<p>Does anyone know of science-related internships offered this summer, whose deadlines for submitting applications have not passed yet?</p>
<p>(I'm already aware of NIH, RSI, and Caltech)</p>
<p>Does anyone know of science-related internships offered this summer, whose deadlines for submitting applications have not passed yet?</p>
<p>(I'm already aware of NIH, RSI, and Caltech)</p>
<p>Center for Clinical Immunology at Stanford summer internship.
Children's Hospital of Oakland Research Institute summer internship.</p>
<p>Summer Research Apprentice Program at the University of Wyoming
High School Summer Research Program at Baylor University</p>
<p>Try googling it, and I gurantee that you will find tons of programs.</p>
<p>american Chemical Society Project seed Program</p>
<p>THey pay $2000 for two summers and you doresearch in a lab but you have to be a minority.</p>
<p>Students should have an interest in participating in scientific research.</p>
<p>They need to have completed a course in high school chemistry and be entering their junior or senior year in high school.</p>
<p>The program is designed for students whose household annual income is below $32,000 or does not exceed 200% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines for family size. Reasonable exceptions are made for total household income up to $44,000 for:</p>
<p>students belonging to an ethnic group underrepresented in the sciences (African American, Hispanic, American Indian),
students whose parents did not attend college, and
students from a single-parent or a large family.
Students will be required to commute to a nearby research site, except in those cases where the institution (college, university, industry, or government lab) can provide free room and board and proper supervision</p>
<p>Interested students should contact the ACS Project SEED office for a brochure and information on obtaining a list of programs in their area.</p>
<p>Program guidelines for participation</p>
<p>BU's Physics Internship</p>
<p>google it. i'm going!</p>
<p>If you like astro the University of Arizona's astronomy camps are hard to beat (astronomycamp.org). But then I went three years and am going as a counselor this year, so I'm slightly biased. ;-)</p>
<p>You should try just asking a professor if you can work for him/her at a college or university near where you live. A lot of the profs at colleges by me are working on really interesting research and I asked if I could work with one of them this summer, and he said yes.</p>