Scripps Research Recruiting Graduate Students in the South

Events Being Held at Schools from Texas to Virginia

Scripps Research invites undergraduate students from schools in Southern, Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic states, who are interested in pursuing high-impact careers in biomedical research, to discover our top-10 ranked doctoral program in the chemical and biological sciences, our Summer Undergraduate Research Fellows (SURF) program and other unparalleled research opportunities.

Come meet Scripps Research representatives in September when we’re on campus at Virginia Tech (18 Sep), Nova Southeastern University (Davie, FL) (19 Sept), University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill (19 Sep), College of William & Mary (20 Sep), Mississippi State University (24 Sep), Rice University (24 Sep), Duke University (25 Sep), and South Carolina State University (26 Sep).

In October, we'll be visiting career and graduate fairs at North Carolina State University (03 Oct), University of Alabama - Huntsville (07 Oct), Auburn University (09 Oct), Georgia Tech (18 Oct), the Southeastern Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society (SERMACS) in Savannah, GA (20 Oct), University of Texas at Austin (23 Oct), Emory University (28 Oct), Georgia State University (29 Oct), and the University of Georgia (30 Oct). On November 7, we'll be at the University of South Carolina.

We're also going to be at schools in Ohio, Indiana, and a few other places! Click “Sign Up” below to let us know you’re coming and we’ll have information waiting for you, customized to your interests!

The Scripps Research Institute's Graduate Program, recently renamed the Skaggs Graduate School of Chemical and Biological Sciences, provides rigorous, interdisciplinary training in chemistry, chemical biology, biology, neurosciences, immunology, cell biology, chemical physiology, and biophysics. Students have access to the full curriculum and entire faculty affiliated with the program regardless of the faculty member’s department. This approach allows students to be broadly trained and emphasizes the creation of basic knowledge in the biosciences.

Launched in 1989, Scripps Research’s Graduate Program is ranked among the top graduate schools in the country according to U.S. News & World Report. The publication now ranks our Graduate Program sixth overall in chemistry, fifth in the specialty of organic chemistry and second in the specialty of biochemistry. The program is also rated tenth overall in the biological sciences. Scripps Research can now boast more than 600 accomplished graduate alumni, who work in both academia and industry. 

Application deadline: 01 December 2019

Important Links

Scripps Research hosts several dozen undergraduate students each summer as part of our Summer Undergraduate Research Fellows (SURF) program and two NSF-funded Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) programs. Students apply to the programs with a single application, where they can also choose to apply to either the La Jolla campus in California or the Jupiter campus in Florida.

Scripps Research's summer undergraduate research program is a 10-week experience that provides college students the opportunity to perform advanced biomedical research in one of the institute’s 250 laboratories, working side-by-side with faculty members and postdoctoral scientists, as well as doctoral students pursuing their degree in Scripps Research's top-rated graduate program. More than just an internship, Scripps Research's undergraduate program offers students a chance to work as a contributing member of a research laboratory and develop an understanding of how to make that future a reality for themselves.

Of particular benefit to students is the highly interdisciplinary nature of Scripps Research's laboratory environment, in which faculty members conduct cutting-edge research at the interface of biology and chemistry. This close collaboration between chemists and biologists accelerates innovation and discovery, while providing undergraduates with an invaluable training experience. Interdisciplinary training is the key to success in the workplace of the future, particularly in the Science, Technology, Engineering and Math fields (STEM).

About the Program

In addition to receiving mentored scientific training in the laboratory, Scripps Research's SURF/REU participants attend scientific seminars presented by faculty members, experience professional development in a classroom setting and receive specialized training in scientific presentation. Related program components include workshops presented by faculty and doctoral students on topics ranging from graduate school preparation to professional ethics in science.

The program also affords students an opportunity to present the culmination of their hard work at the end of the summer. Participants in California give research presentations open to the entire campus, while in Florida, students distill their research results into scientific posters, which they present at a two-hour competitive poster session. Both events are campus-wide celebrations of the students’ accomplishments while also serving a critical educational function: developing students’ abilities to effectively communicate their research.

Social activities arranged for SURF/REU participants provide opportunities, not only for building community, but for interaction with Scripps Research faculty and graduate students in a fun and relaxing environment. For example, students on the California campus took to the waves with surfing lessons, while on the Florida campus, SURF students join several faculty members to tour the nearby Loggerhead Marinelife Center, a conservation center and hospital for endangered sea turtles, and even observed turtles coming ashore at night to build nests and lay eggs.

Transportation to the campus and housing at nearby universities are provided for participants on both Scripps Research campuses and participants receive a stipend of $5000 to help cover basic expenses.

Eligibility and How to Apply 

Acceptance into Scripps Research's SURF/REU Program is awarded on a competitive basis to college students who are United States citizens or permanent residents, or international students who are enrolled in a US college, with a minimum grade point average of 3.2. International students studying abroad are not eligible. A special emphasis is placed on identifying and recruiting students who are historically underrepresented in the sciences (i.e., African-American, Hispanic, Native Pacific Islander, or Native American students or first-generation college students).

Applications can be submitted online and are due by February 15 each year. For more information and to submit an application, please visit https://education.scripps.edu/undergraduate/summer-research/.