
Summer Program for
Undergraduate
Research
FAQs
(Frequently
Asked Questions)
Applying
to SPUR
Application Deadline
Application
Statements
Letters of Recommendation
Grades & Transcripts
Eligibility
Inquiries
Problems
with
online
submission
Selection
for SPUR
Selection criteria
Selection process
Notification
SPUR
Program details
Dates & flexibility
Offer -- stipend, travel, housing, meals
Weekly Schedule
SPUR Undergraduate Research Symposium
Outside
the Lab
Summer
in Oregon
Travel around Oregon
Recreational Facilities
Recreational Events
Cultural Events
Eugene, Oregon
-- Applying to SPUR
What is
the Application Deadline?
There is not a
hard deadline. We will begin
making offers on Monday of the last full week in February, and we will
continue to review applications until all slots are filled. Please note
that space is very limited.
-- Statements A, B and C :
How in depth
should the Statements be? Is there a word minimum, maximum, or
suggested length?
We don't want you to feel burdened
with a long complicated application, but we do want to know about you,
your goals, studies, talents, motivation, and what you hope to gain
from the program. You should clarify your research interests and
perhaps list some labs in which you would like to work. Statement C is
entirely optional.
There is no word limit for any of the
statements. Just be
as concise as you can without omitting any ideas that might
help us in evaluating your application. From among
those accepted into the
SPUR2006 program, the longest statement was 853 words, and the average
was about 350 words per statement.
Admission requires more than positive
qualities and well written statements, it requires an available host
laboratory for each
participant; therefore it is suggested that, somewhere in your
statements, you expand on your research choices and possibly suggest
some professors with whom you might want to work.
-- Letters of Recommendation:
A) Whom should I
ask for letters of
recommendation?
The
letters of recommendation should come from professional people who are
qualified to advise us candidly on your abilities, motivation,
integrity, intellectual vitality, and
enthusiasm for science. They could be from professors,
instructors, or
other researchers in non-science fields. They should be sent by email,
from a professional (.edu) address to spur@uoneuro.uoregon.edu.
B) Can recommendation letters be sent
by email?
Yes! In
fact, we greatly prefer that they be sent by email. Recommenders
should use their professional (.edu) address, and email to
spur@uoneuro.uoregon.edu.
Letters can also be sent by US Mail, if
necessary. Please do not waste money sending applications by
FedEx.
We do not have a hard deadline, and a few days either way will not make
a difference.
C)
Should the recommendation letters be emailed at the same time that the
online application is submitted?
Doesn't matter.
-- Grades & Transcripts
Is there a cutoff GPA for selection to SPUR?
No. Although we seriously
consider applicants' grades, we feel that grades very often do not
reflect
the creative abilities of prospective scholars; and so, we place heavy
emphasis on candid evaluations within recommendation letters that
accompany the applications.
Why do you not want official
transcripts?
We want you to send us a list of your classes
and grades electronically (not hard copy), so we can easily add it to
our database. Also, we don't want you to waste time or money
arranging for official transcripts when you send your
application. It is best if you simply list your classes and
grades. When you are accepted into the program, we will ask for
official
transcripts to verify your application and to update your grades in our
database.
If it's really
difficult to upload my transcripts into the application form, can I
mail them or email a scan?
We want ultimately to have a spreadsheet that includes all applicants'
information, including courses & grades, so we prefer to have you
manually enter or upload your grades as neatly formatted text into the
online application
form. Our second
choice would be for you to send them by email. But if it is much
easier for you to mail them, that would be fine.
-- Eligibility
Can
seniors/post-bacs apply and participate in the SPUR program?
Yes, we occasionally accept SPUR interns who
will have
graduated before the summer.
Can international
students (non-US citizens) apply and participate in the SPUR program?
Most of our funding sources require that SPUR
Fellows they sponsor be US citizens or permanent residents (having
green card). However,
occasionally we sponsor international students. For example, in
SPUR 2006, two international students participated, but supplied much
of their
own funding.
-- Inquiries
Can I call to
find out if my application is complete, whether I made
the short list, or what faculty are reviewing my application?
Email would be better, but feel free
to contact us with any questions.
-- Problems with
online
submission.
Some applicants have had
problems with the online submission, receiving error messages or not
being able to load the page. If you encounter problems, please
a) contact us, so we can correct it if it's on our end; AND
b) send us your application information via email to
spur@uoneuro.uoregon.edu and we will enter it into the database.
To make it easier, download the application form, fill it out, save it,
and then email it to spur@uoneuro.uoregon.edu
as an
attachment.
Most often, we have found that the problem has been
on the applicant's side, generally with the internet browser. If
you're so inclined, you might try to clear your cache, discard
temporary internet files and temp files, and clear browser history.
