Pillars two & three
Research & Volunteering
Professors take curious, reliable students — and a cold email doesn't have a GPA field. Neither does a volunteer application. These two pillars run on showing up, not on your transcript, which means you can start building both this month.
① Getting into a UC lab — the cold-email path
This is the real no-GPA route into research: PIs almost never ask for a transcript from a volunteer undergrad. They ask two silent questions — is this student genuinely interested in my work, and will they show up? Your email's only job is to answer both.
The five steps
- Build a list of 5–10 PIs. Department faculty pages (Biology, COM basic-science departments, CCHMC-affiliated labs), research.uc.edu, and the UC Office of Undergraduate Research. Pick labs whose papers you can say one true sentence about.
- Write a short, personalized email. Three things only: why their work specifically, your availability (8–10 hrs/week), and your attached resume. The ready-to-copy version is on the templates page.
- Send to all 5–10. This is a numbers game with a warm tone — a 1-in-5-to-10 hit rate is normal and one yes is all you need.
- Follow up once after 1 week. Polite, two sentences. Plenty of yeses arrive only after the follow-up.
- Ask for warm intros in parallel. PPAC advisors and any professor whose office hours you attend can walk your email past the inbox pile.
Once you're in
- Commit 6–10 hrs/week during the semester and treat it like a class you can't skip. Reliability is the whole currency.
- Stay 2+ semesters. A PI letter after two semesters of consistent work outweighs any summer program on your application.
- Volunteer seats often convert to paid or for-credit roles once you've proven yourself — and UC's course-based "R"-attribute courses + the Protégé Undergraduate Research Program (verify Protégé specifics) put research evidence directly on your transcript.
② Formal research programs — the honest picture
This is the only place in Cincinnati where GPA gates exist — and the gate is 3.0, which is one good semester away. Treat these programs as a concrete reward for the fall semester, not as closed doors.
| Program | What it is | GPA gate | Timing | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cold-email a UC PI ⭐ | Volunteer lab seat, 6–10 hrs/wk; often converts to paid/credit | No GPA | Any semester — start this fall | Steps above |
| UC "R" courses + Protégé | Course-based research with transcript evidence | None listed (verify Protégé) | Semester / co-op cycle | Info |
| CCHMC SURF | Premier paid 10-week summer fellowship at Cincinnati Children's, capstone presentation; freshmen–seniors may apply | ≥ 3.0 — unlocks when you cross 3.0 | Late-May start; apply ~Jan–Feb (verify) | Info |
| UC COM SURF | Paid full-time summer research at UC College of Medicine | ≥ 3.0 + sophomore/junior status, US citizen/PR | Summer; same winter application window | Info |
| CCHMC BRIMS | 9-week paid biomedical research internship — HS seniors and college freshmen | Verify GPA req + rising-sophomore eligibility | Summer, full-time | Info |
| UC COM RISE UP (Neuroscience) | Undergrad research fellowship aimed at broadening participation | Verify — GPA terms not confirmed; worth an email to the coordinator | Check program page | Info |
| Clinical research assistant (paid) | Entry research posts at CCHMC Research Foundation + UC COM; full CRC roles are a gap-year target | No GPA screen in postings | Watch job boards ongoing | Browse |
SHPEP (the AAMC/ADEA pipeline program, 2.5 GPA minimum) concludes after its summer 2026 cohort — watch shpep.org in fall 2026 for a successor program. Verified 2026-07-06; items marked "verify" need a confirming email or call.
③ Volunteering that matters
Med schools count sustained commitments — 150–400+ hours over 12+ months in 2–3 activities — far more than a scatter of 20-hour stints. Pick one or two of these and stay a year. Clinical-setting roles live on the Clinical Experience page; these are the community and service lanes.
