You are here: American University College of Arts & Sciences Student Advising & Resources Undergraduate Research & Travel Support

The College of Arts and Sciences at American University is committed to fostering research opportunities for undergraduate students. Below is a list of resources geared specifically towards undergraduate students interested in designing, funding, and presenting their research projects.

Conference Travel

Hall of Science exterior with students approaching.

College of Arts and Sciences undergraduate students who are giving papers or presenting research at scholarly conferences may request up to $400 per year from the College to help defray the expense of attending the conference. Undergraduate students must apply for the Provost's Undergraduate Research Travel Funding before applying for CAS funding. Students may not receive funding from both the Provost’s Office and the CAS Dean’s Office. All funding requests must use the Student Conference Travel form. Requests will be considered on a rolling basis; there is no single deadline. Requests for undergraduate travel should be sent to the Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies: casundergradstudies@american.edu.

Research & Project Support

AU Summer Scholars and Artists Program: Students can apply for funding for in-depth research projects or creative work under the guidance of a faculty mentor through the Summer Scholars and Artists Program. This program allows students to apply for up to $4,000 for eight weeks of summer research. Faculty mentors are paid a stipend of $500 to supervise the project. Please see AU Summer Scholars and Artists Research Fellowship.

Please see also CAS Undergraduate Scholarships, organized by department or office administering the awards, including these for undergraduate research:

  • Buell Scholarship (for collaboration with a faculty member on scholarly or creative work during the academic year)
  • Robyn Rafferty Mathias Undergraduate Summer Fellowships (for scholarly or creative work done under the direction of a faculty mentor during the summer)