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nashville0808

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  1. If you are not admitted to any programs in your field, why do you choose to attend? Wait for next round. A one-year master's program is not so useful even if it is at UPenn or other top schools. When you apply for Ph.D. programs next time, you will not have completed the first semester. What makes you more competitive? You will waste your time and money. BTW, UVA is a very good school and has good researchers in school leadership.
  2. What I meant is a general statement, not for one particular year. If you look at the number of students in each cohort over time (from at least around 2005), there are years in which they admitted a lot more students than the other departments.
  3. Just FYI, each Ph.D. program at Peabody is small. Ph.D. programs in Teaching and Learning tend to be larger than those in the other departments.
  4. While I understand the uncertainty you all feel, I don't think it is a good practice to call the admission office, the departments, or other program staff/faculty members. They are busy with their daily operations and don't want to get interrupted by applicants.
  5. Applicants who get admission offers from Peabody tend to get admission offers from other top schools, and depending on the strength of each program and location, they may choose different schools over Peabody. So there is still possibility. I was admitted off the waiting list long time ago but had multiple admission offers from other top schools. I chose Peabody as it is stronger in my field than the other schools.
  6. There are multiple reasons. In education policy, a lot of research is now highly quantitative and uses advanced causal inference techniques. This program offers rigorous quantitative training to conduct such research. Second, folks in this program, both faculty members and students, often work with researchers at the other departments (e.g., teaching and learning, and special education) within the college and schools (e.g., political science, economics, sociology, etc.) across the university. They bring in interesting interdisciplinary projects. They also work with the Tennessee Department of Education and publish a lot of interesting policy studies. Also, the program has many research-active high quality faculty members and researchers, who consistently bring in new projects with a lot of grants, which fund Ph.D. students and offer various research experience. For funding, across the departments within the college, Ph.D. students are fully funded for 4-5 years with a lot of additional grants such as travel grants, professional development grants, and technology grants. My friend in this program earned close to $40,000 a year including summer RA jobs, and by the time she graduated, she had a lot of saving.
  7. The LPO's Ph.D. program is very competitive. What I hear is typically they receive over 200 applications, invite about 10 applicants, and offer about 7 admissions. Since they have K-12 and higher education concentrations, probably each year about 4-5 are in K-12 and 2-3 are in Higher education.
  8. I don't recommend TC for a doctoral study. They have great faculty members but lack funding for doctoral students. In addition, it is difficult for doctoral students to get RA/TA positions. So you are likely to face a lot of financial pressure during the study. I know some doctoral students who transferred to different, cheaper schools after accumulating a lot of debts. You may need to keep a full-time job to continue studying. In addition, because so many graduate students are enrolled, doctoral students do not receive adequate training.There are many other high quality schools that offer a lot of funding. I would consider these schools seriously.
  9. I was admitted to a MA program in a different field long time ago, switched to an Ed.M program, and received an Ed.M. Then I worked for some years and applied for a Ph.D program in the same field. I was admitted without funding and so declined the offer. In that field, my classmates switched from the MA to the Ph.D. program. I thought it was very easy and just a matter of submitting necessary documents. Competition appears to be different from field to field.
  10. You need to evaluate your qualifications objectively. I'm not sure about your outcomes this year but if you didn't get into any of your top choice schools this year, there are some reasons. They may be something you can control or cannot control. You need to carefully investigate them and prepare for next year's cycle. In terms of personal network, I am not discouraging you to contact professors. Probably it may be better than not doing so but I don't think it would matter a lot. For my case, I was admitted to six top schools and was put on a waiting list for two other top schools (eventually rejected). I didn't contact any professors. Some professors don't like to receive e-mails from applicants because they receive too many e-mails every day. Personal network may matter if a program is small. For example, if a program within a department admits two students every year, personal network matters a lot. I think Stanford is one example. For publications, at least at my department, it doesn't matter very much. Most of the students at the department, including international students, were practitioners or junior researchers. I just had one publication. This is not a peer-reviewed paper. It is a non-technical report. On the other hand, I presented research papers almost every year at well-known professional conferences. This might have made me more competitive. But this would depend on which field you belong to. If you are interested in neuroscience and education, probably publications matter more than my field. In any case, you should do your best to improve your chance of admission. If you are interested in top schools, keep in mind that there are so many Ph.D. applicants for a limited number of spots. My department receives over 200 applications just for 5-10 spots and this competition would be similar across top schools. It is not surprising that an applicant doesn't get admission offers from any top schools. It would be wise to stretch your choice to get at least one admission offer. Good luck!
  11. For doctoral programs, in my field, it doesn't matter very much whether you have personal contacts with professors unless you advance from a master's program to a Ph.D. program within the same university. Publications do not matter very much either because most of applicants do not have publications in good academic journals. Professors at my program do not expect Ph.D. applicants to have any publications. In fact, I have rarely seen new Ph.D. students come with any publications. Just contacting professors won't help you very much. And they wouldn't remember you anyway. The only way that I think is useful would be that you present a high-quality paper at professional conferences and have professors of your interest come and see your presentation. When I presented my paper at a professional conference, a professor that my supervisor and I personally knew from work came to my presentation and aggressively recruited me to his school's Ph.D. program with generous funding. Although I didn't even apply for the program, I think presenting a high-quality research paper would be a good way to sell yourself. Experience matters a lot here. Many new Ph.D. students come with great work experience. Typically students have working experience for 3 to 10 years in various settings. It is very rare that students come straight to Ph.D. programs in education from undergrad. Finally, the statement of purposes makes a big difference. It demonstrates your passion for a Ph.D. program, fit with the program, and writing skills. If you write a long SOP, this is a bad signal. SOP should be short and succinct. Don't use tricks to put more words or sentences in a 2-page SOP. All of this assumes that you have very high GPAs, high GRE scores, and great letters of recommendation.
  12. From PhD admissions and from my experience. I wasn't invited to the recruitment weekend but didn't receive a rejection e-mail or notification either. In late March, I was told that I was on a waiting list and eventually got an admission offer in April. However, this is a very rare case across the departments. Peabody's admission offers are very generous and it is unlikely that admitted students decline the offer. This wouldn't apply to masters' programs.
  13. Applicants who did not receive an invitation e-mail to the recruitment weekend are not shortlisted. Applicants who got a rejection e-mail or notification were rejected. Applicants who did not hear about the recruitment weekend or rejection are on a waiting list. These applicants will hear from the admission office as admitted applicants decline offers. This may come in March, April, or May.
  14. I'm not sure about these programs. There may be different time lines for these programs.
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