Prospective Undergraduate Students:
We are always interested in highly motivated undergraduates joining the lab. Read through these tips to
see if undergraduate research might be of interest to you.
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Do some research before talking to me. Are the projects described on this webpage of interest to
you? Which ones? Why?
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Be selective with your research project. Make sure that you have a clear goal and it is something
that you will enjoy. When you start getting bogged down with midterms, you will need this enjoyment
to pull you into the lab.
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Setup a project schedule, especially if you are a procrastinator. Have a good idea of how much time
you will be able to spend on this project. This is not just the white space in your schedule! Your
classes will take time too.
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Talk to people. I can't stress this enough -- you will learn the most when interacting with other
students.
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Document your work. The highest goal in research is to have others use what you have done. They
can't do this if you don't write (or type) it down.
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Research is hard. Undergraduates are often involved in completely new research directions in our lab
which means that the original goal is not always successful. Motivation, creativity, and hard work
are most important here.
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If this still seems interesting, contact Prof. Bergbreiter via email. If she doesn't respond within
a couple days, send another email. Be persistent.
If interested, please email at sbergbre@andrew.cmu.edu