
Internship Management Diagnostics Internship start: July 2026, duration: 6 months
Required skills
Job description
Lufthansa published this listing. We've added our own working-student context below — what this role means for your weekly hours, take-home pay and student visa as a student in Frankfurt, Germany.
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Description provided by Lufthansa
Tasks
- Supporting a specialist team consisting of psychologists on diagnostically relevant topics in the HR area
- Assistance in the conception and design of assessment centers for the management level
- Evaluations on selected fields of application of the diagnostic procedures we use
- Assisting with interviews with managers on various issues
- Developing concepts for psychologically relevant topics in the work environment
- Free parking
- Subsidized public transport
- Flexible working hours
- Cafeteria
In order to complete an internship in our company, you must be in at least your third semester of study at the time of the internship.
- Matriculation for the entire period of the internship (current certificate of matriculation and a written compulsory internship certificate must be enclosed with the application) or the internship between the Bachelor's and Master's degree program (gap year)
- Study of psychology with at least a Bachelor's degree
- Knowledge of statistical methods (R, SPSS) is an advantage
Working student essentials
What this Research internship in Frankfurt means for you — pay rules, social contributions, and what international students should check before applying.
Weekly hours
Internships have no 20-hour cap, but a voluntary internship longer than three months generally has to pay at least the German minimum wage. Mandatory internships in your study programme are exempt.
Working student rulesSocial contributions
Mandatory internships are largely exempt from social contributions. Voluntary internships are treated like regular employment once they run long enough, so contributions usually apply.
Check your insuranceInternational students
Non-EU students can work 140 full or 280 half days per year (raised from 120/240 in March 2024). A working student contract usually fits within this — confirm the exact limits printed on your residence permit.
Studying in Germany