Anonymous wrote:A 9th grader can't even get hired as a lifeguard because they're not seen as having the requisite maturity, but you expect a college professor to babysit her for the summer and call it an "internship"? Let her be a kid. She has all of college to chase internships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the only option is to cold email professors.
There are a variety of formal high school internship programs across the DMV at universities, government agencies and private companies but they
1)almost aways (if not 100% of the time) require the students to be 16 and/or a rising junior or senior.
2) have fall or winter application dates for the following summer. You'd be too late for summer 2024.
To expound upon this, all the federal positions (paid and volunteer) we found required kids to be at least 16. I'm not sure agencies can even hire at 15 so professors with joint government appointments may be bound by this as well.
You should draft a generic email template and then start emailing professors or even grad students at local universities (of course personalizing the greeting, etc each time).
No, the CHILD who wants the internship should do this. NOT Mommy or Daddy.
Anonymous wrote:A 9th grader can't even get hired as a lifeguard because they're not seen as having the requisite maturity, but you expect a college professor to babysit her for the summer and call it an "internship"? Let her be a kid. She has all of college to chase internships.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know of any programs like this at my university. Even in labs where freshmen/sophomore undergrads work, it's mostly doing things that you'd need to be over 18 to do.
Anonymous wrote:
DD15 really wants an internship at our state university but has no idea how to get one. Her school doesn’t have any programs for this kind of thing and we have no connections.
She’s easily as advanced as a high school senior, at least in STEM (she is taking multivariable calculus and will be taking AP chemistry and physics next year), and has decent writing skills. However, I’m not sure what a high school freshman could do for a professor or PhD student.
Any tips? I’ve seen this topic in forums and people just seemed to say to wait until 11th or 12th grade, which she really doesn’t want to do.
Thanks!