Information for prospective faculty mentors
- ERAS is a two-term introductory program designed for first-year students to explore hands-on faculty-mentored research in the sciences, with a focus on students who have not previously had opportunities to engage in research outside the classroom.
- Students are matched with faculty mentors by program staff based on a variety of factors. Students and faculty do not set up their own matches.
- Be sure to read the full description of the program before deciding whether to participate.
Factors to consider in deciding whether to be a mentor
- Read the program description and purpose.
- Review the eligibility guidelines for faculty mentors.
- This is an hourly paid position. You as the faculty mentor will be the student's job supervisor and will need to sign off on timesheets.
- The program pays the student wages but does not provide funding for costs associated with the research.
- You may assign a graduate student or postdoctoral fellow to supervise the student, but you are the primary mentor and are responsible for ensuring that students have adequate supervision.
- Dartmouth ERAS is intended to provide students with hands-on research experiences. Projects that are literature-based or more theoretical may be less appropriate for students in this program.
- First-year students have different levels of preparation and scientific background, and students in the program will need supervision and mentoring from you.
- If your research is more appropriate for students farther along in their studies at Dartmouth, there are other research programs offered through SURFD .
How to enter the matching process
- Submit a project to the online ERAS faculty project database.
- Link to the database and instructions on how to add and edit projects.
- This is NOT the same database as the general faculty research project database.
- When the database opens to students, they will contact you to arrange interviews.
- At the end of the interview cycle, faculty will be provided with a list of interested students and asked to indicate which students they would be willing to mento. See below for more information about this form.
- Program staff match students with faculty mentors based on multiple criteria.
- Faculty and students do NOT arrange their own matches.
- After the first round of matching is completed, there will be a smaller second round of interviews and matching. Faculty who are not matched with students in round 1 may opt to enter round 2.
See the application timeline below.