 00:00:00Z
Source Updated At
Raw Payload Uris3://job-postings-prod-raw-590183727216/raw/provider=jazzhr/board=educationunlimited/date=2026-06-06/2026-06-06T20-07-31-742Z-a0d98f1c3fdf773a8b20b80d7e7750a0dd8d07cd588dba2413b903aaca8cf35a.json
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Extensions
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    "heading": "Engineering Instructor - One week Summer Camp - 2026",
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    "canonical_url": "https://educationunlimited.applytojob.com/apply/BKZNno4LXB/Engineering-Instructor--One-Week-Summer-Camp-2026",
    "description_html": "<p>Education Unlimited® provides academic summer camps & pre-college summer programs for students entering grades 4-12. Our summer programs include public speaking camps, college admissions prep programs, science camps, summer acting camp, writing camps, computer camp, leadership camp, video production camp, and college tours.</p><p><span style=\"font-size:18px;\"><strong>Enginering Camp Instructor </strong></span></p><p>Education Unlimited seeks energetic and experienced science instructors for our fun, activity-based summer program.</p><p><span style=\"font-size:14px;\"><strong>Available sessions: </strong></span>Please indicate your availability on your application.  Instructors may be hired for one or more sessions based on availability.   Housing, meals, salary and travel stipend provided for correct candidate. </p><ul><li><strong>UC Berkeley (Grades 9–12)</strong><br>June 28 – July 4, 2026</li><li><strong>Stanford University (Grades 4–6)</strong><br>July 19 – July 24, 2026<br>July 26 – July 31, 2026</li><li><strong>Stanford University (Grades 9–12)</strong><br>August 2 – August 8, 2026</li></ul><p><strong>Education Unlimited offers two levels of Engineering Courses: </strong></p><p>* Intro to Engineering for rising 4th to 6th graders</p><p>* Engineering 9th - 12th for rising 9th to 12th graders</p><p>Course descriptions can be found below for both courses. </p><p><span style=\"font-size:16px;\"><strong>Intro to Engineering Course Description: </strong></span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">In Intro to Engineering, students will learn the basic principles of engineering design and use this process to solve a variety of build challenges, which must survive performance trials and unexpected obstacles along the way! Students will work collaboratively with one another and our amazing instructors to study the principles of force, energy, mass, and other fundamental properties in Newtonian physics.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">Using real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. Students learn how engineers have to build with earth's forces in mind; from gravity, to air resistance, to friction, to buoyancy and even centripetal force, students will be learning how scientists both work against and with those forces in their designs.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! Students will learn how to use air resistance to create windmills and helicopters as well as fight against that force when they create rockets and planes. They will even learn how to keep a top spinning as they create their own toy that uses centripetal force. The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure?sing real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. </span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure? </span></p><p><strong>High School Engineering Course Description</strong></p><p> </p><h4><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">This immersive camp gives students a hands-on introduction to diverse fields of engineering, guiding them through the full design process across multiple specialties. The week begins with a human-centered design challenge — creating a functional wallet — and progresses into electrical engineering with basic circuitry involving switches and light bulbs.</span></h4><h5><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">Midweek, students tackle an environmental challenge by designing and building water filtration systems, followed by a biomedical engineering project where they construct a prosthetic hand and explore biomechanics. Mechanical engineering is next, with rubber band-powered car builds that emphasize force, motion, and design iteration.</span></h5><h5><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">The camp wraps up with an exciting Engineering Olympics — a friendly, fast-paced competition that brings together all the skills students have built throughout the week. Along the way, students practice budgeting, build bills of materials, and present their projects, gaining skills that extend far beyond the classroom.</span></h5><p><strong>RESPONSIBILITIES</strong></p><p><strong>In-person Camp Responsibilities </strong>include teaching the Education Unlimited curriculum, supervising campers both in and out of the classroom, organizing and leading classroom labs, and executing a finale showcasing student work at the end of camp. Instructors will also be responsible for tracking student work and handing in any deliverables to the camp director and EU home office. </p><p>In addition to teaching responsibilities, instructors should be available and willing to assist the camp director with active supervision, recreational activities, and some administrative tasks. Instructors should be mature, reliable, and able to work well with fellow staffers. Instructors are also expected to act as mentors and will be asked to assist with field trips and guide students on excursions. With the support of the entire staff, instructors are responsible for the health and safety of students, in addition to fulfilling instructional objectives.</p><p>At all overnight programs, instructors have the option of commuting to camp each day or staying overnight on campus. Overnight staff members will receive full room and board and will be expected to help with evening supervision duties.</p><p><strong>Qualifications:</strong></p><p>Instructors are usually year-round science teachers, are studying science at the graduate level, or have some other significant teaching/mentoring experience in the area of cardiology. </p><ul><li>2+ years experience teaching experience or significant subject matter knowledge.</li><li>Experience working with middle, high school  or college age students in an academic setting.</li><li>Preference given to those with an advanced degrees.</li><li>A passion for science education.</li><li>A calm and professional demeanor.</li><li>Self-motivation and follow-through.</li><li>Strong organizational skills and attention to detail.</li></ul>",
