Now Liu is taking the site even further, expanding it across Georgia Tech to students in every major with the support of the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program and the Undergraduate Research Ambassadors. Which, truth be told, was what she had in mind all along.
“I quickly realized it would be a lot more feasible to start with a smaller group to conduct a pilot run and refine the process before expanding,” said Liu, who is finishing her biomedical engineering bachelor’s degree this spring. “It made perfect sense for me to start with my own major, since BME has the highest undergraduate research participation rate across majors and we had the additional need for our researchers at Emory to recruit Georgia Tech students to their labs.”
PairMe connects students interested in a research experience with the graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, research scientists, and faculty members who have work and want to mentor undergraduates in their labs. Mentors post opportunities; students sign in with their Georgia Tech credentials and can apply for positions directly through the platform.
Liu knows the value of undergraduate research. Since her first year, she has worked on several projects in Coulter BME Professor Shu Takayama’s lab. In fact, she had been thinking about how to facilitate connections between labs and students since high school. Though she connected with Takayama’s research group fairly quickly, she saw the search didn’t always go as smoothly for some of her fellow students. She also found in talking to researchers that they were interested in ways to more actively recruit students.