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kayrabbit

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Posts posted by kayrabbit

  1. Hey!

    Just wanted to give y'all a heads-up that I contacted Sangeeta about courses for next semester. There are two classes that I know  I want to take, and I wanted to tell her that to make sure I would have a spot reserved in them. It took a few days, but she did eventually get back to me. Basically, my sense is that she somehow made sure it was recorded that I wanted those two classes and my spot is reserved but that it's a little ways before they start official registration for us.

    Can't wait for next year!

    --though, no lie, I do want summer first : )

    Thanks, that's a great idea! I received an official decision letter from the Graduate School itself, which included an ID number and suggested that I should be able to register, but I don't think our accounts have been set up to do so yet, so emailing is probably the best alternative until that's worked out.

     

    Now I just have to narrow down the five classes I want to take to three before they start filling up. You make a good point about at least reserving the two I'm sure about taking, though. Perhaps my third class will simply be decided for me as seats fill up.

  2. As of right  now, I'm not being funded, but I'm first on the waitlist. If I don't get funded, I for sure wouldn't go. So, things are still up in the air. I guess I don't feel as excited about going since it wasn't my top choice. I met with a grad student there and she said that everyone seems happy and is doing well. They're not getting the "best" jobs out there, but some are getting tenure track jobs at other places. So, I'm not sure what to think. 

    I can understand why you'd feel that way. If you visited and still aren't feeling excited, that says something in itself. For me, the initial excitement of getting into a top program like Cornell or Yale would have been greater, but after learning more about all the programs I applied to and visiting, I think I'm just as excited about where I'm going now as I would have been to go anywhere else. But then, perhaps if you are offered funding you'll feel that way too? Even if there's a good chance of receiving it, I imagine I probably wouldn't allow myself to feel the same excitement until it was certain.

     

    I guess I just wish there was some way to know if I had a chance at other schools. Not sure if I should consider this round as my last chance or not. Anyone have any advice about GRE scores and top 50 schools? Do I have to have over a 600/700 on the verbal to get in?

    The fact that you got in somewhere seems like it would indicate that you at least have a chance to do well in another application season, especially if you had any other wait lists/MA offers. I feel like I learned so much just going through this process that, were I to apply next year, my application would be much stronger. I think how you feel is important in determining the question of whether to try again. If you have no idea how you would improve your application or feel like you've done all you can, your chances may not be as good, but if you can identify aspects that you would like to and know how to improve, I would feel more confident about giving it another shot.

  3. I need some advice--I got into one out of 9 programs that I applied to and it wasn't my top choice. It's hard to turn down an offer though, especially considering that there's no guarantee that my application season next year would be successful. Any suggestions on what I should do? The school I got into is ranked #63 in the US rankings--is that really horrible in the scheme of things? The main thing I dread in reapplications is the GRE. My verbal score is around 580 and I'm not sure if I can make it higher--or if it's really the thing that's stopping my applications. As of now, I'm thinking about deferring and reapplying. Help! 

    Is it a fully funded offer? How do their placement records look? I mean ideally you want to be excited about where you're going and feel good about the job prospects it's going to help you reach, but I don't think ranking alone should keep you from attending.

  4. Thanks for describing your experience, hopefulscribbler. It's interesting to see how others have navigated passions for critical and creative work.

     

    Lit profs will almost always advise against revealing your CRWR ambitions and CRWR profs will probably really hate the idea of someone who they think should be dedicating themselves to the craft of fiction or poetry, "lowering themselves" to become a literary scholar. As one CRWR prof once said to me rather snottily, "why in the hell would you just want to talk about something if you can MAKE what everyone wants to talk about?" It's hilarious to me (and on some days a little stressful :blink: ) that each course of study seems to feel itself slightly superior to the other. 

    Yes, I found it extremely funny to walk around the English department to talk to several of my professors and come away with opposite advice from those on the lit and the creative sides. Both made me feel a bit like I would waste my talent in one area if I chose the other. It was flattering to see that they all felt strongly about my continuing to work in their field, but it added a lot of pressure to the choice because it felt like I had to risk betraying a pursuit that I care about either way.