| Opportunity | Org + Location | Requirements | Commitment | Why it matters | Apply |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Student Volunteer Internship | Crossroad Health Center (FQHC), Over-the-Rhine | One semester of undergrad done; essays + resume + group interview No GPA | 4 hrs/wk for a full year | 1-on-1 patient case management — textbook service-to-the-underserved; fall window opens late July/Aug | Apply |
| Charitable Pharmacy Volunteer | St. Vincent de Paul, West End | No license — pharmacist-supervised No GPA | Weekly/biweekly (verify) | Ohio's busiest charitable pharmacy; medication access + patient advocacy | Apply |
| NeighborHub / Center for Respite Care | Homeless-healthcare clinics + medical respite, Cincinnati | Contact-based (verify openings) No GPA | Varies | A rare, memorable setting — medicine for people with nowhere to recover | Contact |
| Ronald McDonald House | RMHC Cincinnati — next to Children's | Guest Service role is 21+ (verify — under 21 you can do group/episodic events) | 2 shifts/month for 9 months | Families of hospitalized children; pairs naturally with Children's volunteering | Apply |
| La Soupe | Walnut Hills | None No GPA | Flexible kitchen/food-runner shifts | Food insecurity = social determinants of health, hands-on | Sign up |
| Matthew 25: Ministries | Blue Ash | None; drop-in friendly No GPA | Flexible sorting/packing shifts | Easy consistent service hours; humanitarian-aid narrative | Sign up |
| Freestore Foodbank | Liberty St + distribution sites | None No GPA | Flexible shifts | Largest tri-state food bank; reliable volume of hours | Sign up |
| Crisis Text Line (remote) | National — from your dorm | 18+, background check, free 15-hr online training No GPA | 200-hr total, self-scheduled (~4 hrs/wk) | Real crisis counseling hours; strong mental/behavioral-health narrative | Apply |
| 988 Lifeline — Talbert House | Talbert House runs Cincinnati's 281-CARE/988 line | 18+; center-trained (verify volunteer vs paid openings) | Weekly shifts | Local crisis-line work; Talbert House also posts paid entry-level behavioral-health jobs | Info |
④ Leadership — the story only you can tell
Admissions committees don't count titles; they look for people who saw a need and did something about it. You have two lanes here — one conventional, one that nobody else in your applicant pool can copy.
Turn membership into a title
- Join one pre-health org and one service org this fall — then just show up consistently. Most members don't; reliability alone puts you in line for a role.
- Volunteer for the unglamorous jobs (events coordinator, treasurer, volunteer scheduler). Titles follow the people who do the work.
- By year 3, aim for officer, coordinator, or founder of something — one real title with real responsibility beats five memberships.
Build something in your own community
Your Syrian and Muslim community in Cincinnati isn't a line on a resume — it's a real community with real health needs, and you're about to hold a real clinical skill. That combination is leadership material no committee can dismiss as box-checking:
- Health screening days at the mosque or community center — once you're certified and working, your phlebotomy skill plus a partnering nurse or physician from the community makes blood-pressure-and-basics events genuinely doable.
- Bilingual health navigation — helping Arabic-speaking families read appointment letters, prep questions for doctors, and find free clinics like Crossroad. You already speak the language the healthcare system doesn't.
- Start small and real: one event, one family helped. Authenticity is the whole point — this works because it's yours, not because it's impressive-sounding.
⑤ Your first 3 asks
Everything on this page starts with asking someone. These three asks, made this month, put all three pillars in motion — they save automatically as you check them off.
Research, tiered by leverage
Not all research hours are worth the same. These tiers rank by leverage — how much a single hour compounds across your whole application when the work is mentored, biomedical or clinical, sustained, and ideally paid. The order is not about prestige. Here's the verified truth admissions officers state plainly: duration and depth beat prestige. A student who spent two years in one ordinary UC lab and can talk fluently about the findings outshines someone who padded six activities at famous names. Adcoms "don't count hours — they count what you produced." So pick for depth, then stay.
Tier 1 — compounds everything
Biomedical/clinical, local to Cincinnati, mentored, ideally paid. Highest leverage per hour.
