Please complete this form if you are interested in employment as a leadership challenge course facilitator with the Campus Recreation Center.  a variety of workshops on the challenge course with a a variety of student and other groups.  Workshops focus on expanding skills related to leadership and teamwork.




Are you a current GT student?
Year in school?
Are you already employed on campus?
Have you ever been a challenge course participant?
Have you ever been employed as a challenge course leader/instructor?
It is important that you understand the nature of working as a challenge course facilitator.  Working at the challenge course is dissimilar from many jobs.

The facilitator's job is to assist with leading leadership-themed workshops on the challenge course structure.  This involves presenting problem-solving exercises and leading discussions about the groups participation in the exercise.

Work schedules are not consistent one week to the next.  We will provide a list of work opportunities every month or so.  You can then sign-up to work programs that fit into your schedule. You may, for example, have the opportunity to sign-up to lead one 5-hours workshop one week, four 5-hour workshops the next, and then go two weeks with few opportunities to work.

We expect facilitators to work or participate in trainings most weeks. If you do not work for more than a month when work opportunities are available to you, we will consider re-evaluating your status as a member of the facilitation pool.

Working at the challenge course can add a valuable dimension to your Georgia Tech experience.  If you are looking for a job that allows you to work the same hours every week, this probably is not the right role for you. Once hired and onboarded, our goal is to train you to function as an independent challenge course technician within 30 days. This requires 25-30 hours. If you don't qualify as a technician within 60 days of onboarding you could face termination.

Are you comfortable with the idea of working at heights greater than 25 feet?