Voice Up Purpose Music & Global Impact 100% Remote Internship

Voice Up Publishing Incorporated · Washington, DC, US

PostJobFree Posted Jun 11, 2026 First seen Jun 12, 2026
Internship: Purpose, Music, and Global Impact Fellowship Overview The J Ellington Purpose, Music, and Global Impact Fellowship is an eight-week experiential learning internship designed for undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral students interested in leadership, behavioral health, communications, digital media, public health, education, nonprofit innovation, entrepreneurship, and workforce development. This internship is built around the real-world story of J Ellington, a faith based music based on the teachings of Jesus Christ that has surpassed 1.1 million plays across 49 countries and more than 50 cities worldwide while operating with virtually no marketing budget. The foundational premise of the J Ellington Catalog is that God is love and that the fruit of the Spirit help us demonstrate the power of God's love in simple ways every day through our simple actions and how we treat others. The fruit of the Spirit are: Love Joy Peace Patience Kindness Goodness Faithfulness Gentleness Self-control There is also alignment between the Fruit of the Spirit and Voice Up's principles. Voice Up is the anchor organization for J Ellington. Fruit of the Spirit Voice Up Principles Love, Joy, Peace Collaboration Gentleness Humility Faithfulness, Goodness Precision Patience Patience Love, Kindness Empathy Students will examine how purpose-driven content can create meaningful global engagement and explore what this reveals about leadership, human motivation, community building, and the future of communication in the AI economy. Rather than studying a hypothetical case, participants work directly with a living project that has demonstrated measurable international reach. The internship operates under Voice Up's "University of Practice" model, where students learn through real-world application, reflection, and research. Learning Objectives By the conclusion of the internship, students will be able to: Share more powerfully how their lived experience is able to share the powerful impact of God as love. Analyze how purpose-driven content spreads across diverse populations and cultures. Examine digital engagement metrics and identify patterns related to audience behavior. Explore the relationship between music, storytelling, identity, and community development. Apply concepts related to leadership, resilience, purpose, and behavioral health. Develop research and communication skills through project-based learning. Create a professional portfolio demonstrating practical application of learned concepts. Evaluate the role of creativity and human-centered communication in the modern AI economy. Weekly Structure Students participate in multiple online and weekly learning sessions, including a required Saturday afternoon meeting with real people across the globe. Students complete project activities and local throughout each week. Week 1: The J Ellington Story Students explore the history of the J Ellington catalog, including its origins, growth trajectory, and global reach. Participants examine how a project rooted in faith, purpose, and family legacy evolved into a worldwide digital asset. Week 2: Understanding Purpose-Driven Content Participants analyze selected songs and themes from the catalog, identifying recurring concepts such as hope, resilience, community, belonging, gratitude, forgiveness, and personal growth. Week 3: Global Reach and Audience Analysis Students examine engagement data from countries and cities around the world. They explore why listeners from different cultures may connect with similar themes despite differences in language, geography, and background. Week 4: Music as a Leadership Tool Participants investigate how music can influence motivation, communication, and leadership. Students identify leadership lessons embedded within creative works and explore applications in education, healthcare, business, and community settings. Week 5: Behavioral Health and Well-Being Students study how music, reflection, and storytelling can support well-being, resilience, and personal development. Discussions focus on strengths-based approaches rather than clinical interventions. Week 6: The AI Economy and Human Creativity Participants examine how artificial intelligence is transforming creative industries while exploring the continuing importance of authentic human experiences, relationships, and storytelling. Week 7: Applied Research Project Students conduct an independent or team-based research project examining an aspect of the J Ellington case. Potential topics include global dissemination, audience engagement, purpose development, digital communication, leadership, or community impact. Week 8: Portfolio Presentation Participants present their findings and recommendations. Final projects are shared with mentors and may contribute to future Voice Up research, publications, or presentations. Deliverables Students complete: Weekly reflection journals Local community outreach sharing real loved experiences Participation in discussions One research brief One digital presentation Final portfolio project Professional reflection on lessons learned Academic and Professional Benefits Participants gain experience relevant to careers in: Public Health Behavioral Health Social Work Education Communications Marketing Nonprofit Leadership Healthcare Administration Research Workforce Development Entrepreneurship Artificial Intelligence and Human-Centered Design Divinity Students also develop competencies in critical thinking, data interpretation, project management, professional communication, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Final Outcome The ultimate goal of this fellowship is to help students understand a simple but powerful question: How can one person's purpose-driven work create meaningful impact across the world? Through the lens of the J Ellington story, students explore how leadership, faith, creativity, service, perseverance, and authentic human connection can influence communities far beyond what traditional measures of success might predict. Participants leave the experience with practical skills, a professional portfolio, and a deeper understanding of how purpose can be transformed into measurable impact. ::: This internship aligns particularly well with public health, social work, psychology, communications, nonprofit leadership, education, business, and doctoral-level workforce development programs because it combines real-world data, global dissemination, leadership development, behavioral health themes, and applied research into a single experiential learning framework. II. From Fuller Road to the World Arthur L. Fuller Jr. Art grew up knowing Fuller Road as home ground. His father, Arthur Lee Fuller Sr., was part of the paternal line that had built land ownership and community in Madison Park. His mother, Rosa Mary Fuller, was the daughter of Mary Douglass, which meant that when Rosa married into the Fuller family, two distinct strands of Alabama Black survival braided themselves together: the maternal heritage of Lowndes County land and endurance, and the paternal heritage of church leadership and urban institution-building. Old Elam Baptist Church, founded in 1819, stood at the intersection of both. Rosa died of breast cancer at forty-nine or fifty, during Art’s first year of teaching in Connecticut. This is the kind of biographical fact that tends to be placed in parentheses in official documents, treated as context rather than content. It should not be. The loss of a mother who was herself an educator who believed, according to the oral history, that every student can make it because she made it is not background. It is the reason someone eventually builds something.