Jump to content

RubyBright

Members
  • Posts

    447
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by RubyBright

  1. I was just wondering if anyone has any experience with this. I don't want to dramatize my experience; I know that most people have gone through a difficult break up that makes them feel like their life is being torn apart. I'm just concerned about how this will affect my start at grad school. I'm not a very social person, and my confidence has really taken a hit because of this, as well as affecting a chronic medical condition. Any experience or advice?

  2. That depends on if you're going for a master's or a PhD. In most PhD programs, your research fit with your POI is your ticket into the program. Many PhD applications ask you to indicate your top three-five professors you'd like to work with. If the professor in question is accepting students for their lab, and they choose your application out of all the rest, you will be assigned to them, either as your first-year mentor, or as your assumed PI for the entire time you'll be at the school. This is often how you receive funding, as well. Needless to say, the POI is important to your admission. Contacting them ahead of time helps you assess whether or not you have similar research interests and if they're accepting students for the coming year, as well as helps you stand out from the pile of applications being reviewed.

  3. If you're interested in computers or engineering, you could look into human factors. Despite the lack of "psychology" in the name, it is a psychology sub-field.

    I've noticed that you're thinking in terms of getting into a PhD program. But the question is... what kind? You say that you want to, "specialize in a sub-field that has some future, I believe (to maximize their acceptance chance, of course)." However, PhDs are rarely, if ever (at least not in the U.S.) granted in general psychology. You earn a PhD in, say, cognitive psychology, or social psychology, or quantitative psychology. So I think you need to reorient yourself - it isn't about choosing a field of psychology that will maximize your chance of being accepted to grad school. It's about choosing your career path in general. 

    If your degree is anything like American ones, you will take some survey classes during your first and second year that will allow you to explore different areas in psychology. These may help crystallize your options. I do recommend getting into a lab for research experience as early as possible.

    Also, just because you mentioned it - a biology class or two wouldn't hurt. You should know the basic functioning of neurons, and neurons are cells. A cell biology course paired with more information on the brain would help orient you on how the brain works.

    Good luck to you!

  4. is your program in new york?  i doubt it.  the programs in new york are profit centers.  if you need them because you do not have a background in psych, then they are useful.  but they are expensive, and when weighed out in pro and con fashion, they do not make sense for someone with a good foundational BA in psych, as i said.

     

    You weren't talking about New York, earl.palomino. You said that master's programs "do not ever give you the access to mentorship and research that phd programs give you." I understand that you're talking about the OP's schools, but it's important to note for his/her future applications that not all master's programs are created the same. I agree with PsychGirl1, that some master's programs are both respectable and useful. Personally, I'm considering a partially-funded master's program that can lead into a PhD at the same school (of course, I'm not in clinical pscyh, like the OP).

    As for NYU and TC Columbia, I have no experience with their reputation. Have you tried talking directly to professors and current students in the program, though? If there is some flaw in your application (i.e., GPA), considering a master's may be useful, though not necessarily one from the programs you were admitted to during this round. Good luck!

  5. Hi, mtjamieson! Welcome to our (very little) corner. If you're looking at east coast schools, you may find that many of the schools only do combined master's-PhD programs. Don't be scared off from that - you can definitely still go into industry with a PhD. Plus, you're a lot more likely to find funding in a PhD program than in a master's program. If you do see a school that supposedly offers a terminal master's, do some digging and find out if the program is actually active. 

  6. I just got waitlisted today and while I've been accepted elsewhere I don't have funding information yet. I'm having trouble deciding if I should wait and see or if I should just withdraw from the waitlist.

     

    It's logical to assume that they've already given out most of the aid and scholarships to the people who got first-round acceptances, right? So I have little to no chance of getting any. Will they bump someone else onto the waitlist if I go off, or will it not really benefit anyone? It seems like the place where I already have an acceptance has a better chance of being financially feasible, and the programs are similar in length and method so it just comes down to cost.... I guess I just don't want to "give up," even though more waiting is a drag.

     

    Funding varies by program, but obviously if the people on the first-round decline their offers, they won't be using that financial aid. So it will theoretically go to people who are being accepted off the waitlist (barring specific fellowships that require nominations). I know that the school I'm waitlisted at funds everyone who is admitted. So if I'm given an offer later, it will include funding. 

  7. @ruby most schools are having spring break right now no? I think it is ok to ask if a month has gone by.....

     

    I guess I should check when theirs is; my school already had our break.

     

    psuedo waitlisted at the only school that hasn't rejected me

     

    DGS says i'm on the shortlist as per the recommendation of the admission committee but no doctoral advisor has taken in an interest in my file yet

     

    i guess it's better than a rejection but that still doesn't sound good, fml

     

    That's hard, sdx! Did you have a POI you could email at the school?

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use