In 20 years, when you ask a group of scientists to recall the moment they decided they wanted to pursue a career in STEM, they might say it happened on the campus of Syracuse University in the summer of 2023.

Thanks to the Syracuse University Research in Physics (SURPh) paid internship program, Syracuse City School District (SCSD) students and recent graduates spent six weeks on campus in labs and in classrooms where they worked alongside faculty to engage in cutting-edge research. Among the topics explored, students took a dive into the world of invisible subatomic particles, known as neutrinos, and probed the inner regions of distant galaxies using computational astrophysics.
SURPh was an idea developed last year by rising senior physics major聽, who is also an alum of SCSD. The program provides SCSD students the unique opportunity to work as a paid scientist before entering college, which organizers hope will inspire the young researchers to continue in STEM.
The program is led by聽, professor and department chair of physics, and also includes co-organizers Melanie Pelcher, a science teacher at Henninger High School in Syracuse, Devon Lamanna 鈥23, an SCSD alum who majored in economics in the and is now pursuing a master鈥檚 in the same subject, and Yudaisy Salom贸n Sargent贸n, operations specialist for the Department of Physics.
Now in its second year, SURPh is a collaboration of Arts and Sciences and SCSD and is supported in part by the , , and . The program welcomed 12 new student participants and five that returned from last year鈥檚 cohort to serve as near-peer mentors.
Faculty instructors included physics professors , who specializes in computational astrophysics and simulations of black holes and stars; , who focuses on experimental biophysics and bacterial biofilms; , who specializes on experimental biophysics and microtubule self-organization; and and , who specialize in experimental neutrino physics.

The program wrapped up with a poster session where students presented their research to their peers, faculty, local high school teachers and families in the University’s physics building.
鈥淚t is exciting to see the science these students are able to achieve in just six weeks,鈥 says Ross. 鈥淚t is even more exciting that so many wanted to return as mentors and to do science with us a second summer. To me, that is the impact鈥攃reating the longitudinal pipeline going into the future.鈥
While one of the major goals of the program is to instill in these students an interest in science, Ross hopes the six weeks on campus serves as a recruiting tool that will bring them back to Syracuse University for the next step in their academic journey.
鈥(At the poster session) one local teacher said that the students from his school are all saying that Syracuse University is a top pick for them to go to college, and he wasn鈥檛 sure they were thinking about college before,鈥 says Ross. 鈥淭hat is a major win. Any kids who continue their school after this is a win. Any kid who stays with science is a win. If they pick physics, double win. My top-level goal is to have a student do this program, major in physics, decide to stick with it for a Ph.D. and come back to teach for us at Syracuse University. We are trying to create our own pipeline of diverse talent from the local neighborhoods up.鈥
Ross says they plan to hold the event again next year and will get started in December with recruiting at local high schools.

All photos by Yudaisy Salom贸n Sargent贸n