Anonymous wrote:Someone wrote here about summer research program.
What’s your advice to a kid who got into a top research program (3-5% acceptance rate), but has imposter syndrome?
He applied to this program to get mentorship for the first research project and were honest about it.
The caliber of kids in this program is very high - US Olympiad team members, AIME qualifiers, science Olympiad winners.
Our kid got in because he is from underrepresented state,
However, after interviewing with the professor and talking to alumni he realized it’s a very hands off program. There is actually little to no mentorship. Kids do all the work.
The kid is afraid to be a failure among the “insanely cracked research ppl” and not get any support.
What’s your advice? Should he try anyway?
Yes! He should do it. Reassure him they would not have admitted him if he doesn't belong there.
My kid had a confidence issue in a top summer program. Everyone else talked a big game. She was intimidated. Then she got paired with another girl for a project who was very very confident. But in working with her, my kid realized she got concepts that this other girl just didn't get. That was an eye opener for her.
But she had to experience it to learn this lesson, as your kid will too.