     

    At the risk of getting kicked off the forum ;) I'm a writer first, academic second. I love scholarship but I could probably live the rest of my life never gaining a PhD (if worst comes to worst ;) ), but never writing creatively again or teaching it again would kill me. Part of the reason I wish to apply for the PhD, then, is that I feel I have a lot more to learn. A lot more that could underpin my creative work. I'm also aware that CRWR tenure track jobs are much more competitive than any Lit job out there, and that's where I'd like to head depending on whether or not I have any creative success - I love teaching literature, love, love, love it, but teaching CRWR is soooo great, and personally I find it a much greater challenge (communicating craft in a way that doesn't kill creativity is HARD).

    I completely agree with you — teaching creative writing would be much harder than teaching literature. That was part of my decision to pursue a PhD; usually I feel enthusiastic to take on a challenge, but the challenge of teaching craft and judging students' creative work was one that dissuaded rather than excited me. I have had some wonderful creative writing professors, and I admire them for finding a way to refine students' work, engage their creativity and remain sane after reading countless workshop stories over the years that have the same problems. I don't think I would stand up to it very well!

  5. I can't give you the perspective you asked for of going from an MFA to a PhD, but I was interested to learn a little more about what led you to be in that position. When I began looking into graduate programs, I was really torn between MFA and PhD programs at first, particularly because advice from my lit professors made me feel like I needed to suppress my interest in creative writing to be successful as a PhD applicant, and I wondered whether my creative writing would always be pushed down if I took that path. I looked into pursuing options such as a PhD in creative writing or a dual MFA/PhD, but much of the feedback I got back from professors on both the lit and the creative writing sides was that such a path might make me less marketable as a university would ultimately want to hire me to teach and publish in one field or the other.

     

    For me, it came down to the fact that while I am equally passionate about writing critically and creatively, I don't have very much interest in teaching creative writing. I also think it is easier to be a strong creative writer without an MFA program than it is to be a successful literary scholar without a PhD program and a connection to current research in the field. Then again, I suppose there is really no substitute for two years spent focused entirely on your writing, but that's the side of things I came down on. I think the fact that you're looking to do a PhD following an MFA program AND a master's is ambitious and awesome, and I agree with you that the two perspectives enhance each other (hence my desire to progress with both). Are you hoping to eventually teach one or the other?

  6. Nope! I haven't heard anything yet. I imagine Sangeeta is waiting until April 15 and everything is settled before taking the next step. I am really excited and eager to figure out my class schedule! I have been obsessively reading over the course selection, trying to figure out what my schedule will be like next semester. 

    That's good to hear, I was worried I may have missed something. I'm also anxiously awaiting class registration! Moving to evening classes is going to be a change for me, so I'm eager to figure it all out.

  7. I've been asking about financial aid, units, and the consortium, and I thought others might find this important: "The financial aid package provides 10 tuition remission credits and any credits taken over are not reimbursed. Regarding courses taken through consortium, I like to inform you that tuition remission awarded to graduate assistants cannot be used to pay for courses at other consortium universities. Graduate assistants and fellows must pay for any courses that they take under the consortium arrangement."

    Thanks, that is good information to have — the offer letter I received suggested to me that consortium courses would be covered in tuition remission. Incidentally, after accepting your offer at Maryland, have you received any information about next steps or official documentation? I haven't asked additional questions since accepting, but I was a little surprised not to hear back after being contacted about whether I had reached a decision, and am wondering if I should send another email (though I suppose I could just wait and combine it with an email asking about more program details).

  8. kayrabbit-- I can't make any promises, but if you want me to check out one or two apartment complexes while I'm there in June, let me know! Maybe I can take pictures? 

     

    To everyone else:  grad student organizations can be really helpful in finding places to live. Grad students will tell you which complexes to avoid, which neighborhoods are the most affordable, and more! 

