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The masterclassCold emailing for research positions
The single skill that turns curiosity into a lab seat. A complete, no-fluff guide to landing lab internships and research mentorship, starting with one well-crafted email.
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01Why cold email
Cold emailing is your best tool, not a backup plan
A cold email is not a long shot you fall back on. It is the most direct way to reach exactly the researcher you want to learn from.
You choose the mentor
Competitive summer programs assign you randomly. Cold emailing lets you find someone working on exactly what you care about.
You build a relationship
A cold email starts a conversation, not a lottery. Professors remember thoughtful students even when no position is open right now.
You start early
Email in fall for summer. Email in spring for fall. Professors plan lab schedules months ahead, and being on their radar pays off.
02Who to target
Skip the famous names, find the right fit
A real project at a state school beats a spectator role at a famous one every time.
Target these
- Assistant and associate professors.
- Professors actively publishing (in the last 1 to 2 years).
- Local labs for wet-lab work.
- Remote labs for coding, data, or literature review.
- State university researchers building their lab.
Skip these
- Full professors and department chairs.
- Ivy League labs, where your email competes with PhD students.
- Labs with no publications in 2+ years.
- Paid "summer research programs" charging tuition.
- Anyone you have not researched at all.
03Email structure
Seven parts of an email that gets read
Every part has a job. Miss one and the email reads like every other one in the inbox.
Subject line
Reference the paper or topic directly. A good format: "Your [year] paper on [topic], question about getting involved." Avoid generic subjects like "Research Opportunity"; those get deleted instantly.
Hook
Cite one specific paper from the last 1 to 2 years. Name a finding, a method, or a question it raised for you. One or two sentences max. This is the single most important part; it proves you did your homework.
Intro
Name, school, grade, and one relevant thing you have done: a class, project, club, or science fair. One or two sentences. Do not list your GPA, awards, or life story. This is not your biography.
Ask how
Use "How do students typically get involved in your lab?" instead of "Can I intern here?" It is open-ended, low pressure, and much easier to answer. It shows curiosity, not desperation.
Give an out
Add a line like "I completely understand if your schedule does not allow for it." It reduces the pressure on the professor and actually increases your reply rate. People respond more when they do not feel cornered.
Low ask
Request 15 minutes by phone or video call. Offer email as an alternative if that is easier. The lower the ask, the higher the response rate. You are asking for a conversation, not a job.
Sign off
Use "Sincerely" and your full name. Attach a clean one-page resume. Make sure your email address is professional (firstname.lastname@gmail.com). One bad detail undermines everything else you built.
04Sample email
Copy this template, then make it yours
Replace every bracket. The subject line is read before your name, so make it feel like it came from someone who did their homework.
Subject: Your 2026 paper on [specific topic], question about getting involved
Dear Dr. [Last Name],
I recently read your paper on [specific finding or method]. The way you
approached [brief detail] was something I had not seen framed that way,
and it made me want to understand more about [broader question].
I'm a [grade] student at [your high school] interested in [relevant area],
and I've been [one relevant thing: a project, class, or volunteer work].
I'd love to learn more about your work. How do students typically get
involved in your lab? I'm genuinely happy to start small and support
whatever the team needs.
Would you have 15 minutes for a quick call sometime? I'm also happy to
answer any questions over email if that's easier. I completely understand
if your schedule doesn't allow for it.
Sincerely,
[Your full name]
[Your high school] | Class of [year] | [Phone or LinkedIn optional]
05Timing
When you send matters as much as what you send
Realistic reply rates by connection
It is a numbers game. Everyone you email should relate to the field you actually want to research.
06How to prepare
Do this before you send a single email
Build a spreadsheet of 100 to 200 professors
Include name, institution, email, 1 to 2 recent publications, and one specific hook per person. Treat it like a pipeline.
Read at least one recent paper per professor
Focus on the abstract and intro. You need the question they are trying to answer, not every method.
Learn Python before you get a yes Strongly recommended
Most early work is data wrangling and cleaning spreadsheets. Start with Harvard CS50 (free), then a pandas course.
Build a clean one-page resume
Coursework, independent projects, clubs like CRS, and any science-fair results. Clarity matters more than length.
Follow labs on LinkedIn and Twitter/X
Professors sometimes post open positions before they are listed anywhere official. Engaging gives you things to reference.
07Mistakes to avoid
Eight things that kill your email before it's read
08After you send
The follow up, the call, and the bigger picture
One follow up after 1 to 2 weeks
Professors missed the email; they are not ignoring you. One sentence is enough: "Just wanted to make sure this didn't get buried."
On the call, ask smart questions
Ask what the lab is working on now, how students typically contribute, and what skills would help you hit the ground running.
Research signals initiative
Admissions officers at selective schools look for students who use university research resources. You are proving you already do.
The skill is transferable forever
Cold emailing gets you professors today, hiring managers and investors later. Very few people your age can write one that gets a response.
09Action plan
Your roadmap, starting this summer
Now, start of summer break
Set up a professional email address, build your professor spreadsheet, and send your first emails while professors have bandwidth in May and June. Read one recent paper from a local university lab and update your one-page resume.
Next week
Draft your first three cold emails using the template. Get feedback from a CRS member or a teacher. Send on a Tuesday or Wednesday morning at 7:30 AM.
Ongoing
Keep expanding your spreadsheet to 50 to 100 professors. Send 5 to 10 emails per week. Follow up once after 1 to 2 weeks. Use the slower summer pace to start learning Python on Harvard CS50 for free.
Want to do this with someone in your corner?
After you message us, you can get on a one-on-one to learn exactly how to start cold emailing and how to proceed from there: building your list, writing your first email, and reading a mentor's reply.