Metadata
Title
Summer Research Opportunities
Category
scholarships
UUID
46200fa1cba646648abf378b182ad77a
Source URL
https://discover.engineering.utoronto.ca/experiential-learning/summer-research/
Parent URL
https://discover.engineering.utoronto.ca/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T07:56:52+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Summer Research Opportunities

Source: https://discover.engineering.utoronto.ca/experiential-learning/summer-research/ Parent: https://discover.engineering.utoronto.ca/

Each summer, hundreds of U of T Engineering students gain research experience working in labs on campus and across the world.

Put your lab experience to the test with a summer research position that will open your eyes to leading-edge engineering research in action. In addition to the many U of T Engineering professors who hire undergraduate students as team members on campus, this is a fantastic way to get a hands-on look at how research unfolds in another country. Of the 300+ engineering students who participated in summer research opportunities in 2019, 80+ students worked in top-notch research labs all over the world, from the National University of Singapore to the University of Queensland.

Professors engaged in research report their results in articles they write for prestigious journals; that’s how engineers and scientists around the world learn about the latest advancements in their fields. When a journal article is published, every team member's name appears on the paper, including the names of undergraduate students who contributed to the work. Even before you graduate, you can begin to build an impressive resume of accomplishments. All hours worked count toward your practical experience requirement.

Opportunities to gain global research experience include:

Learn more about summer research at U of T Engineering

Top U of T undergraduate Ben Agro is taking his passion for research into a direct-entry PhD

‘A world of possibilities’: U of T Engineering undergraduate students host virtual summer research conference

Why more U of T Engineering students than ever are going global