Then try again to submit.
-- Selection for
SPUR
What are you looking
for in a
SPUR applicant? Is it beneficial for me to have Prior Research
Experience? If I need prior experience to get in, how do I get
experience in the first place?
In the selection process, we look
for people who exhibit creativity, motivation,
diligence, native
intelligence, integrity, broad interests, an interest in the specific
research at the University of Oregon, and an upbeat outlook, among
other things. We try to choose candidates who would
benefit
most from this intensive program. We don't require
prior experience to apply: Some of our labs prefer prior
experience, others don't, and some prefer no experience. So, yes,
prior experience is desireable for some labs but not others.
How does the
selection process work?
The application materials, including
basic information, areas of research interest, statements, transcripts,
and letters of recommendation are compiled as a packet for each
applicant. These are read and evaluated by the SPUR
administrators, and a short list is made. Each participating
faculty member evaluates packets from applicants who have similar
research interests; each faculty member then generates a ranked list of
preferred candidate applicants. The SPUR Director then makes
offers of admission to the top candidate(s) on each faculty member's
list. Because it often happens that a candidate
applicant will be selected by more than one professor, it is helpful
for us if you list professors with whom you might want to work. Thus,
before each offer of admission to SPUR is made, a professor and the
candidate SPUR scholar commit to working together in the
summer program.
Following acceptance, the potential host professor
and the candidate SPUR scholar then communicate with one another by
email/phone, discussing the summer research possibilities,
responsibilities, expectations, etc.
When will applicants be notified if they are accepted into the
program?
We begin reviewing application files on the Monday
of the last week
in February. During that week, we generate a short list of SPUR
candidates. From the short list, we begin making
offers to SPUR
candidates. The process of filling available spots generally
takes a few weeks. We maintain a waiting list and ask for your
patience. The last few slots are very fluid, because labs often
find new funding or new openings. Thus, each year there are late
applicants who are admitted to the program as late as May.
--
The SPUR Program
What are
the SPUR Progam dates? Can I go to my sister's wedding in the
middle? My university has a weird schedule, can I arrive/leave
early?late?
We keep the
participation
dates flexible, to accommodate the
variety of schedules of schools across the country. The earliest
arrivals are at the beginning of June and the latest departures are at
the third week in August. Most SPUR Fellows are here from the beginning
of June through the middle of August. Some Fellows take a week off in
the middle of the Summer. The minimum duration is 8 weeks; the
maximum so far has been about 14 weeks. Despite these
differences, SPUR
participants have always
developed close bonds.
-- What
are the specifics of the SPUR offer?
Round trip from your home to the University of
Oregon and housing, including meals, are arranged
by our staff and paid by SPUR. Housing includes room and board,
and SPUR interns are housed together. Most SPUR interns arrive
about a week before the UO dorms empty for our summer
break, and so during this period, interns are housed in doubles; but as
the
dorms become available during UO final exam week, they would move to a
single,
in an area with the other SPUR fellows. Our SPUR summer stipend
is paid only at the end of each month, with the 1st pro-rated
paycheck at end of June. (So come prepared to avoid a cash flow
problem).
--
What is the weekly schedule for the summer?
The SPUR
experience is very intensive in research work, and in social, cultural,
and recreational activities. SPUR Fellows research 40+ hrs/wk, on a generally
flexible
schedule determined by the host lab and mentors. Each Monday
afternoon, SPUR Fellows attend a
Faculty
Research Seminar Series presentation on a specific area of life
sciences research given
by a different UO
Professor. Each Thursday morning, SPUR Fellows attend a
Professional
Development Workshop Series presentation or a facilities tour.
One evening each week all SPUR interns discuss their ongoing research
with their fellow interns at the Research
Discussion Group series. These events
are listed on links from the SPUR
home page, and previous schedules are available. Once or twice each week, the SPUR Director meets for
lunch in
the cafeteria with all the SPUR students to hear comments, complaints,
problems, ideas for improving the program, gossip, etc. One or
more evenings per week, the SPUR group gathers with the
SPUR facilitator (a UO undergraduate researcher who participates in
SPUR, living in the dorms with the SPUR group) to plan weekend
activities/excursions. Throughout the summer, SPUR professional
workshops
and
individual mentors work to train SPUR fellows in reading and preparing
scientific
papers and scientific presentations, using online tools in life
sciences research, keeping lab notebooks, responsible
research conduct, accessing career opportunites, and other issues
related to careers in life sciences research.
--
SPUR Undergraduate Research Symposium
At summer's end,
the SPUR
Undergraduate Research Symposium is held in 4 sessions; here, all
SPUR
Fellows present the results of their summer work in formal oral
scientific presentations. Some students additionally prepare
research posters for presentation at national meetings. Several
students each year will travel to national scientific meetings to
present their work from the SPUR program.
