Anonymous wrote:She should focus on doing research with a professor in a university and work hard. If she produces good results, the work will be published. The goal should not be to publish.
Anonymous wrote:OP, chances are she's been reading on line that this is the only way she can get into her dream school. It just isn't true. It's a nice goal to have, but super rare and probably not realistic.
Anonymous wrote:There are pay-to-publish factories in N VA. While I think these are unethical, they do exist.
Basically you pay someone big $$ for a software program and a research idea, and work under their supervision to run the program to generate data. Then you write a paper with the supervisor, and then send it to publish in a for-profit journal, often an e-journal.
Recently many for-profit journals have popped up. These are peer-reviewed, and charge a big fee to publish your results. Very few submissions are rejected.
Anonymous wrote:She needs to be working on the sort of research (with the right sort of mentor in academic science) that could possibly lead to her becoming a Regeneron finalist. Those are the kids who publish in scientific journals before graduating from high school. Some high schools specialize in preparing students for this and have formal programs to help them find mentors, etc.
I also know some students who "published" in academic journals before graduating from high school because they have parents or other relatives who research and publish regularly, and they added their kid as an "author". One would hope that college admissions officers could see right through, say, the dermatologist's child publishing an article in a dermatology journal. But unfortunately, the last kid I know who did this got into Harvard.![]()