So I currently have a dilemma and was just looking for some advice. I want to apply for a Ph.D in social psychology, but I'm planning on taking at least a year off first. I apologize that this is a rather long write-up.
Some background:
I am a Psychology major and Anthropology minor at a top 15 school. I am currently a senior. I am increasingly sure that I want to apply for a PhD program in social psychology.
I currently have a 3.46 GPA, which I am a bit worried about, since it is on the low side. I had a bad freshman year, although I have had good grades since then. I believe I should be able to raise that to over a 3.5 after this last semester, although I am worried about it still being a bit low. I'm worried because it seems a lot of applicants have 3.7 GPAs when they apply.
I took the GRE in January, and I got a 170 Verbal, 161 Quantitative, and 5.5 Analytical score. I'm happy with my score, but from what I've read, it seems a good GRE score doesn't help as much as most people think?
What worries me most is my research experience. I'll have 3 semesters of working as a research assistant after this year, and I helped out a bit last summer in a lab as well. I know research is the most important thing for an application. I don't have any publications or conferences, which worries me.
So here's the complication:
I have an offer from Teach for America and I would very much like to do that for the next two years, but I am worried about it not being directly applicable to PhD applications later and hurting my applications. It is something I would like to be engaged in, but I'm wondering if I should just do research instead. If I decide not to do TFA, then I have to start applying for research assistant jobs.
Some caveats: TFA can involve a lot of data analysis, so that would be a good way for me to potentially practice some skills important to psychology. In addition, the summer is open during TFA, so I would be able to do a research assistant job during that time.
I would ideally like to do TFA, but I was wondering whether it would actually be that much more helpful to get a research assistant job instead. I know TFA looks good to many graduate schools, but I am worried about it actually hurting me for a social science Ph.D.
Sorry for the long post, but I was wondering if anyone had any thoughts or advice. Thanks in advance.