Audiobook Narrators and Translators

Closed
Antarctic Institute of Canada
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Chair
(136)
3
Project
Academic experience or paid work
80 hours per student
Student
Canada
Advanced level

Project scope

Categories
Communications Translation Media
Skills
english language editing research mentorship
Details

This project will begin on August 1st following a kick-off meeting and orientation for all student-hires. The project will end on September 3rd, 2022.

The Antarctic Institute of Canada (AIC) is a non-profit organization that conducts research activities, academic mentorship programs, and equity building through a variety of government-funded work-initiatives for undergraduate and graduate students.

The AIC is seeking 25 (twenty-five) post-secondary students currently enrolled in a post-secondary program to translate, narrate, and record audiobooks using manuscripts from our catalog. Audiobooks will be targeted toward market-segments within children’s & youth literature.

This project is projected to take 80-hours between August 1st and September 3rd.

Deliverables

Applicants must be fluent in a non-english dialect and highly skilled in verbal and textual translation. This position requires hirees to use basic audio recording and editing technologies to record their own narration of their translation of AIC texts during the duration of the internship.

Mentorship

Mentorship and oversight of project timeline and execution

About the company

Company
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
2 - 10 employees
Education

The Antarctic Institute of Canada is a non-profit Canadian charity organization founded by former Antarctic researcher Austin Mardon in 1985. Its original aim was to lobby for the federal government of Canada to increase the extent of Canadian research in the Antarctic. However, AIC slowly diversified and initiated programs for students to publish Antarctic research in newspapers and academic journals. These days, the AIC supports academic writing, research, and multimedia in many fields, expanding far beyond the organization’s original focus on Antarctica.