Finding Summer Research Opportunities When Programs Are Full (or You’re Not Admitted To A Formal Program)

Finding Summer Research Opportunities When Programs Are Full (or You’re Not Admitted To A Formal Program)

At this point in the year, many formal summer STEM programs have closed their applications. However, many of the strongest STEM applicants pursue another path: independent research with professors or in research labs. This is a very common route for students who later apply to selective STEM programs and universities.

Most research opportunities are not publicly advertised. They often happen because a student reaches out thoughtfully and demonstrates genuine curiosity. Below is a guide to help you try to make this happen.

1. Identify the right type of lab

Focus on universities, research hospitals, or research institutes near you. Professors are much more likely to work with students who can participate locally and can show up if needed. Good places to look include:

  • University department websites (physics, engineering, computer science, psychology, human development, kinesiology, math)
  • Research labs within those departments
  • Medical research institutes
  • National labs or science centers

When researching labs, look for work that genuinely interests you, rather than emailing randomly.

2. Read a little about their research

Before emailing a professor, spend some time learning about their work. This step helps your message stand out. Try to:

  • Read the lab’s website or research description
  • Skim one or two recent research papers
  • Understand the general goal of its research

You do not need to understand everything. The goal is to show you took the time to learn about their work.

3. Send a short, thoughtful email

When you reach out, express curiosity and ask whether there may be opportunities to learn or assist with research. A strong outreach email usually includes:

  • Who you are (grade, school, academic interests)
  • What specifically interested you about their research
  • Any relevant coursework, projects, or activities
  • A polite request to learn more or potentially assist

Professors often respond well to students who show initiative and intellectual curiosity, even if the role begins in a small way. Common starting points include:

  • Shadowing
  • Assisting a graduate student
  • Helping with data collection
  • Reading research papers and attending lab meetings
  • Completing a small independent project within the lab

4. Email more than one lab

It is normal to contact 10–20 labs before finding an opening. Professors are busy, and many will not respond. Persistence is part of the process.

5. Be open to starting small

Most high school researchers begin with foundational tasks such as:

  • Data entry
  • Literature reviews
  • Coding assistance
  • Building or testing equipment
  • Running simulations

While these may seem small at first, they often lead to:

  • Longer term mentorship
  • Deeper research projects
  • Sometimes, conference presentations or co-authorship

6. Start now, don’t wait

March and April (even into early May!) are the best times for securing summer research opportunities. Labs are often flexible if:

  • A graduate student is willing to supervise
  • You demonstrate strong initiative
  • You won’t need extensive training

In many cases, students work most closely with a graduate student mentor, rather than directly with the professor.

7. What makes someone say yes

Professors are most likely to respond to students who demonstrate:

Initiative — reaching out after learning about the lab
Genuine curiosity — not simply résumé building
Basic preparation — relevant classes, independent research/projects, competitions, etc., all made clear to them

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CLA’s High School Internship Program

CLA’s High School Internship Program

Looking to explore the world of business, professional services, or accounting and gain hands-on experience with real projects and clients? Discover your passions and pave the way for your future career with CLA’s high school internship program. Applications for CLA’s High School Internship Program will be open soon.

This program helps students get a head start in considering career options, understand the opportunities available in professional services, and work on real projects. The 2026 high school internship program is an immersive, four-week paid program designed to inspire and grow the next generation of accounting and professional services talent.

Experience Dates: June 15 – July 16 (off the week of June 29 – July 3 off)
Workdays: Monday – Thursday (In Person)
Work Hours: 9am to 4:30pm local time
Attire: Business casual
Technology: All interns are assigned a laptop while in the program.

More information here!

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Columbia U Engineering – Summer Foundations of Research & Streetscapes (Stipend!)

Columbia U Engineering – Summer Foundations of Research & Streetscapes (Stipend!)

Awesome programs for NYC-based students!

For six weeks, students work with Columbia Engineering researchers and participate in programming to develop their academic and professional skills. Students gain practical research experience, collaborate with research faculty, staff, and students, practice new skills, and take part in multi-level mentorship. ENG has two tracks students can apply to: Foundations of Research (FoR) or Center for Smart Streetscapes (CS3). 

Program components include experience in working on genuine engineering research projects, research skills and college prep workshops, science communications workshops, and additional supplemental seminars and opportunities. Students are provided with a stipend to support them over the summer. They encourage all rising seniors (current 11th graders) with an interest in engineering and research to apply.

The application is now open! Applicants should know that the application uses the same platform as the graduate school, so some questions may not be relevant for high school students. Those questions can be left blank.

Read more here –> https://outreach.engineering.columbia.edu/eng 

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