    That would be fantastic if you get the chance! If you happened to be near any of the units I'm hoping to inquire about through craigslist, it would be great to have some idea of what they actually look like and where they are located. I had time to visit one apartment complex in Greenbelt before flying back after the visit day, and it was nice but in a complex that has almost 3,000 units in 3-story buildings, so the stacked on top of each other apartment situation is definitely a drawback.

     

     

    We would also love to live in a privately owned duplex or fourplex/townhouse and to avoid living in a large isolated apartment community, but like you said, there seems to be little resources for this sort of housing without actually scouting the area. I wonder if it would be of bad taste to offer to pay a student volunteer $100 or so to scout out for rent signs in the area when we get closer to our move date? I feel like even if we found something privately owned listed on craigslist, we would need someone to check it out for us before we agreed to anything anyways. Any thoughts?

    I don't think it would be that bad — you could hire an undergrad to do it so it's less awkward than trying to arrange it with a current grad student (well, I would feel awkward about asking someone in the program to do it, but maybe that's just me). I feel the same way about finding something on craigslist — until you have seen the apartment in person, you really don't know what you're getting.

     

    The trouble with the apartment rating sites is that everyone goes on them to complain, therefore, after limiting my search to a few large complexes, I was totally bumbed to find that they all have less than desireable ratings :( I guess if we end up going the large apartment community route, we will have to arrange a short lease just in case.

    The one apartment I did visit in Greenbelt had some bad reviews about mildew and maintenance issues. While I was being shown units by someone from their office, I simply brought up those reviews in a polite, straightforward manner and asked whether those were issues I should expect to encounter. They can of course lie to you, but I feel like just hearing how they react to the question and what they say about the problems reviewers mentioned tells you a lot.

  9. This is something that terrifies me as I consider some CA schools...

     

    ETA: I currently live about 7 miles from my campus and it takes about 9-11 minutes to get there...

    Right? I live less than 2 miles from campus in a pretty small town, so it's never more than a five to seven minute drive. The worst traffic I've driven in is Portland... so venturing into DC is probably going to be scarring.

  10. I am curious as to how everyone plans on finding a place to live. My husband and I are moving from California to Michigan and it will cost us almost all of our savings to do so, so we won't be able to make a trip out to look for housing. Also, we have a dog so we don't qualify for student housing. Therefore, our search is limited to Craigslit and other online searches. Just wondering if anyone else is in the same boat, and if so, what strategies are you considering to make sure you end up with a decent place?

    I'm moving from Oregon to Maryland and have been using Craiglist, ForRent.com and Rent.com to at least find places. If you're looking for an apartment complex, these can be good resources to guide you to the community's website or to get in touch with them about units that may be available when you're planning to move. I'm hoping to get a duplex or townhouse that is more independently situated, and unfortunately Craigslist has been the only place I've seen places like that. In a month or two when I feel more reasonable inquiring about August availability, I plan to make contact with landlords through Craigslist, but I'm still less than comfortable with the idea of choosing a place without physically visiting it. We can't really afford an apartment-hunting trip either, but I'm starting to feel that it may be necessary unless we just move into a community of apartment buildings.

  11. Just a word of advice, in case you aren't familiar with the area--the DC suburb housing can get pretty expensive (2-bedroom townhouses selling for $400k in some of the "nicer" areas), though there are of course some good finds and places for students too--but my thought is that those places will be rentals. As far as living farther away, the area also has some pretty crappy traffic, so I would recommend getting as close to campus as possible. Definitely do not live somewhere where you would need to take 495 or 95. Seriously, ugh, don't do it.

