Our committee aims to foster a community of support and encouragement for women in mathematics. We will accomplish this by creating events and opportunities which establish and strengthen connections with women in the department, including undergraduates, and with women in other STEM fields.
TBA
A typical REU is 8-10 weeks long and provides students with a stipend ($4000-5000) and, in many cases, assistance with housing, travel, and food. As a participant, you will most likely first read a few papers on your research topic, and from there prove something new relating to that topic.
The full list of NSF-sponsored REUs can be found here. Applications are typically due in February and March.
Many REUs start in early June or late May. The following is a list of schools with REUs that start in late June. Since UO is on a quarter system, applying to these programs might be the best choice for UO undergraduates.
If you're interested in working on real-world research projects, consider the following programs.
The Research in Industrial Projects for Students (RIPS) Program provides an opportunity to work in teams on real-world projects proposed by sponsors from industry or the public sector. The program has two locations: one in Hong Kong and one in LA.
The national labs all hire summer interns in the sciences:
The NSA offers the Director's Summer Program. Note that the application deadline is October 15th.
The Center for Communications Research (CCR) in Princeton, NJ runs a 10-week summer conference in which cryptographic problems are presented and the participants work on the problems that interest them.
The following programs provide an opportunity to study mathematics, computer science, or mathematics education abroad. All instruction is in English.
BSM, BSME, and AIT also have summer programs.
How you fund these programs depends on your financial aid package and your school's policy on study abroad. The AMS Math in Moscow Scholarship program covers some of the cost associated with attendance for one semester of study in the Math in Moscow program.
Resources with information about applying for graduate school will be available here soon!
Marie Vitulli has an excellent list of fellowships and scholarships on her website.