Whether they’d like to pad their wallets or resumes, many college students seek part-time employment while they’re in school. And if you’re one of them, these 10 jobs might be up your alley—they offer flexible work schedules and competitive part-time pay. What’s more, dozens of companies are hiring for each of these jobs. So, get your resume ready and apply!
1. Tutor
Hourly Pay: $15-$35
Details: As a tutor, you will help students with homework, advance in a certain area of study, discuss and review assignments—helping students to succeed—and more.
Companies Hiring: Sylvan Learning Centers, VIPKID, Action Potential Learning, Compass Education, and more.
Hourly Pay: $8-$17
Details: As a restaurant host, you will greet guests as they enter the restaurant, then seat them at a table. You may also assist with servers, helping to manage their workloads.
Companies Hiring: Wagamama, Marriott, Montage Hotels & Resorts, Live Nation, Hilton Hotels & Resorts, and more.
Hourly Pay: $18-$27
Details: An IT support specialist provides technical support for a company, its employees, an its customers, helping them to work through computer software and equipment issues.
Companies Hiring: Avast Software, Kronos Incorporated, Cloud Peak Energy, Gensler, Fleetio, Catalant, and more.
4. Driver
Hourly Pay: $10-26
Details: A driver might work in deliveries, making sure packages arrive safely at their destination, or as a personal driving, driving individuals to and from their locations.
Companies Hiring: Doordash, Enterprise, FedEx, Good Eggs, Stanley Automotive, CHS, Manheim, Uber, Lyft and more.
Hourly Pay: $7-$15
Details: A delivery person picks up, transports, and delivers packages—including mail, food, media, and more. A delivery person might do so in a car, on a bike, or even on foot.
Companies Hiring: IGA, Best West Pet Foods, Cleveland Brothers Equipment Company, HomeTown Pharmacy, Millionaires Investment Group, and more.
Hourly Pay: $10-$27
Details: As a brand ambassador, you would raise a company’s brand awareness—and perhaps increase sales—by representing the brand and talking about it in a positive way.
Companies Hiring: Cox Media Group, Chameleon Cold Brew, The Legion of Bloom, ForceBrands, Monster Energy, HSSG Inc., and more.
7. Barista
Average Base Pay: $7-$19
Details: A barista makes many beverages, most especially coffee beverages. They usually work in coffee or tea shops, but can also be employed at a store or bar that serves coffee.
Companies Hiring: Dunkin’ Donuts, illy, Compass Group USA, Wegmans Food Markets, Blue Plate Catering, and more.
8. Babysitter
Average Base Pay: $9-$17
Details: When parents need to leave their children, a babysitter steps in to care for the children until the parents return—often feeding, entertaining, and putting kids to bed.
Companies Hiring: Sitter, Nanny Lane, PlatinumSitters, Safe Drive, College Nannies + Tutors, and more.
Average Base Pay: $9-$15
Details: As an animal caretaker, you will help with animals in a variety of settings, including pet stores, animal shelters, kennels, and more, feeding, bathing, walking, and otherwise caring for them.
Companies Hiring: Food and Drug Administration, USA Jobs, Laboratory Staffing, Daybreak Foods, Pawtropolis, and more.
Average Base Pay: $10+
Details: A social media assistant helps to manage a company’s social media channels, such as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, engaging with the community and addressing customers’ concerns.
Companies Hiring: Ad Council, Pharmaceutical Product Development, True North Social, Brew, and more.
How to Get an Internship
Consider Your Qualifications
- Think about your degree: Look up common career fields and job titles for people with your major.
- Consider your experience: Think about your previous work experience, and which roles it might prepare you for. A student working at a campus newspaper might consider a journalism internship, while a student who tutors for a statistics class may want to look at data science internships.
- Identify transferable skills: Skills that help you succeed in school or in the student organizations you participate in — such as organization, critical thinking and time management — will all be useful in the working world. Some quick research should reveal which jobs require these skills.
- Explore your interests: With how much time you spend at work, you want to make sure you enjoy it! Write down a few career fields that interest you, and search internships in those areas.
- Start small: Don’t feel pressured to get your dream internship right away, especially if you have no prior work experience. Start by exploring small local organizations, groups affiliated with your school or volunteer work in order to bolster your resume.