     

    Just my $.02, of course. But I lived about 6 miles from my job outside Baltimore (which has a slightly-less-evil 695 beltway) and it sometimes took me 45 minutes or more to get home (with no traffic it was about 15 minutes). That's the #1 reason I quit that job. :wacko:

    Thanks for the insight on the area, bfat. I'm looking for a rental and trying to stay out of the DC area. I definitely want to live either close to campus or somewhere I can take the metro rather than battle traffic, but I wasn't sure whether traffic coming from places like Severn or Bethesda would be as bad. Directions from those places to the university seem to avoid the evil highways you mentioned. Some of the current graduate students said living in Baltimore and commuting works for them, but I can't imagine a 45-minute to 1 1/2-hour drive between school and home working well for me. But I suppose I've been spoiled by living in low-traffic areas.

  12. Yup! My husband and I are heading there for a week in June. We are actually thinking of buying a house (we have some money saved up from working full-time these past few years), but we aren't sure how feasible it is to buy a house in an area we aren't familiar with. What about you? Where are you thinking about living? We are hoping for Takoma Park!

    That's great, buying a house would definitely make for a more desirable living situation, but it would be hard to make such a big decision without knowing more about the area. I'm looking in Takoma Park, Silver Spring and Greenbelt primarily, though I've seen some good options in Bethesda too. We really don't want to get stuck with an apartment complex, but it's a bit early now to find a townhouse or duplex that will be available in August, when we plan to move. I'm torn between the convenience of places like Greenbelt, where I could get to the university by shuttle or metro without any driving required, and the nicer housing options that are 30-40 minutes out. Ideally, I'd like to find a duplex or townhouse between 10 and 20 minutes from campus, but I feel like it's harder to find privately owned, smaller units like that in advance and from across the country.

  13. Mine are pretty similar to yours, bluecheese. I would have not applied to some programs that I did apply to and would have applied to some other programs if I had known more about their funding packages and taken even more time to find programs that fit my interests really well. I think I'm ending up at the perfect place for me, but I wish every school I had applied to had been a near-perfect fit, and that definitely wasn't the case. I also would have worked harder on the fit paragraphs for my statement of purpose. With some schools, I felt like I was looking for a connection to talk about there, a good indication that some of the programs weren't right for me. If I had made sure I didn't apply to any program for which I couldn't give a really strong explanation of fit in my SOP, I may have made better application decisions in general, as well as had stronger, more detailed school-specific paragraphs in my SOP.

  14. My perspective:

     

    Definitely review the AW section. When I first saw an AW prompt, I was completely stumped. I just really couldn't figure out what it was asking for. I did some review, read some samples, and scored 5.5 on the writing. 

     

    Also, gotta agree with girl who wears glasses. Try with the math. I took the GRE twice within five weeks of each other. I didn't study or try on the math the first time, and I got in the fourth percentile. That just can't look good. So, when I redid the test, I basically just reviewed the math section of the Princeton Review GRE prep book. I didn't do that well on the math test the second time, but 50% is much better looking than 4%. But here's the real kicker: without any more studying for the verbal section, my verbal score also increased by 13%. I think because my brain was engaged the entire time, I was in problem-solving mode for the entirety of the test. 

    OK, I take my suggestion back. Definitely study the math enough that you can at least land somewhere around the 40ish or higher percentile. Math is my least favorite subject, but I think I'm underestimating the effects of taking it throughout high school through calculus and tutoring a high school student in algebra and geometry during my sophomore year of college. That made a huge difference for me, I'm sure, because the material was much fresher than it otherwise would have been, and teaching something is the best way to fully comprehend it. I was in the 74th percentile and figured there was no need to really do better than 40-50 if you're applying to an English program. But girl who wears glasses makes a good point about overall numbers. I definitely wanted everything to be as high as it could be, for any good it might be able to do me.

  15. This thread has veered off into different territory, but my take on the GRE: its difficulty is vastly overrated, generally speaking.  I don't think it's even necessary for humanistically minded people to study for the verbal or analytic writing portions.  I would, however, familiarize yourself with the question types and format of the exam. That's very important.

     

    For what it's worth, I did well on the verbal and analytic portions.  Not stratospheric, but respectable.