| Opportunity | What it is | Pay | GPA gate | Apply window |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UC faculty lab + BIOL 4095–4097 (research-for-credit) No GPA gate The keystone — start here |
Join a Biological Sciences (or adjacent) faculty lab by emailing PIs directly, then formalize it as undergraduate research credit. ≥3 credits + a Spring Symposium presentation can satisfy an upper-level lab elective and the Capstone. | Usually credit; some labs pay hourly | None — relationship-based | This month / rolling — email 5–8 PIs before fall |
| CCHMC paid RA postings Paid | Standing hourly research-assistant roles in individual Cincinnati Children's labs; part-time options require current college enrollment. Your phlebotomy cert is a genuine edge for study/clinical roles. | Hourly employment | None stated on generic RA postings | Rolling — postings refresh continuously |
| UPRISE (UC undergrad research) Paid | Competitive summer program pairing undergrads with faculty across STEMM; holistic review weighs recommendations + personal statement, and rising sophomores are eligible. | $6,000 stipend | No hard cutoff — holistic | Spring window (verify current cycle) |
| CRSP — Cancer Research Scholars Paid | 10-week summer cancer-research program; some scholars continue during the academic year. The one top-tier local program that openly flexes GPA — its own language allows "a brief lapse in GPA due to extenuating circumstances," which fits a documented rebuild. | $15/hr, ~400 hrs | 3.2 desired — holistic, flexes for a rebuild | Deadline ~Feb 1 (verify) |
| CCHMC SURF Paid | 10-week summer fellowship across 700+ Cincinnati Children's labs — basic, translational, and clinical pediatric research. The gold-standard local program. | $13/hr, ~10 wks | ≥ 3.0 — unlocks when you cross 3.0 | Opens ~Nov 1; deadline ~Feb 1 |
| UC College of Medicine SURF (GE / Neuro / ASPET) Paid | 10-week summer research in College of Medicine labs across several themed tracks, including a Neuroscience SURF and ASPET pharmacology. | $4,000–$5,000 / 10 wks | ≥ 3.0-ish (verify per track) | Deadline ~Feb 1 |
| EPA-AWBERC + NIOSH/CDC (ORISE) Paid | Federal, Cincinnati-local research appointments — EPA's Breidenbach center (environmental/biomedical) and NIOSH occupational-health research — posted individually via ORISE on Zintellect. US citizens only. | ORISE stipend (varies) | Per-posting (ORISE commonly ~3.0+ — verify each) | Rolling — set a Zintellect alert |
Tier 2 — solid, still fully counts
Any real mentored research — including non-bio and away-from-home summers. Counts fully for med school.
| Opportunity | What it is | Pay | GPA gate | Apply window |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NSF REUs Paid | Nationwide 8–10 week mentored summer research at host labs; 200+ sites. Target the holistic-review sites (e.g. the Marine Biological Lab at Woods Hole, which reviews grades + essays + experience together) while your GPA is near 3.0. | Stipend + usually housing | Varies — many 3.0, some holistic | Deadlines mostly Jan–Feb |
| NIH Summer Internship (SIP) Paid | 8+ week summer research at NIH campuses. Structurally open — no formal minimum. The real filter is competitiveness, not a gate, so it's worth applying. US citizen/PR required. | Stipend | No minimum GPA | Deadline ~Feb 18 |
| UC Psychology / Public Health labs | Faculty-led research in clinical, cognition, community-health, and behavioral labs. Psychology and population-health research count fully for med school and pair well with a pre-med narrative. | Often credit; some paid | None stated — relationship-based | Rolling — email PIs |
| OSU SROP Paid | Big Ten summer research pipeline at Ohio State — faculty-mentored plus enrichment. In-state and paid; opens at exactly 3.0, so it's a natural "GPA-just-crossed" target. US citizen/PR. | Stipend | ≥ 3.0 | Winter / early-spring (verify date) |
| Ohio Five – OSU SURE Paid | Summer Undergraduate Research Experience with a special focus on rising sophomores/juniors, any major — a good structural fit for your year. | Stipend (verify amount) | No hard cutoff surfaced — verify | Spring window — verify |
| Case Western summer research (SURP) Paid | Cleveland-based summer undergrad research across multiple departments and the med school — an in-state paid biomedical option. | Stipend (varies) | Commonly ~3.0+ — verify per program | Winter–spring — verify offerings |
Tier 3 — recognize and deprioritize
- Pay-to-play "research academies." Programs that charge you (often thousands) for a "research experience." The tell: real programs pay you a stipend or are free — they never invoice you to participate.
- Paid authorship & predatory journals. "Get published" offers, journals that accept papers in hours, hidden fees, flattering spam invitations. Adcoms read this as a research-integrity red flag, not an achievement.
- Unmentored data-entry "research volunteer" roles. Zero PI contact, no scientific ownership, no path to understanding the study. Hours without depth don't move the needle.
Be fair, though: a self-driven or independent project with a real mentor — a PI, physician, or faculty member who actually supervises you and can write about you — is completely legitimate, even without a branded name. The disqualifier is the absence of a real mentor and real ownership, not the absence of a famous label. The clean test: does money flow to you (or is it free), and is there a real scientist mentoring you? Yes/yes → real.
The sequence, in order
- This month (July 2026): email 5–8 UC PIs to land a research-for-credit seat for fall — the ungated keystone — and scan the rolling CCHMC + UC RA postings (no GPA gate) in parallel.
- Still at 2.9 (fall–winter): apply to the GPA-agnostic programs whose windows open — UPRISE, NIH SIP, holistic-review NSF REUs, and take a real swing at CRSP, which openly flexes GPA for a documented rebuild.
- The moment you cross 3.0 (~early 2027): the gated locals unlock — CCHMC SURF, UC CoM SURF, and OSU SROP, all on the ~Feb-1 calendar. Your phlebotomy cert sharpens every clinical RA application.
