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abed

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  • Application Season
    2016 Fall
  • Program
    Political Science PhD

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  1. Department website lists two Graduate advisors, one of whom "Coordinates graduate admission" among other things. Contact info here: http://www.polisci.ucla.edu/graduate/advisors. Good luck!
  2. In the same place. It looks like in previous years, some PhD applicants who didn't make it were considered for Chicago's MA Program in the Social Sciences (MAPSS), so perhaps that could explain the delay?
  3. So I'm still waiting to hear back from a program that sent out its acceptances three weeks ago and rejections last week, but I still haven't heard anything. I'm guessing it's some kind of informal waitlist? But I was wondering if anyone had advice on whether it would be appropriate to contact the department administrator to ask about the status of my application. Thanks y'all!
  4. No worries, I'll be the one showing up awkwardly late on the second day!
  5. Anyone planning on attending the Northwestern visit weekend? Excited to meet you if so! And congrats to McGill admits!
  6. Ditto. Got an email from the Department last week, nothing since then. Nothing shows up on the application portal either.
  7. Yes, these are all excellent points! I didn't mean to say that activism/organizing experience should be centralized in the statement; I got some similar advice from my advisors as well, and I think it makes sense. Ultimately I did decide to include it towards the end in the statements that had longer word/page limits, since it forms so much of the latter half of my resume that I figured I could use the opportunity to explain why I thought my organizing background prepared me well for doctoral work in addition to my research experience. If I remember correctly, the paragraph went in 3 out of my 12 statements, and in longer form in 3 diversity/personal history statements. I kept it short, and focused on how my background would make me a better researcher and how it shaped my research agenda, rather than suggesting that research would take a backseat to organizing in my future career plans. Here's an (edited) example of what I wrote: "My co-curricular experiences engaging in community organizing have prepared me for doctoral work as well, encouraging XXXXX. For example, while organizing for XXXX in XXXX at XXXX, my role as a leader focused on XXXXXX. The task of XXXXX drove me to seek a more nuanced understanding of how XXXXX. This background XXXXX drives my intention to connect my scholarship with XXXXX. It has also facilitated my ability as a teaching assistant to XXXXXX." And ditto on the indiosyncracy of the admissions process. In retrospect, I don't regret including this background (in this way) in my application, but I don't think I would have lost that much if I had dropped it.
  8. Could I ask how you went about doing this? As I saw your post I realized how good of an idea it would be, but I'm wondering if it makes sense to just cold-email grad students who have similar interests to mine, or if there's a more specific protocol for reaching out? Thank you!
  9. Thanks so much! I'm thrilled and honestly very surprised!
  10. Just double checked my email, and it actually just says soon (guess I just projected "a couple of days"). So, ditto @PizzaCat93, hang in there and we'll all find out soon!
  11. Claiming a Princeton admit. I was that first post; sorry for causing any confusion! Received mine at around 3:30pm EST, standard email from graduate studies director (not POI) stating that official acceptance letters will be sent out in the next couple of days. Congrats to other admits, and best of luck to everyone still waiting!
  12. I posted on the Decisions forum asking for advice on what kinds of questions to ask professors and current grad students and got some useful advice there; linking here in case you find this useful as well!
  13. Ditto on making sure that you get good reference letters. What I've learned from the process is that (generally) the more express your passion for grad school to your recommenders, they more excited they get about writing LORs. As someone who also has some organizing background, I also learned that it's important to frame this as best you can in your application. Some schools will ask for a Diversity statement or a Personal History statement, which makes this easy. For other schools, your statement of purpose is your only chance to frame yourself as an applicant. Try to show how your organizing and non-profit experiences are directly relevant to your research, not just in that they emerge from the same interests and passions, but also in that they prepare you in interesting and compelling ways for your work in a PhD program. Everyone has different ways to do this, but if it helps, what I did was start with my agenda and then show how my experiences were relevant and compelling (so research interests + why school X is a good fit, then how my academic experience is relevant, then how my organizing experience is relevant). Similarly, I would also recommend organizing your resume to reflect your priorities, if you haven't already -- I categorized mine as "Academic & Research Experience", "Other Relevant Work Experience", and "Leadership & Organizing". I found that this helped me demonstrate how my organizing background was relevant to my research agenda.
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