    I agree. I didn't study for the GRE general. The GRE lit was a different story, but on the general, I received very high scores in the verbal and writing sections without any study other than thinking a little bit about how I might approach the essays the night before (which didn't help at all because my issue topic was completely out of left field). I scored pretty well on the math section, but I agree with MissHavishslam that the math section really doesn't matter. If you can earn a college degree, you can probably perform well enough on the math section to get by. I also think that how you scored on the SAT (unless maybe if you have taken a long break at some point in your education and have scores that are more than 10 years old) is probably a good indication of how you'll do on the GRE. I found the tests incredibly similar and I think my percentages in each section of the GRE were almost identical to those on my SAT.

     

    Edit: I think SAT scores are a good indication of how you might do on the GRE without much studying. You could perhaps use that as a base to determine how much effort you may need to put into studying.

  16. You all just got the standard MAPH letter. There's a part in it that is customized to your individual applicant profile, and may mention faculty of interest to you, but other than that it's a standard letter. Definitely don't dismiss MAPH out of hand, though. Recent placement has been very, very impressive (both to PhD programs and non-academic positions). Plenty of discussions on this forum.

    Yeah, even though the part about my interests didn't seem particularly genuine, the letter itself did make me think about the advantages of the MAPH. If I didn't have offers to any PhD programs, I might have considered taking on the financial burden of the program. But I'm glad that's not the case, because that kind of debt just to get placed in a PhD program in a year or two is a really scary thought for me. Not that I don't think anyone should do it. The program sounds great and I feel like it would almost guarantee (almost because there are no guarantees in this process) admission to a PhD program for a promising student who completed it. But it's definitely not a viable option given my situation. I should probably let them know that, ha. This whole process has made me so paranoid that I've been afraid to decline anything.

  17. Shut up fish bucket.

    Yes, it was really dry and mechanized, and then all of a sudden they would reference my writing sample. "I very much enjoyed your admissions file, especially the part about Ranciere and aesthetics and interestingness."

    Yeah, exactly. It was like a very, very long advertisement for the program with some personal bits thrown in to make it seem as if it had purpose beyond selling the MAPH.

  18. Anybody else get an eerily personalized email about UChicago's MAPH?

    Haha I did. It was almost nice, but the way the writer described my writing sample was "on what thing theory illuminates about 'Prufrock.'" My sample was on "Preludes," "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and "The Waste Land," and "The Waste Land" dominates a lot of the discussion, so that was kind of weird.

  19. I feel deep in my heart that Maryland is the right place for me, but I'm still anxious about making such a big decision. I guess the obvious solution is to just visit, but I can't until April, and like I said, would love to save the money and time. 

     
    Ahhhh! I am just so ready to know where I'm going to end up. I want to know now, so I may be rushing this. Or maybe I'm being smart and going with my gut? I DUNNO. Help?

    I think what you said here makes it clear what the best choice for you is. I'm not Rhet/Comp, but I've always felt that the program that is right for you and will shape you into the most successful scholar you can be is not necessarily the program that has the best reputation or even the highest concentration of faculty and resources in a specific area, but the best combination of resources, environment and opportunities that you're looking for. One thing I came away from Maryland with was the feeling that there is real freedom to shape your study and draw on their resources to make the program meet your needs. But I can completely understand your anxiety about the decision. The other offers I have so far aren't even viable options, and I had nothing bad to say about Maryland after the visit day, but I still went home feeling anxious about deciding to attend, even though it's pretty much a given. This process is stressful even when things are working out perfectly!

     

    Good luck, and I'm happy we might be seeing each other at UMD again in the fall :)

  20. Re: GRE Vocabulary-- there are quite a few good vocab flashcard apps for the iPhone. I deleted them immediately after taking the test, so I can't tell you the name. It did cost a few bucks.

    I liked studying on my phone because I always have it on me. I'd study while taking the bus, walking the dog, and getting ready for bed. It was awesome!

    I found this to be a really helpful approach, too. The app I used was called GRE Vocab, though now it looks like it's called GRE Vocab Genius for the full set of flashcards.

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