Student Employment

The Department of Campus Recreation employs over 350 students annually, making us one of the largest student employers at Tulane University.

Campus Recreation posts all available student jobs on Handshake, Tulane University’s job board and career management system.

Aquatics

Lifeguards and Lifeguard Instructors

Club Sports

Club Sports Attendant

Fitness & Wellness

Personal Trainer or Group Exercise Instructor 

Facilities

Facility Attendant

Technology

Information Technology Assistant

Intramural Sports

Intramural Sports Attendant

Marketing

Marketing & Social Media Attendant

Member Services

Member Services Attendant

Outdoor Adventures

Outdoor Adventures Leader or Rental Attendant

Current Openings

Updated on 04/16/2024

 

Aquatics Summer Lifeguards and Swim Instructors: Summer availability is required to proceed with this position. Please apply using this link. Priority is given to those who hold current American Red Cross Lifeguarding and/or Water Safety Instructor certifications.

 

Outdoor Adventures Trip Leaders Fall 2024: No experience required. $10/hour. CPR & Wilderness First Aid certifications provided. Deadline to apply is April 17. Interviews will be April 22-25. Please apply using this link.

 

IT Assistant: Assists the Campus Recreation department with daily IT tasks such as basic malfunctions, updates, and documentation. $10/hour. Apply on Handshake: Job #8869402. Application closes April 19.

 

Marketing & Social Media Attendant: Creates engaging and informative content for various platforms to promote Campus Recreation events and facilities. View full job description on Handshake: Job #8896337. Please apply using this link. Application closes May 7.

Why Work at Campus Recreation

Campus Recreation is committed to helping our staff grow and hone their personal and professional competencies. Our staff development framework is guided by the following calls to action:

Job Skill Development

Campus Recreation employees will consistently pursue training in their functional area, as well as with peers across the entirety of Campus Recreation, to identify, understand, and excel in their individual role. They will act to articulate and embody departmental values, identify their unique contributions to the department’s mission and vision, recognize their own empowerment in their ability to perform their job functions and foster interdepartmental relationships, and positively and meaningfully collaborate with peers and colleagues to further refine the Campus Recreation experience for employees and patrons alike.

Leadership Development

Campus Recreation employees will act with intent to awaken their latent potential for ethical, effective, and transformational leadership in both the personal and professional spheres. They will engage in challenging socio-cultural conversations with peers, examine and deconstruct manifestations of oppression and systemic inequity, foster positive mentoring relationships, cultivate opportunities that affirm organizational values by working with others in service, and facilitate leadership learning in the on-campus workplace environment.

Professional Development

Campus Recreation employees will persistently seek to instill and refine within themselves skills, abilities, and perspectives that will meaningfully benefit them in their personal and professional aims. They will deepen their capacity for understanding and empathizing with the experiences and perspectives of others, enhance their communicative abilities in the pursuit of expressing their best, authentic selves, identify and translate commonalities and connections between their present role and future aims, and inculcate within themselves an unyielding drive for meaningful self-reflection and future growth.

Multicultural Competency Development

Campus Recreation employees will continually strive to identify intersections between justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion in the development of job proficiency, professional skills, and leadership aptitude. They will practice regular self-examination with intent to develop a critical consciousness and capacity for empathy, and will work towards building equity in purpose and demonstrating an active commitment to anti-racism in their values and actions.

Tulane Campus Recreation is a part of National Intramural and Recreational Sports Association (NIRSA), an organization which regulates in various sports through the collegiate systems across the United States. Opportunities for leadership exist at a regional level for student staff members in Campus Recreation.

The NIRSA Annual Conference is held in the spring each year. It provides students and professionals the opportunity to learn about and connect on pertinent topics in Campus Recreation. Interested Campus Recreation student staff can attend with the department at a reduced cost for a professional development experience unlike any other!

GROW stands for “Guided Reflection On Work.” TU GROW is based on a program at The University of Iowa, and features four simple questions that our supervisors review with student employees once per semester. These questions assist in bridging the gap between your job responsibilities, school, and your professional goals.

TU GROW Questions

  • How is this job fitting in with your academics?
  • What are you learning here that’s helping you in school?
  • What are you learning in class that you can apply here at work?
  • Can you give me a couple of examples of things you’ve learned here that you think you’ll use in your chosen profession?

Applicants who are selected for employment are required to present original I9 documents during onboarding. Copies of I9 documents will not be accepted.

Please see Tulane HR's Student Employment Webpage for general information and resources about jobs for Tulane students. If you are an international student, Tulane HR provides International Student Resources and Guidelines as well.