Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry in advance, I don't know where else to ask. If your dc is at an ivy, ivy plus, or ivy adjacent, do they have something lined up? Is it basically over and it's time to get in with a professor? I thought this was the benefit of being at a top school, but seems like the career center fall back is to connect with an alum and they don't seem to respond. (seem is the operative word as I only talk to my dc about it). Is it unusually quiet? Is this common? Is it this year? Or has it always been this way? I didn't go to a top school so I'm not trying to be obnoxious, I thought this was supposed to be a benefit? Should I be offering any specific advice? Thanks
DC is at an ivy as a peer mentor and a TA in engineering, senior. Almost all of the sophomores have paid positions lined up, some in uni or govt research internships and some in industry. Some research programs are still in the process of rolling out acceptances.
The culture at the ivies and similar is to start in labs on campus early, maximize the course progression and have a transcript as a sophomore that resembles a junior transcript from a midlevel flagship E school with regard to research experience and courses taken.
The students do have to make the effort to get to know professors, talk to upperclassmen, read department emails that list summer jobs.
All of the juniors have internships, leans toward private industry jobs. Half of the freshman have paid stem jobs for the summer, though many are through professors at this ivy.
It was about the same last year and every year since she arrived on campus, though paid research at other universities have contracted due to funding cuts last year.
Anonymous wrote:i'm a prof at a T10 engineering school and have talked to about 15 rising juniors. None have company internships. Several are doing research jobs. Companies want rising seniors generally, rising sophomores in my experience would only get an internship with strong direct family connections. this is nothing new....though competition for internships is getting fierce. The only student I personally know who did such an internship last summer did it in China with direct family connections.
Anonymous wrote:Are kids finding it more difficult to get research given all the funding cuts ?
Anonymous wrote:I would separate engineering from the sciences. They are very different markets. Biology and Physics are getting decimated right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are kids finding it more difficult to get research given all the funding cuts ?
Funding has bounced back from last cycle but not up to 2024 levels. Good 3.8+ stem students from top schools are getting offers.
We know more than one sitting on multiple paid research offers.
Anonymous wrote:My rising junior got a research (in field related to major) internship, no nepotism, knows no one. 1400 applicants for 14 spots. App included essays + 2 interviews. Give 5 days to accept offer which came about 7-8 weeks after the interviews.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry in advance, I don't know where else to ask. If your dc is at an ivy, ivy plus, or ivy adjacent, do they have something lined up? Is it basically over and it's time to get in with a professor? I thought this was the benefit of being at a top school, but seems like the career center fall back is to connect with an alum and they don't seem to respond. (seem is the operative word as I only talk to my dc about it). Is it unusually quiet? Is this common? Is it this year? Or has it always been this way? I didn't go to a top school so I'm not trying to be obnoxious, I thought this was supposed to be a benefit? Should I be offering any specific advice? Thanks
Just so I understand... he wants an internship when he will be a rising junior?
No, looking for this summer and is a sophomore currently. Thank you
So, he will be a rising junior. He will be done with the sophomore year. You should actually use all your network to get him an internship. Anonymous wrote:and how may don’t? Seems like confirmation bias.Anonymous wrote:My stem T50 (non ivy) civil engineer has an internship lined up with a construction management company. No connections- from the fall job fair. Many classmates also have internships
Anonymous wrote:Are kids finding it more difficult to get research given all the funding cuts ?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry in advance, I don't know where else to ask. If your dc is at an ivy, ivy plus, or ivy adjacent, do they have something lined up? Is it basically over and it's time to get in with a professor? I thought this was the benefit of being at a top school, but seems like the career center fall back is to connect with an alum and they don't seem to respond. (seem is the operative word as I only talk to my dc about it). Is it unusually quiet? Is this common? Is it this year? Or has it always been this way? I didn't go to a top school so I'm not trying to be obnoxious, I thought this was supposed to be a benefit? Should I be offering any specific advice? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which specific major?
Deciding between electrical and mechanical engineering.
Not sure what you can do with an EE bachelor degree. The typical path is to get a PhD in EE. I would suggest looking for research opportunities.
Really? Not OP, but my kid wants to do EE, and I’ve never heard this before.
Because it is wrong.