Your target list: professors to email
This is the ungated keystone from the tiers above — no GPA screen, just a well-written email. Don't email all 20. Read the list, pick 5–10 whose work genuinely interests you, and reach out in small, personalized batches. The exact cold-email wording is on the templates page.
"Med-relevance" below is your-facing framing, not an official label: direct studies disease/drugs/human systems · indirect a model system with clear links to human health · basic-science fundamental biology where the pre-med value is skills + a rec letter.
UC Department of Biological Sciences — your home department, start here
| Professor | What the lab studies (plain English) | Med-relevance | Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Joshua B. Benoit | How insects survive stress and dehydration and control metabolism with hormones — includes disease-spreading (vector) insects | indirect | Profile |
| Daniel R. Buchholz | How hormones drive development, using frog metamorphosis as a model for thyroid-hormone biology | indirect | Profile |
| Elke K. Buschbeck | How insect eyes and visual nervous systems are built and evolve — neurobiology and optics | basic-science | Profile |
| Miguel Angel Chiurillo | The molecular biology of trypanosome parasites that cause Chagas disease, using CRISPR gene editing | direct | Profile |
| Theresa M. Culley | Plant population genetics — how invasive and endangered plant species reproduce and spread | basic-science | Profile |
| Ronald W. DeBry | Molecular evolution and DNA-sequence analysis, including forensic entomology | indirect | Profile |
| Kathleen E. Grogan | How genetic variation affects survival across environments; also STEM education and diversity | indirect | Profile |
| Josh B. Gross | The genetics of how animals evolve — using blind cavefish to find genes behind physical traits | indirect | Profile |
| Elizabeth A. Hobson | Animal social behavior and cooperation — how individuals form relationships and social networks | basic-science | Profile |
| Bruce C. Jayne | The physics and muscle biology of how animals move — functional anatomy | basic-science | Profile |
| Noelia M. Lander | Cell signaling in trypanosome parasites that cause Chagas disease, using gene-editing tools | direct | Profile |
| John E. Layne | How animal brains use vision to navigate and orient in the real world — behavioral neurobiology | basic-science | Profile |
| David L. Lentz | Ancient plant use and domestication — how past human societies grew and used plants | basic-science | Profile |
| Stephen F. Matter | Population ecology — how animal populations move, disperse, and survive across fragmented habitats | basic-science | Profile |
| Nathan I. Morehouse | The behavior and biology of butterflies and jumping spiders — vision, mating, and nutrition | basic-science | Profile |
| Kenneth Petren | Evolutionary genetics — how species adapt, migrate, and form, using genomics and ancient DNA | basic-science | Profile |
| Michal Polak | Sexual selection and host-parasite biology in insects — why mating traits evolve | basic-science | Profile |
| Stephanie M. Rollmann | The genetics and neurobiology of behavior — especially smell (olfaction) and chemical ecology | indirect | Profile |
| Eric J. Tepe | Plant classification and evolution of large plant groups like peppers and nightshades | basic-science | Profile |
| Dieter Vanderelst | Building robotic and computer models of how bats echolocate and navigate — biology meets robotics | basic-science | Profile |
Best-fit starting points if you want disease-relevant work: Chiurillo and Lander both study a real parasitic human disease (Chagas) with modern molecular tools. Benoit, Buchholz, Rollmann, Gross, and Grogan are strong "indirect" options (endocrinology, genetics, neuro-genetics). But remember — a basic-science lab where you thrive beats a disease lab where you're ignored.
Adjacent targets — cast a wider net
Chemistry — biochem-leaning labs
- Anthony Grillo — how mitochondrial problems disrupt micronutrient metabolism and cause neurodegenerative disease direct
- Aaron Joiner — how cells move materials across membranes, and how this breaks in neurodegeneration direct
- Ashley Ross — electrochemical sensors measuring fast chemical changes in the brain direct
- Briana Simms — new biomaterials for drug delivery and wound healing direct
- Ryan White — new bioanalytical methods to probe biological systems indirect
Psychology — neuro / clinical / health labs
- Matia Solomon (Behavioral Neuroscience) — how stress and hormones affect depression, anxiety, and Alzheimer's pathology direct
- Quintino Mano (Cognitive & Affective Neuropsychology) — reading, dyslexia, emotion + thinking in children direct
- Cathy Stough (Healthy Bearcat Families) — pediatric psychology, childhood obesity, behavioral-health interventions direct
UC Psychology labs → Clinical labs often want a multi-semester commitment.