    "description_text": "Education Unlimited® provides academic summer camps & pre-college summer programs for students entering grades 4-12. Our summer programs include public speaking camps, college admissions prep programs, science camps, summer acting camp, writing camps, computer camp, leadership camp, video production camp, and college tours.\n Enginering Camp Instructor\n Education Unlimited seeks energetic and experienced science instructors for our fun, activity-based summer program.\n Available sessions:  Please indicate your availability on your application.  Instructors may be hired for one or more sessions based on availability.   Housing, meals, salary and travel stipend provided for correct candidate.\n UC Berkeley (Grades 9–12)\nJune 28 – July 4, 2026\n Stanford University (Grades 4–6)\nJuly 19 – July 24, 2026\nJuly 26 – July 31, 2026\n Stanford University (Grades 9–12)\nAugust 2 – August 8, 2026\n Education Unlimited offers two levels of Engineering Courses:\n * Intro to Engineering for rising 4th to 6th graders\n * Engineering 9th - 12th for rising 9th to 12th graders\n Course descriptions can be found below for both courses.\n Intro to Engineering Course Description:\n In Intro to Engineering, students will learn the basic principles of engineering design and use this process to solve a variety of build challenges, which must survive performance trials and unexpected obstacles along the way! Students will work collaboratively with one another and our amazing instructors to study the principles of force, energy, mass, and other fundamental properties in Newtonian physics.\n Using real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. Students learn how engineers have to build with earth's forces in mind; from gravity, to air resistance, to friction, to buoyancy and even centripetal force, students will be learning how scientists both work against and with those forces in their designs.\n As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! Students will learn how to use air resistance to create windmills and helicopters as well as fight against that force when they create rockets and planes. They will even learn how to keep a top spinning as they create their own toy that uses centripetal force. The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure?sing real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs.\n As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure?\n High School Engineering Course Description\n This immersive camp gives students a hands-on introduction to diverse fields of engineering, guiding them through the full design process across multiple specialties. The week begins with a human-centered design challenge — creating a functional wallet — and progresses into electrical engineering with basic circuitry involving switches and light bulbs.\n Midweek, students tackle an environmental challenge by designing and building water filtration systems, followed by a biomedical engineering project where they construct a prosthetic hand and explore biomechanics. Mechanical engineering is next, with rubber band-powered car builds that emphasize force, motion, and design iteration.\n The camp wraps up with an exciting Engineering Olympics — a friendly, fast-paced competition that brings together all the skills students have built throughout the week. Along the way, students practice budgeting, build bills of materials, and present their projects, gaining skills that extend far beyond the classroom.\n RESPONSIBILITIES\n In-person Camp Responsibilities include teaching the Education Unlimited curriculum, supervising campers both in and out of the classroom, organizing and leading classroom labs, and executing a finale showcasing student work at the end of camp. Instructors will also be responsible for tracking student work and handing in any deliverables to the camp director and EU home office.\n In addition to teaching responsibilities, instructors should be available and willing to assist the camp director with active supervision, recreational activities, and some administrative tasks. Instructors should be mature, reliable, and able to work well with fellow staffers. Instructors are also expected to act as mentors and will be asked to assist with field trips and guide students on excursions. With the support of the entire staff, instructors are responsible for the health and safety of students, in addition to fulfilling instructional objectives.\n At all overnight programs, instructors have the option of commuting to camp each day or staying overnight on campus. Overnight staff members will receive full room and board and will be expected to help with evening supervision duties.\n Qualifications:\n Instructors are usually year-round science teachers, are studying science at the graduate level, or have some other significant teaching/mentoring experience in the area of cardiology.\n 2+ years experience teaching experience or significant subject matter knowledge.\n Experience working with middle, high school  or college age students in an academic setting.\n Preference given to those with an advanced degrees.\n A passion for science education.\n A calm and professional demeanor.\n Self-motivation and follow-through.\n Strong organizational skills and attention to detail.",
