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Feasible with the intern’s current skills and ramp-up time (typically a few weeks)
Important, but not critical:
The project(s) must produce real results that help move us forward.
It should not be just busywork
We shouldn’t bet our future on timely successful completion of the project
Stand-alone enough:
For example, we shouldn’t expect a new intern to know or learn all of our infrastructure or technology stack to be able to complete their project.
Some engineering examples include:
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Generally, we are limited to employing legal adults (minimum 18 years in most jurisdictions, 16 in states like California) as interns, working no more than 40 hours per week. Occasionally, younger candidates such as high school/secondary school students (16-17-year-olds) may express interest in internship opportunities as well. Please contact our VP of People to discuss exceptions. Depending on state regulations, interns who are minors (under 18 years of age) may require a work permit.
Meal Breaks and Rest Breaks
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Maya Friedman shared a collaboration with Amanda Jo Fisher (Deactivated) and Former user (Deleted) about menstruation and diabetes (data). Maya came back to a full-time position on the Product/UX team at Tidepool.
Tejasvi Desai shared an overview of her work and what she learned as a Product Manager Intern. She was mentored by Kelly Watson and Amanda Jo Fisher (Deactivated).
Eden Grown-Haeberli made improvements to our marketing website and documented the entire process in her first summer (as a high school student). In her second summer, she wrote additional tools that launched the Tidepool Big Data Donation program. She was mentored by Lennart Goedhart (Deactivated), and is now a student at Stanfordand got degrees in Computer Science and Biomedical Engineering from Stanford. She’s now working at Included Health.
Anna Quinlan wrote PyLoopKit, a Python port of the Loop algorithm, and developed it into a great tool for simulating and visualizing different scenarios after graduating from high school. She was mentored in parts by Ed Nykaza (Deactivated), Pete Schwamb, and Lennart Goedhart (Deactivated), and is now a student at Stanford.
Michael Pangburn is a Loop iOS developer, mentored by Pete, and is a student at Cal Poly SLO. He interned with Apple Summer 2019, and returned to Tidepool Fall 2019-Summer 2020. In August 2020, he joined Apple full time.
Courtenay Huffman did Front-End work in React, mentored by Clint Beacock. We found Courtenay through the JDRF internship program.
Karina Goot wrote dfaker, a test data generator. She went on to be a Site Reliability Engineer at Google, and is now at Lyft.
Ethan Look wrote the first version of Tidepool Mobile for iOS (formerly known as Blip Notes, without really having a mentor, which wasn't great…) during his first summer internship. In his next summer, he wrote command line data tools that later turned into the TBDDP, mentored by Brandon Arbiter. He 's went on to work at Google/X and is now at GoogleViam.
Nancy Kao, a design intern, produced this awesome video.
JP Reilly, a student at Stanford, prototyped the web UI for prescription flow. He was mentored by Thacher Hussain (Deactivated) and Kelly Watson.
Noah Brauner, a software engineering intern, created the Favorite Foods feature for Loop under the mentorship of Pete Schwamb in the summer of 2023. He came back to Tidepool in the summer of 2024 to build on that feature by providing users with insights on their favorite foods.
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