May 2026
John Locke closes, Breakthrough starts to matter, Sci-MI may still be open, and iGEM teams should stop staying vague.
A WDC guide for students who hear about olympiads, research programs, summer schools, writing contests, and business competitions after everyone else has already started.
A separate WDC space for olympiads, research programs, summer schools, writing contests, business competitions, economics competitions, and application windows students usually hear about too late.
Open the programs boardMain application seasons and recurring windows across academics, research, business, economics, writing, and STEM.
John Locke closes, Breakthrough starts to matter, Sci-MI may still be open, and iGEM teams should stop staying vague.
PROMYS, SUMaC, SSP, and Lodha Genius Programme show how early summer-program preparation really begins.
IOQM, HBCSE enrollment, Wharton, Foyle, Breakthrough, and Diamond Challenge can land close together.
RSI, TASS, Rockefeller SSRP, AMC 10/12, IARCS, and Wharton Data Science become the winter planning stack.
The strongest choices match a student’s actual lane: proofs, research, writing, coding, economics, public policy, or entrepreneurship.
Start months early. The first stage is not the personality; the subject is.
Choose a question you can test, explain, and defend. The work has to survive questions.
Draft early, revise hard, and know why you made every major choice.
A quick entry point into the programs students ask about most across STEM, research, writing, economics, and business.
Physics, chemistry, biology, and astronomy. Watch late-summer enrollment and November NSE exams.
For students who genuinely enjoy proof-based math. Registration usually builds before a September first stage.
Best for real projects with evidence, testing, and a clear explanation. Start long before submissions open.
ZIO, ZCO, and INOI reward repeated algorithmic practice, not casual coding-club attendance.
Useful if you can build one clear argument and revise it until every paragraph earns its place.
Strongest when the team can defend its process, assumptions, and decisions instead of just showing a nice deck.
Business knowledge, case analysis, strategy, and presentation for students building a serious business lane.
Economics, finance, and applied reasoning for students who want business to be more than pitch decks.
Mentored research for students ready to turn a real academic question into a serious written output.
If you run a school initiative, mentorship group, outreach program, or opportunity database, send it to WDC. We are open to shared guides, deadline boards, workshops, and recognition routes that help useful programs reach the students who would actually use them.