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      "description": "<p>Education Unlimited® provides academic summer camps & pre-college summer programs for students entering grades 4-12. Our summer programs include public speaking camps, college admissions prep programs, science camps, summer acting camp, writing camps, computer camp, leadership camp, video production camp, and college tours.</p><p><span style=\"font-size:18px;\"><strong>Enginering Camp Instructor </strong></span></p><p>Education Unlimited seeks energetic and experienced science instructors for our fun, activity-based summer program.</p><p><span style=\"font-size:14px;\"><strong>Available sessions: </strong></span>Please indicate your availability on your application.  Instructors may be hired for one or more sessions based on availability.   Housing, meals, salary and travel stipend provided for correct candidate. </p><ul><li><strong>UC Berkeley (Grades 9–12)</strong><br>June 28 – July 4, 2026</li><li><strong>Stanford University (Grades 4–6)</strong><br>July 19 – July 24, 2026<br>July 26 – July 31, 2026</li><li><strong>Stanford University (Grades 9–12)</strong><br>August 2 – August 8, 2026</li></ul><p><strong>Education Unlimited offers two levels of Engineering Courses: </strong></p><p>* Intro to Engineering for rising 4th to 6th graders</p><p>* Engineering 9th - 12th for rising 9th to 12th graders</p><p>Course descriptions can be found below for both courses. </p><p><span style=\"font-size:16px;\"><strong>Intro to Engineering Course Description: </strong></span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">In Intro to Engineering, students will learn the basic principles of engineering design and use this process to solve a variety of build challenges, which must survive performance trials and unexpected obstacles along the way! Students will work collaboratively with one another and our amazing instructors to study the principles of force, energy, mass, and other fundamental properties in Newtonian physics.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">Using real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. Students learn how engineers have to build with earth's forces in mind; from gravity, to air resistance, to friction, to buoyancy and even centripetal force, students will be learning how scientists both work against and with those forces in their designs.</span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! Students will learn how to use air resistance to create windmills and helicopters as well as fight against that force when they create rockets and planes. They will even learn how to keep a top spinning as they create their own toy that uses centripetal force. The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure?sing real-world buildings and other edifices as inspiration, campers will start the week by defying gravity to build the tallest skyscrapers and strongest bridges. Then, they will move onto air resistance and density and study how different types of planes, boats, and cars operate, seeking out unique ways to build them all and optimize their designs. </span></p><p><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">As the week continues, our engineering challenges get even more elaborate! Campers will be faced with tasks that combine their knowledge of physics with ingenuity and an ability to work together within a budget! The camp finale will be a demonstration of campers’ final invention, an egg drop – whose team will succeed and get their precious cargo to safety, and who will crack under pressure? </span></p><p><strong>High School Engineering Course Description</strong></p><p> </p><h4><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">This immersive camp gives students a hands-on introduction to diverse fields of engineering, guiding them through the full design process across multiple specialties. The week begins with a human-centered design challenge — creating a functional wallet — and progresses into electrical engineering with basic circuitry involving switches and light bulbs.</span></h4><h5><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">Midweek, students tackle an environmental challenge by designing and building water filtration systems, followed by a biomedical engineering project where they construct a prosthetic hand and explore biomechanics. Mechanical engineering is next, with rubber band-powered car builds that emphasize force, motion, and design iteration.</span></h5><h5><span style=\"font-size:12px;\">The camp wraps up with an exciting Engineering Olympics — a friendly, fast-paced competition that brings together all the skills students have built throughout the week. Along the way, students practice budgeting, build bills of materials, and present their projects, gaining skills that extend far beyond the classroom.</span></h5><p><strong>RESPONSIBILITIES</strong></p><p><strong>In-person Camp Responsibilities </strong>include teaching the Education Unlimited curriculum, supervising campers both in and out of the classroom, organizing and leading classroom labs, and executing a finale showcasing student work at the end of camp. Instructors will also be responsible for tracking student work and handing in any deliverables to the camp director and EU home office. </p><p>In addition to teaching responsibilities, instructors should be available and willing to assist the camp director with active supervision, recreational activities, and some administrative tasks. Instructors should be mature, reliable, and able to work well with fellow staffers. Instructors are also expected to act as mentors and will be asked to assist with field trips and guide students on excursions. With the support of the entire staff, instructors are responsible for the health and safety of students, in addition to fulfilling instructional objectives.</p><p>At all overnight programs, instructors have the option of commuting to camp each day or staying overnight on campus. Overnight staff members will receive full room and board and will be expected to help with evening supervision duties.</p><p><strong>Qualifications:</strong></p><p>Instructors are usually year-round science teachers, are studying science at the graduate level, or have some other significant teaching/mentoring experience in the area of cardiology. </p><ul><li>2+ years experience teaching experience or significant subject matter knowledge.</li><li>Experience working with middle, high school  or college age students in an academic setting.</li><li>Preference given to those with an advanced degrees.</li><li>A passion for science education.</li><li>A calm and professional demeanor.</li><li>Self-motivation and follow-through.</li><li>Strong organizational skills and attention to detail.</li></ul>",
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