This is probably the question I hear most from high school juniors trying to figure out their extracurricular strategy. Both show up in the Activities section of the Common App. Both look like initiative on paper. But if you’ve ever sat on the other side of an admissions decision — or talked to people who have — you’d know they don’t read the same way at all.
What admissions officers actually see
You’ve got 150 characters per activity. That’s it. So when one student writes “Summer internship at a local marketing firm” and another writes “Published author in an indexed academic journal,” they’re both filling the same box — but the reader’s reaction is completely different.
Internships show professional exposure. They tell an admissions officer: this student can show up, take direction, and function in a workplace. That’s genuinely useful. But here’s the problem — at highly selective schools, professional exposure is everywhere. A huge chunk of the applicant pool has interned somewhere. Far fewer have actually produced original research that got published.
Research signals something else entirely. It says: I identified a gap in knowledge, spent months wrestling with it, and created something that didn’t exist before. That’s what schools like MIT and Stanford mean when they talk about “genuine intellectual initiative.” It’s not just an activities entry — it becomes the spine of an entire application.
The core difference is what you walk away with
Forget prestige for a second. The real question is: what did you actually produce?
An internship gives you experience — and hopefully a solid rec letter. But there’s no way for an admissions officer to verify what you actually did. They’re taking your word for it.
A published paper is different. An independent journal — one with no connection to your school or your mentor’s institution — reviewed your work and said yes. That’s external validation. It’s checkable. And it’s not something anyone can write off as resume padding.
This matters most at the schools where competition is fiercest. Harvard, MIT, and Stanford are swimming in applicants with 4.0 GPAs, 1550+ scores, and internship experience. A peer-reviewed publication in an indexed journal is still rare enough that it genuinely stands out.
RISE Research scholars get this. The programme’s publication record spans 40+ academic journals across fields from economics to neuroscience to environmental policy — and those papers came from high schoolers.
When an internship actually makes more sense
Internships aren’t the wrong choice. In some situations, they’re the smarter one.
If you’re applying to programmes that explicitly care about professional experience — business, finance, pre-law — the right kind of internship carries real weight. Same goes for students in Grade 9 or early Grade 10 who aren’t ready to commit to a 10-week research project yet. Building professional habits early isn’t wasted time.
And some internships genuinely stand out on their own. A summer at a US Senate office, a hospital research lab, or a tech firm with a selective application process hits differently than something arranged through a family connection. The selectivity matters almost as much as the role itself.
When research is the clear winner
For most students targeting top-20 universities in the US, research is the stronger play. Here’s why I think that.
First, a published paper doesn’t expire. An internship ends in August. A publication follows you through every application, every scholarship interview, every academic conversation for the rest of your career. Your 150-character description becomes: “Published researcher, [Journal Name], [Subject Area].” No explanation required.
Second, research actually proves you understand something. An admissions reader seeing “biotech internship” knows you were in the building. A reader seeing “independent study on CRISPR gene editing mechanisms, published findings” knows you understood the subject beyond what any high school class would teach. That’s a meaningful distinction.
Third — and this is the practical one — research produces a document. You can reference it in your essays. Talk about it in interviews. Submit it as a writing sample. An internship mostly produces memories and, if you’re lucky, a recommendation. Both have value. One you can actually show people.
RISE Research scholars work directly with PhD mentors from Ivy League and Oxbridge institutions. The programme’s 90% publication rate means nine in ten students who complete it finish with an externally validated paper. That outcome isn’t random — it reflects exactly what a published paper does for an application. The full RISE admissions results have verified data if you want to dig in.
What the data says heading into 2026
The admissions trends here aren’t new, but they’ve picked up speed. Research experience — especially published research — consistently ranks among the highest-value extracurriculars a high school student can hold. As application volumes keep climbing and more students arrive with strong academics, the Activities section is being asked to do more and more of the differentiation work. A published paper is one of the very few entries that’s genuinely hard to dismiss.
Can you do both? Yes — if you sequence it right
The research-vs-internship framing is a bit of a false choice. The strongest applications often have both. The key is the order.
Grades 9 and 10 are great years to explore through internships. They help you figure out what you care about enough to spend 10 weeks really studying. Grade 11 is the sweet spot for a serious research project — enough time to complete it, submit to a journal, and (hopefully) get a publication decision before November EA and ED deadlines in Grade 12. A student who interned in Grade 10 and published research in Grade 11 has a story: I explored the field, then I went deep. That’s compelling.
It’s a sequence a lot of RISE scholars follow. The high school research internships guide on the RISE blog covers how the two experiences reinforce each other when planned intentionally.
So how do you decide?
A few rough guidelines:
If you’re in Grade 11 or 12 and you’re targeting Ivy League, Stanford, MIT, or Oxbridge — prioritise research. The admissions value of a published paper at these schools is well-documented.
If you’re in Grade 9 or 10 and still figuring out your interests — an internship or structured programme helps you find your research focus before you commit to an independent project.
If you’re applying to business, finance, or policy programmes that weight professional experience — a selective internship can be the stronger signal. Pair it with an academic project if the timeline allows.
If you’ve already done an internship and need something to differentiate you — research is the next step. The internship provides context; the publication provides proof.
If your application has no externally validated output at all — research is the priority, full stop. Grades, scores, and recommendations are expected. A published paper is not.
FAQs
Is research or an internship better for Ivy League applications?
Research, generally. A peer-reviewed paper is externally validated, independently verifiable, and still rare enough to actually stand out. Internships are common in the Ivy League applicant pool. Published research isn’t. If you have the subject focus and the timeline, prioritise research.
Can a high school student publish real research?
Yes — thousands do every year, in independent academic journals. The critical ingredient is a qualified mentor who can guide the research design, methodology, and writing process from the start.
Do internships count as research experience?
Not automatically. An internship at a university lab can count as research experience if you were actually involved in the research — not just filing paperwork. Admissions officers care about whether you can speak specifically about the questions being studied, the methods used, and what the findings showed. If you can’t answer those questions, it probably wasn’t research experience in the meaningful sense.
How early should I start research for college applications?
Grade 11 is ideal. Starting then gives you time to complete the project, submit to a journal, and (hopefully) get a decision before November deadlines in Grade 12. Starting in Grade 12 is risky — many students don’t have a confirmed publication by application time. Grade 9 and 10 students can start with exploratory programmes or internships to figure out their area of focus.
What’s the most impressive extracurricular for a college application in 2026?
Honestly? A peer-reviewed publication in an indexed journal. It’s external, subject-specific, and rare. National competition wins, selective programme completions, and leadership in genuinely impactful organisations also carry real weight. The common thread in all the strongest extracurriculars is external validation — something outside the student’s school or family network assessed their work and recognised it.
Bottom line
Research and internships both belong in a strong college application. But they don’t carry equal weight at the most selective schools — not in 2026. A published paper is tangible, externally verified, and uncommon. An internship is common, hard to verify, and easy to overlook in a pile of applications that all look roughly similar.
If your goal is a top-tier university, the priority is clear: get the paper first. Use internship experience to build toward it or to show range alongside it. Don’t let internship season eat the window you had for research.
The RISE Summer 2026 Cohort deadline is coming up. If a published paper before your application deadline is the goal, schedule a free Research Assessment — we’ll tell you exactly what’s achievable before your EA and ED deadlines.