Other Volunteer research with professors - what am I doing wrong?

AI Thread Summary
A potential graduate in Electrical Engineering is seeking research opportunities but has received no responses from professors despite personalized emails and relevant experience. The only feedback was from a professor who acknowledged being out of town. Suggestions for improving response rates include obtaining letters of recommendation from professors who can vouch for the applicant's abilities, particularly those from classes where the applicant excelled. Engaging with professors during office hours is recommended, as it allows for direct interaction and may yield better results than emails, which can easily be overlooked. The discussion highlights the importance of personal connections in academic settings and the potential drawbacks of relying solely on email communication.
Ngineer
Messages
62
Reaction score
1
Hello everyone,

I am a potential graduate in Electrical Engineering. Being highly interested in doing research, I contacted several professors who lead research groups for possible research opportunities. I included my resume, but did not a transcript (my GPA is not spectacular) in my e-mails. I don't personally know most of the professors I contacted.

Even though, for some of the professors, my experience is highly relevant to their work, I haven't received a single response so far. The only response I got from a professor was that he's currently out of town and will be able to read e-mail in two days -- then nothing.

I contacted the research coordinator for a research center who said she forwarded my e-mail to all professors -- again, no response.

My e-mails were personalized to each professor and written in a professional matter, is there something that I have missed? What can I do to improve my chances of receiving a response from a professor?

Advice needed!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Do you have any professors who could write a brief letter of recommendation for you? That could make your applications stand out from the others. Maybe some professor whose class you did really well in, or one that knows you, or your adviser?
 
Something else that can help is talking to professors in person during office hours. This allows you to ask things like - whether they are aware of anyone else who might be looking for an undergraduate research assistant. And it can help you to get an idea of what working for them might really be like.
 
Ngineer said:
my experience is highly relevant to their work

Can you elaborate? This is highly unusual. Usually one needs to spend a lot of time teaching them.
 
Vanadium 50 said:
Can you elaborate? This is highly unusual. Usually one needs to spend a lot of time teaching them.
For example, one of the professors I contacted works primarily on medical image acquisition and analysis. My SYP was in a related field; to mathematically model an Ultrasound transducer calibration device, including maximizing device bandwidth based on acquisition equipment noise margin / minimally acceptable SNR as well as other design parameters. I included a description of the project as well as a link to the report from the university Web site.

One of the extra-curricular projects I have worked on was to design a C-like signal processing / waveform construction language, to simplify data synthesis and acquisition, complemented by an fpga/microcontroller combination board for real time processing. I included a brief description of this project as well as a links to the github repository of the software portion, and a link showing some screenshots of the system in action (code and resulting output).

Interestingly, his Web site states that he welcomes undergraduate research assistants.
 
Do you have any professors who could write a brief letter of recommendation for you? That could make your applications stand out from the others. Maybe some professor whose class you did really well in, or one that knows you, or your adviser?
The only professor I asked thus far stated that she can say that I was among the top 5% in her class, but will also state that she does not know me personally.

Choppy said:
Something else that can help is talking to professors in person during office hours. This allows you to ask things like - whether they are aware of anyone else who might be looking for an undergraduate research assistant. And it can help you to get an idea of what working for them might really be like.
I have tried doing that in the past and it wasn't fruitful. Emailing them is easier in that it involves no personal embarrassment in case they are not interested.
 
Ngineer said:
I have tried doing that in the past and it wasn't fruitful. Emailing them is easier in that it involves no personal embarrassment in case they are not interested.

Well, if you decide to go the easy route, then you should expect this outcome.
 
Ngineer said:
The only professor I asked thus far stated that she can say that I was among the top 5% in her class, but will also state that she does not know me personally.I have tried doing that in the past and it wasn't fruitful. Emailing them is easier in that it involves no personal embarrassment in case they are not interested.

It is just as easy for them to ignore your email as it is for you to write it.

I don't understand how it is embarrassing if they are not interested.
 
Definitely go to their office hours. E-mails get lost in inboxes, people think to themselves "I should respond" then don't, etc. It's pretty hard to ignore a person standing in the doorway of your office.
 
  • #10
I received a positive response from a professor, and in a field I am highly interested in. He is someone who I did talk to in person before, so I guess e-mails by themselves really don't mean much.

Thanks everyone for your advice!
 

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
14
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
2K
Back
Top