-- Outside the Lab
-- What is available
outside of the Research program? Why is Oregon a good place to spend the Summer?
Every year, the SPUR fellows form a very close knit group (you
can check out the SPUR alumni group on facebook.com and also our SPUR
scrapbooks), and on weekends they travel all around Oregon, for
recreation, sightseeing, shopping, concerts etc. In the past, activities have included hiking in the
Columbia
River Gorge, the Cascade Mountains, Crater Lake,
concerts/shopping in Portland & Seattle, various places along the
Oregon coast,
Silver Falls State Park, Fall Creek, the California Redwoods,
one year a group climbed South Sister
(of the Three Sisters, dormant (so far) volcanoes in
the Cascade
Mountain Range, visible from some of the labs), rafted on the
McKenzie
River, the Rogue
River, canoed on the Willamette
River, and many more activities. In some years, a
small group of SPUR Fellows and friends have climbed Spencer's Butte (a
2000+ ft peak in South Eugene) a couple times/wk. Eugene has many miles
of bike trails and running trails around the town.
Also
check out what SPUR alumni have said
about the past years' programs.
-- What recreational facilities are
available on campus?
We have a terrific Student
Recreation Center (SRC) close to the dorms, with exercise machines,
weight machines & free weights, swimming pool, climbing wall,
squash courts, racquetball courts, indoor and outdoor tennis courts, aerobics
dance and yoga classes, an indoor
track and our world famous outdoor track, Hayward
field. We have miles and miles of maintained running
paths
through the city. Miles of bicycle
paths also wind through
the city and into the countryside.
The Willamette River is immediately adjacent to campus, and you can
rent canoes, inner tubes, swim or just jump in on hot summer
days. We have a great Outdoor
Pursuits Program that offers courses in wilderness survival, rock
climbing, sailing, and more; they organize trips around the pacific
northwest (rafting, hiking, biking, canoeing, etc); and it
has an
extensive collection of guides, maps and videos. Here's a UO campus map and
directions.
-- What is Eugene like?
The Eugene metropolitan
area has a population of over 200,000. Yet the city of Eugene maintains
a colorful, small town feel. Our links to Eugene and Local Area
and PlanetEugene offer
information about arts, culture & entertainment, shopping, outdoor
recreation, news, lodging, transportation & maps. You can
also check it out on Wikipedia.
Eugene is one of the most bicycle-friendly places in
the country, with many miles of bike routes and bike paths through and
around town, the parks and gardens, and the wetlands.
The
summer weather is dry, very low humidity, and very pleasant (July
weather
summary for Eugene).
Throughout the summer, we have a Saturday Market, with
a growers market, local food and crafts vendors, and local
entertainment on the Market Stage.
The
Willamette River runs through the University and is joined by the
McKenzie River just north of town. From Eugene, it is just over
an hour’s drive to either the Cascade mountains to the East, the
Coastal Mountains and the Oregon coast to the West, and Portland and
the Columbia River Gorge to the North.
Eugene is often referred to as Track Town USA.
You see people running constantly -- there are many 10K, 5K, 2K, and
fun run
races around town, all-comers track meets several weeks in the summer, running groups,
and a new Eugene Marathon.
At Hayward Field, each year is the Prefontaine
Classic Track Meet that
brings world class runners. In the past, Eugene and UO have
hosted the national championships, the world championships, and in 2008
we will again host the US Olympic
Trials.
There is
great music in town of many types.
Oregon Bach Festival, Oregon Mozart Players,
Jazz, Swing dances, salsa and tango groups, Zimbabwean marimba
groups, drumming
circles, Oregon Country
Fair, City of Eugene Summer Concerts
in the Park and Movie
Night in the Park, and many more events and groups. Check out
links from the SPUR
home page.
-- If I participate in SPUR, what
should I bring to Eugene?
The UO Housing
"What to Bring" page lists fundamentals. For SPUR activities, you
will want hiking shoes/boots, swim wear, running shoes, water
recreation footwear (particularly TEVA-type sport sandals for tide
pooling), sunglasses, sunscreen, hat. Overall the summers in
Oregon are
beautiful. However, you should be prepared for the
extremes. Temperatures will vary greatly: in 2008, we had record
heat in late May and record cold in early June; ski areas remained open
in June, while students were trying to beat the heat by walking from
their dorms to the river with inner-tubes. You'll want a warm
jacket and sweaters for cool nights on coast trips, and camping in the mountains can be co-old. There are
typically several days of 100°F weather each summer, but it's very dry heat. Be
prepared for rain, for heat, but mostly for beautiful weather.