<p>Hi! I've been looking into a summer program to attend and I'm not sure what to look in to. Does anybody have any suggestions?
-It shouldn't be super-selective. I'm a good student, but I'm not perfect. (Current GPA: 3.65)
-I'm looking for something in science or music (preferably science.)
-I'm busy for several weeks during the summer, so I'd prefer a couple of weeks to a full-summer program.
-I'm a bit late in applying, so I hope the application deadlines haven't all run out.
Thanks for all of your help! :)</p>
<p>NYLF maybe? Technically you have to be nominated but you could have pretty much anyone you know do it for you. It’s a little pricey though</p>
<p>Consider UC Santa Barbara-RMP. It’s a 6 week summer research program. The deadline is still open, and the minimum GPA is 3.50</p>
<p>Summer@Brown has a wide selection of courses (including science and music-related). After you apply, if you’re accepted (it’s on a rolling basis; I think most applicants are accepted) you can choose from whichever classes are still open. They vary in number of weeks, from 1 to 7 weeks. Most classes are still open.
[Summer@Brown</a> - Pre-College Programs at Brown University | Brown University Office of Continuing Education](<a href=“http://www.brown.edu/ce/pre-college/]Summer@Brown”>Pre-College Program | Brown University)</p>
<p>For girls, there’s Smith College SSEP (Summer Science and Engineering Program). 4 weeks long, during July. Early app is over but regular app ends May 1.
<a href=“http://www.smith.edu.ssep%5B/url%5D”>www.smith.edu.ssep</a></p>
<p>EPGY Summer Institutes is another option. Registration is still open; there are several science/engineering courses. It’s a bit expensive though.
[EPGY</a> Summer Institutes](<a href=“http://epgy.stanford.edu/summer/]EPGY”>http://epgy.stanford.edu/summer/)</p>
<p>I’ve heard of <a href=“mailto:Summer@Brown”>Summer@Brown</a>. Have you been on it? It looks interesting.</p>
<p>No, I haven’t. I agree though, it looks interesting. I’ve heard both good and bad reviews about it; probably depends on the class.</p>