
Required skills
Job description
Resaro posted this role. Below, we break down what it means for a working student in Munich: your weekly hours, take-home pay and visa limits. You can also open ChatGPT or Claude with a ready-made prompt to tailor your CV, check your fit, draft a cover letter or prep for the interview.
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Description provided by Resaro
We are looking for Interns or Working Students
to join us in our Munich office.
This role is ideal for someone who has some exposure to Programming and LLM/or Computer Vision models. You should have strong interests in learning how to evaluate and test mission critical AI systems in production settings.
Your Role
- Assist in developing, testing, and evaluating machine learning models.
- Perform data preprocessing, analysis, and feature engineering to prepare datasets for model training and testing.
- Work closely with senior data scientists and AI engineers to design testing frameworks for AI.
- Currently pursuing a Bachelor’s or Masters degree in Computer Science, AI, Data Science, Machine Learning, or a related field.
- Some programming skills in Python.
- Familiarity with version control (Git) and unit testing frameworks (e.g., pytest).
- Passion for working with data, models, and AI systems.
- Think from first principles and want to tackle the most challenging technical problems from a multi-disciplinary approach e.g., design, engineering and social science.
- Thrive in a fast-paced environment.
- Navigate uncertainty by being willing to explore, while remaining laser focused on the mission at hand.
You’ll help make sure our platform isn’t just powerful - it’s AI-native, usable by practitioners, and capable of handling the next generation of AI testing at scale.
Working student essentials
What this Tech working student role in Munich means for you: the weekly-hours rules, the social-contribution perks, and what international students should check before applying.
Weekly hours
Working students may work up to 20 hours a week during the semester and full-time during the breaks. Staying within this keeps your student status and the Werkstudent benefits.
Working student rulesSocial contributions
Under the Werkstudentenprivileg you're exempt from health, care and unemployment insurance contributions — only pension insurance applies. That leaves more net pay than a regular job.
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