Skip to main content
New rolePosted 15 June 2026Springpod

Academic Publishing with Taylor & Francis

T

Taylor & Francis

Remote (UK)Virtual Experience

Role overview

About this role

Overview: Are you a self-proclaimed ‘bookworm’? Well, get ready because this programme invites you into the world of academic publishing with Taylor & Francis! You’ll learn all about the lifecycle of books and journals and the different stages involved in publishing (including digital publishing!) We’ll also look at the monumental impact academic publishing has on academia, industry & government, and more! What else can you expect? A deep dive into the breadth and depth of careers in this exciting industry. What’s Included: From the different stages of publishing to the challenges and opportunities that come with the rise of digital technology, this programme is jam-packed with exciting content to sink your teeth into! Plus, you’ll learn about the various roles and pathways to a career at Taylor & Francis and the wider publishing industry. You’ll also complete a series of quizzes and fun activities to help build your understanding, finishing the programme with a downloadable portfolio of your work.

Job details

Compensation

Unpaid opportunity

Location

Remote (UK)

Remote available

Posted

15 June 2026

Entry requirements

Requirements not available here

The employer hasn't published structured entry requirements through this listing. Check their application page for GCSEs, A-Levels, or any other entry criteria.

See entry requirements on employer listing

Remote (UK)

Open in Google Maps for commute planning

Company

Taylor & Francis

Taylor & Francis hires students into technology-focused teams where software, data, infrastructure, product thinking, reliability, and user impact often matter.

TechnologySoftwareDataProduct

Quick actions

Role insight

Preparing for Taylor & Francis

Good preparation includes project evidence, curiosity, debugging examples, teamwork, and being able to explain technical choices clearly.

  • Talk through one project in terms of problem, trade-offs, result, and what you would improve.
  • Be ready to explain code or data decisions without jargon.
  • Connect technical work to users, reliability, security, or business value.