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BSID Undergraduate Research Experience  Scholarship in Summer 2026

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2026

The BSID is pleased once again to offer undergraduate students  the opportunity to gain skin research experience during the Summer of 2026.

Eligibility and focus:  

The BSID Undergraduate Research Experience  Scholarship  is now open to undergraduate students who are looking for a Summer Project in one of the BSID members’ labs and are at least in the second year of their undergraduate degree and onwards.  Preference will be given to applicants who do not yet have any research experience, and would therefore, particularly benefit from working on a summer project. The project should be skin focused and research question-based.  Through the support of the BAD the BSID will fund 1 (one) scholarship for this call.  The awardee will submit a final report at the end of the project, and will be invited to present their work at the BSID 2027 Annual meeting.

Funding:  

£1500 stipend and £500 consumables for a 6-week project in the lab.  No top-ups or extensions are possible.

Application process: 

Potential students should contact projects’ supervisors prior to their applications. Applications should be submitted by the students, in agreement with the chosen supervisor, selected from the list belowThe applicants are expected to outline what they  want to achieve through this studentship.  The  application form to be emailed to ukbsid@gmail.com  with the subject “BSID Undergraduate Research Experience Scholarship​

Application form can be found HERE

Submission Deadline:  11.59 pm on Monday 12th January 2026.

 

Potential Supervisors

PI name Title Institution Research area Contact email
Chris Griffiths Professor King’s College London Mesenchymal Stromal Cells to Reset the Immune System in Biologic-Refractory Psoriasis Chris.griffiths@kcl.ac.uk
Su Lwin Dr King’s College London Personalised Medicine in Epidermolysis Bullosa through Repurposed Biologics from Psoriasis Su.m.lwin@kcl.ac.uk
Paola Di Meglio Dr King’s College London Inflammatory skin disease: immunopathogenesis and biomarkers paola.dimeglio@kcl.ac.uk
Kim Robinson Dr University of York Studying how the skin detects and responds to infection and damage, via the inflammasomes. kim.robinson@york.ac.uk
Catherine Wright Dr Glasgow Caledonian University Chronic wound healing in diabetes catherine.wright@gcu.ac.uk
David Hill Dr University of Sunderland Cellular stress mechanisms in psoriasis; multicellular tissue culture models; drug development David.hill@sunderland.ac.uk