The College of Wooster’s 9-week REU program is housed in the Physics Department and includes a range of projects from astrophysics to quantum optics, from granular materials to chemistry.
Students in the program have come from Wooster and from 55 other colleges or universities in 19 states.
Our National Science Foundation funding is restricted to U.S. citizens and permanent residents, but Wooster students who are not U.S. citizens may also apply for Wooster-specific funding.
The College of Wooster is a liberal arts college long recognized for its mentored undergraduate research. The research topics we offer in the sciences mix experiment, computation, and theory and are designed to fully incorporate even novice undergraduate students as full collaborators. Our faculty have designed on-going research programs that are both innovative and accessible to undergraduates. We treat our students as co-discoverers and teach them to become independent scientific thinkers and practitioners.
Participants also take part in a variety of workshops for career-building activities, and we have multiple social events throughout the program. All students write a paper to summarize their work, and present their work to the broader community at our end-of-the-summer poster session. See our past schedules for more details!
In 2024, our program begins Monday May 20 and ends Friday July 19. Students are paid a $7000 stipend. Campus housing is included, and funds for students to relocate to Wooster are available. Wooster is located in a scenic part of Northeast Ohio, about an hour from Cleveland or ninety minutes from Columbus.
Many of our participants have completed only a single year of college. Our program is especially adaptable to students of a wide range of backgrounds because our faculty are dedicated to mentoring undergraduate research programs. Students should have completed one year of introductory physics at the college level in most cases.
Our program is designed for currently-enrolled undergraduate students interested in physics and chemical physics. Students who have completed a two-year degree and are continuing in the fall at a four-year institution are eligible and welcome. Students only need to have taken one year of introductory calculus-based physics, and we have no minimum GPA.
NSF funding is restricted to U.S. Citizens, U.S. nationals, and permanent residents. However, College of Wooster international students may also apply for internally-funded positions.
All participants should comply with the College’s current COVID policies.