CoRIS faculty are committed to involving undergraduates in research.
Is participating in research right for you?
Research can be a rewarding addition to your academic studies, both to put the skills you're learning into practice and to motivate learning new skills. However, it does require both a time commitment (6-8 hours a week is typical) and a mental commitment. A lot of research consists of trying things that don't work (or doesn't work as expected), thinking of a different approach, then trying again.
How to get started:
Start by looking at faculty lab pages and seeing what research might interest you. Read at least the introductions of a few research papers to get a sense of what kind of problems the research is addressing.
Questions you should be prepared to answer when reaching out to faculty:
- What interests you about that research area?
- What skills do you want to learn?
- What skills do you bring to the problem? How could you contribute?
- What time commitment can you make?
For high school students:
Consider the Saturday Academy's ASE internships.
For first and second years:
Many of our students begin with the URSA Engage program. We also encourage Honors College students to get involved with research as early as possible.
For US Citizens enrolled in a four year undergraduate program (including OSU):
OSU Hosts several summer research opportunities for US citizens across the country. These are 8-10 week paid summer internships.
- Robotics in the real world
- Engineering for bouncing back
- College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospherics
- AgAID URI Program