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s0ciology1992

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  • Location
    Hell
  • Application Season
    2016 Fall
  • Program
    sociology

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  1. Current student at one of the schools you listed. Your GRE scores are fine, and wouldn't be something I would worry about (mine was aa 4.5 in writing as well and both my V and Q were lower than yours––much lower). Other than that, your undergraduate trajectory actually reflects my own. Same GPA, same RA experience, I didn't co--author though but I was credited in a study I worked on. I speak three languages and english also wasn't my first language either (I was born and raised here too!) Anyway, I think that you shouldn't worry about the GRE stuff, like at all. Like, I mean, stop thinking about it completely. Start focusing on your statement of purpose, your personal statement (for Berkeley, and Columbia now accepts little "diversity" snippets), your writing sample and your CV! The one piece of advice I would give you (actually one isn't enough LOL) is write a statement of purpose that let's your voice shine; so we get to know you. I tried to hide too much of myself in my statement. Be honest about what draws you to your fields of interest and how sociology can help you build a set of questions around it (and how, not just why, you're the person that will make a significant contribution to those fields; whether it's because of your personal experiences or because of the research questions you've already begun asking in your thesis, or because in the process of reviewing a piece of literature a series of questions emerged and so as a result you've begun learning about a particular set of computational tools you'd like to pursue under Professor X to help you answer those questions etc.) Undergraduate applicants also have a habit of summarizing their coursework––don't do that. Rather, focus on how a set of sociological fields have guided you to your study on X and actually talk about that study (what did you do; how did you do it; what were your findings; how does your thesis reflect a change in what others have thought about/said about what you've studied, etc.). You can also point to how your RA helped guide you through your questions or methods, etc. From there, point to what you'll be pursuing in graduate school (following the method of how you explained your work thus far). The trick here is to think about how your past work left you with new, unanswered questions or methodology you'd like to pursue. Maybe you were looking at white and black students but didn't look at asian students and now want to do a comparative to see if this would produce a change to your observations and/or theory. When you're done you move into why this program; mainly who you want to work with, etc. BUT don't forget about geography––actually, that's really important. Why NYC? Why the Bay Area? To answer that talk about how your research makes sense in the context of the social world the university is in/around. That's fine if you want to conduct fieldwork abroad or thousands of miles outside of campus; you'll most likely be supported at any of these programs. That said, you'll still have years of coursework before you do that and so these programs wanna make sure you'll make the most of your time in the area you're in (for instance, if you're studying the relationship between economic relations and knowledge production through the social life of tech startups, the Bay Area or New York might make the most sense for you... but don't just assume they know this. Tell 'em.) What else... oh, reach out to one or two professors you align with and one or two graduate students (ideally 3rd or 4th+ years). More than half of the people I met during admissions day had made contact with either a professor or a graduate student (or both). Try aiming for tenured junior faculty opposed to senior faculty (although the latter can't hurt either). I'll leave you with this. I didn't get in my first or go my second time. But that's okay too, actually. I'm still the youngest in my cohort and, frankly, it was the right move. You'd be surprised how much your interests change once you actually leave academia. All of a sudden, you realize, you have many more interesting questions you'd like to ask and it's those questions that will make you stand out if the first time doesn't work out. Good luck and lemme know if you have any questions!
  2. Yeah, 3 of us here received calls from columbia, but no formal letter yet. That's end of week or next. I'm sure there's more acceptances coming though. I wouldn't sweat it.
  3. omg no, i didn't apply, i applied two years ago when i was an undergrad, but didn't get in. i should've applied this year tho, i regret not doing so it's such a great program. but it's great seeing so many folks accepted. chicken or egg though. is nyu accepting a lot of students or if more people who are on grad cafe being accepted to nyu. i guess it's an empirical question hehe..
  4. I did, it means you're in, unless in the extremely rare event the university declines. very rare. let's chat!
  5. @HopefulSocPhD i got rejected from one of the top schools and i was specifically betting on working w. one particular professor. i messaged them, post rejection, and basically they were were like.... you should've e-mailed me. my friend is at harvard in a different dept. and apparently they don't even read the apps, they just go by e-mails/contacts/connections/referrals. (i.e. reproduction reproduction reproduction). If you don't get anywhere, don't worry. use this as an opportunity to strengthen yr app for next year, but more importantly to start a conversation with those advisors you'd like to work with (assuming yr interests don't dramatically shift or change).
  6. INTERESTING since douche is actually a term typically directed towards men by women...
  7. hey those waiting on columbia, they have made their decision they're working on sending it out.
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