
Many students choose to include a research experience or internship as part of their undergraduate education. These experiences allow you to explore a research problem in depth under the guidance of a member of the faculty. You can apply what you've learned in classes and labs and ask and answer questions that no one else has yet addressed. Many students feel that this was the most valuable part of their academic life at college. In addition to the possibility of participating in the publication of a scientific journal, these experiences give you something concrete to talk about in interviews for jobs or graduate school. In fact, one of the most common interview questions is to talk about a project that you worked on as a student. Interviewers can assess your technical knowledge, your communication skills, and your enthusiasm for science very quickly.
There are several research groups working in the Chemistry Department at Wittenberg and we have placed students in summer and academic-year internships as well.
Examples:
- Conductivity of Carbon Nanotubes
- Attachment of Organic Layers of Silicon
- Photochemical Oxidation of Graphite
- Tick Pheromones
- Carbonyl pi Interactions
- Calixarene Synthesis and Electrode Modification


