Deadline for 2026 Immersion Applications
View all the Immersion Experiences (includes application link)
View all the Immersion Experiences (includes application link)
2026 Immersion Application Coming Soon
The Immersion application for the Summer of 2026 opens on November 3. The priority application deadline is Friday, November 21. Applications are open until all spaces are filled. Please speak with Mrs. Fuentes to learn more.
Financial aid is available for students currently receiving tuition assistance. If cost is the only factor preventing participation in immersion, please contact the Office of Service and Justice to have a conversation. We want all interested, qualified students to be able to participate in this program.
The locations are as follows:
With the mission of “transforming lives through building courts and cultural exchange,” each project is unique. Help build a court with a unique community with its history, strengths, and needs partnering with a distinctive group of volunteers who live, work, and engage in cultural activities with the community. Approximate Cost: $3100
Volunteers spend the week working in a 1-to-1 ratio with a camper with a developmental disability. Camp ReCreation is staffed entirely by volunteers who generously share their time, energy, and talents to provide experiences and memories for our friends who are too often marginalized by their communities. Cost: $200
SSP has a long history of working with partners in the Navajo Nation. Since 1994, SSP has partnered with various Diné (pronounced din-EH, meaning “the people”) communities. Service will include: weatherization for harsh winters, including roof repairs, installing awnings, and building sheds to keep wood dry; accessibility repair projects for elder residents, including decks, stairs, and ramps. Approximate Cost: $1900
We will partner with the L’Arche Tahoma Hope Community, spending time working alongside core community members with intellectual disabilities on the community farm, learning about disability justice and socializing with the members of the community. Housing is provided on-site. Approximate Cost: $1300
The Br. David Darst Center provides transformative social justice immersion experiences grounded in the Lasallian tradition and Catholic Social Teaching. Through the programs and partnerships with local community organizations, participants gain a deeper understanding of the complex realities of injustice and obtain tools to take action. They seek to inspire an active and engaged faith, a commitment to serve, and a passion for social change. Approximate Cost: $1900
This Jesuit apostolate works to provide humanitarian aid to recently deported migrants, advocate for policy change (in the U.S., Mexico, and beyond) that impacts migration, and educate about the complexities of immigration. Students provide service through meal service and accompaniment of migrants through conversation. Students also meet with ranchers, border patrol officers, and participants in the court system (attorneys, judges) for dialogue with people impacted by migration and for reflection on their experience and response. Approximate Cost: $1900
We will be living simply and giving our time and energy to help others, primarily with home maintenance and repair, so that they may have adequate shelter and avoid code violations. The Jerusalem Farm community, which provides our housing, is led by an alumnus of Jesuit High School. Approximate Cost: $1850
Homelessness and the Sacramento River intersect through encampments on the river’s banks. Students will serve and learn about addressing the needs of the unhoused population and the environmental concerns the encampments create. For the duration of the week, students will camp on Jesuit High School’s Campus. Approximate Cost: $500
Our service immersion program offers rising Seniors an opportunity to put their faith into action in a particular way. The service experiences are about responding to the Gospel call to serve those in need, while questioning the reasons behind why people are in need. Service is a tool for creating spaces for kinship and solidarity. While each immersion has its own unique focus, they all encourage participants to live in solidarity with people experiencing acute needs like hunger, homelessness, physical or developmental disability, isolation due to old age or illness, or dislocation due to migration. Experiencing community, simplicity, justice, and prayer is central to the immersion experience.
Each immersion has goals which are modeled on tenets of the Jesuit Volunteer Corps program:
Link to RSVP will be posted closer to event
Join us in the Welcome Center to learn about the opportunities for Immersion 2026 and review the application process. This is an information session for current juniors and their parents/guardians who wish to participate in immersions next summer. Enjoy a simple meal and listen to the experiences of last year’s participants while learning about the many different trips and communities students engage with.