UC College of Medicine — Molecular & Cellular Biosciences
A large pool of wet-lab, disease-focused research that bio undergrads routinely join, across three research areas:
- Structural Biology & Biochemistry
- Microbiology & Immunology
- Cellular Signaling, Regenerative Biology & Neuroscience
The named undergrad door: the College of Medicine lists Dr. Bryan Mackenzie, Director of Research Experiences (bryan.mackenzie@uc.edu) — med professors welcome undergrads. When you email, contact the PI and the lab manager or a grad student if the lab page lists one (they often onboard undergrads and reply faster), and reference one specific paper.
MCB department → · Full faculty directory → (open each profile — verify focus per PI)
Cincinnati Children's (CCHMC) divisions
One of the largest pediatric research operations in the country (700+ faculty), right next to UC's med campus. Browse a division's "Labs" tab → open a lab → check its "People" page for undergrads → email that PI.
- Developmental Biology · Immunobiology
- Experimental Hematology & Cancer Biology
- Allergy & Immunology
Mechanism: email PIs directly — but their stated rule is no more than 1–2 faculty at a time; mass-emailing can disqualify you.
Skim a lab page in 5 minutes
- Read the research summary out loud. Can you explain it to a friend in one sentence? If not, it may not be the fit — or you need to read a paper first.
- Find "Publications." Look at the last 1–2 years. Is the work still active? Do the titles interest you?
- Find "People / Lab members." Are undergrads listed? If yes, this PI already mentors undergrads — a strong sign.
- Note one specific thing — a recent paper, a method, a disease — to mention in your email. That's what separates a real email from a mass one.
Cold-email etiquette
- Small batches. Send 3–4 at a time so you can personalize each and track replies — don't blast all 20 at once.
- One follow-up only, after 5–7 days, if no reply. Then move to the next name. Silence usually means "too busy / no space," not "no forever."
- CCHMC: no more than 1–2 PIs at a time (their stated rule).
- Mention you'd do it for credit via BIOL 4095 — it lowers the "ask" because there's already an official course to register the work under.
The lab skills ladder
Here's a quiet advantage: bench skills compound across your course labs, your lab jobs, and your research labs. A technique you first meet in a Biology II lab shows up again in a specimen-processing job and again in a PI's lab. And it changes cold-email reply rates — "I can already run a gel and keep a clean notebook" reads very differently from "I'm eager to learn." You can truthfully list the course-taught skills now and add the rest as you go.
| Skill | What it is (one line) | Where you first learn it |
|---|---|---|
| Micropipetting | Precise transfer of microliter liquid volumes — the foundational skill under nearly every wet-lab protocol | Intro course lab, then daily in any lab job / research lab (standard in intro bio, but not named in the fetched UC syllabus — verify) |
| Solution / reagent prep | Making buffers and dilutions to a target concentration; needs math + balance/pH use | Intro chem/bio lab; reinforced in a research lab or prep-tech job |
| PCR | Amplifies a specific DNA sequence into millions of copies (sequencing, genotyping, gene expression) | Upper-division bio/genetics lab or research lab |
| Gel electrophoresis | Separates DNA/RNA/protein by size and charge through a gel; visualizes/verifies PCR products | Intro-to-mid bio lab — UC BIOL 1082 confirmed teaches electrophoresis + spectrophotometry |
| Cell culture | Growing and maintaining cells under controlled media/incubator conditions | Research lab (rarely in intro courses) |
| Aseptic / sterile technique | Working without introducing contamination — prerequisite to cell culture and microbiology | Microbiology course lab; mastered in a research/cell-culture lab |
| ELISA | Plate-based antibody assay to detect or quantify a specific protein or antigen (also diagnostics) | Research lab or advanced immunology/biochem lab |
| Western blot | Detects a specific protein's presence and size in a sample via gel + antibody probing | Research lab or advanced biochem/cell-bio lab |
| Lab-notebook discipline | Contemporaneous, reproducible documentation of methods and results — core to data integrity | Every course lab; enforced hard in research and regulated diagnostic labs |
| Biosafety (BSL levels) | The CDC's four containment levels by agent risk: BSL-1 open bench → BSL-2 moderate (biosafety cabinet) → BSL-3 airborne → BSL-4 exotic/full suit | Institutional safety training before lab access; BSL-2 is typical for undergrad research |
| CITI training | Web-based research-ethics/compliance courses — universities' IRBs require CITI Human Subjects Research training for anyone, including undergrads, doing human-subjects research (recertify ~every 3 yrs) | Completed online before joining a human-subjects project |