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Advice for REUs to apply to as a non-US, non-EU citizen? (Marine Biology, Oceanography, Ecology general)

Advice for REUs to apply to as a non-US, non-EU citizen? (Marine Biology, Oceanography, Ecology general)
Advice for REUs to apply to as a non-US, non-EU citizen? (Marine Biology, Oceanography, Ecology general)

I am currently doing a B.Sc. in Marine Sciences, and am looking forward to securing a decent REU to fulfil my graduate requirement, which is to be completed by Nov 2027.

I know rejection should be a normal part of scientific careers, but receiving 3 "we regret to inform" just today alone is really upsetting. Hence, I am coming here to seek advice on any stipended REUs which I can realistically aim for?

Admittedly, I don't have a US/EU passport or PR, which means I am already not eligible for most opportunities out there as a Southeast Asian from a no-name university, and the ones that do accept international students with stipends are extremely competitive for this reason.

So, any advice or suggestions for realistic steps I should take next? What sort of people/CVs will I compete against when aiming for international REUs (just to get a picture)? And any less competitive/less well-known but still decent opportunities that are realistic for my level to apply to? (But seriously, any comment and critique is welcome)

(I am already deeply involved with multiple local NGOs and spend 7 days a week volunteering on top of being a full-time student, many of these involve work across my country. But I definitely have ZERO international exposure, which is why I am desperate to bridge this gap with my REU)

submitted by /u/dearest_hedgehog
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Tagged with

#marine science
#marine biodiversity
#marine life databases
#citizen science
#Marine Sciences
#REU
#graduate requirement
#international students
#stipended REUs
#Southeast Asian
#no-name university
#NGOs
#Ecology
#Oceanography
#competition
#international exposure
#volunteering
#CV
#application process
#rejection