- Summer Research Projects 2006
- Thesis Guidelines
- Honors Thesis Projects
- Summer Research Projects
- Pre-Frosh Summer Research Program
- Summer Research Program
- Research
- Application for a Summer Research Stipend
- Summer Research Application

Honors Research
Unparalleled Opportunities and a Defining Requirement
As an Honors student, you can live on campus at our expense any summer and pursue your research. In fact, thanks to a special "pre-frosh" opportunity, you can work on a sophisticated project for five weeks even before you have begun your first semester classes.
Our hallmark summer program underscores the important role that research experience plays during all four undergraduate years of your intellectual and professional development. Mentored, collaborative research opportunities enable you to share in the exciting process of creating new knowledge. They also equip you with professionally valued problem-solving skills and techniques. In your senior year, you are required to demonstrate the capabilities you have mastered by designing and undertaking a research project of your own choosing - an experience that culminates with a thesis of publication quality.
For Clarkson's Honors graduates, the successful demonstration of professional-level analytical skills gained through research experiences has opened doors to prestigious fellowships, top graduate schools, and fast-track jobs.
Goldwater Scholarship Winners from the Honors Program and Where They Are Now
The prestigious Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship is the nation's premier undergraduate award for students pursuing careers in mathematics, the natural sciences, and engineering. About 300 are awarded annually by the federally endowed Goldwater Foundation. Find out where they are now (displayed after their names below.)
2007
- Jeffrey Ward
2006
- Samuel Gorton
— Chemical Engineering, senior
- Niall Mangan
— Physics/ Mathematics, senior
- Christy Petruczok
— Chemical Engineering, senior
2005
- Andrew Bingham
— Mechanical & Aeronautical Engineering, senior
- Norman Marshall
— Chemistry, Ph.D. student; University of Chicago
2004
- Keith Jackson
— Aeronautical Engineering, Ph.D. student; University of Illinois
2003
- Nadeeka Yapa
— Electrical Engineering, Ph.D. student; University of Illinois
- Ryan Turner
— Chemical Engineering, Ph.D. student; Cal Tech
2002
- Thomas Hooper
— Mechanical Engineering, Knolls Atomic Power Labs, Nuclear Operations Program
2001
- Kirsten Griffiths
— Chemistry, Ph.D. student; UCLA
2000
- Michael Moravan
— Chemistry, MD/Ph.D. student; University of Rochester
