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lyrehc

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Posts posted by lyrehc

  1. This came in today on the IE-L listserv. If you have forensics experience it's a good opportunity.

     

    The University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) is seeking applicants for a forensics graduate assistantship, starting in Fall 2016.  This is a two-year position which provides a monthly stipend for coaching, in-state tuition waiver, and funded conference travel opportunities.  Unlike many programs, forensics graduateassistants are not required to teach courses in the department in addition to their coaching obligations.  The UTEP forensics program is relatively small (10-12 students, on average), and competes in parliamentary debate and individual events.  We welcome applicants with experience in either or both.

    The Department of Communication at UTEP offers an M.A. in communication studies.  This position is ideal for those seeking a smaller department that emphasizes close mentorship with well-respected scholars in the field.  Our faculty includes several prominent scholars whose research interests include: rhetoric, environmental communication, critical-cultural studies, gender, health communication, public participation, and intercultural communication.  There are numerous opportunities for funded, international research and the department is currently working to develop a Ph.D. program in communication.

    UTEP is located in El Paso, TX, which is situated on the US-Mexico border, and is part of the largest international metroplex in the world.  The University has recently celebrated its centennial and has been ranked as one of the top 10 universities in the United States by Washington Monthly (including a #1 ranking for promoting student social mobility).  The El Paso region is one of the fastest growing areas of the country and boasts a robust multicultural environment.

    If you are interested in applying or would like more information about the program, please do not hesitate to contact me directly at: catarin@utep.edu<mailto:catarin@utep.edu>. The departmental deadline for application is April 1, 2016, but early applications are highly encouraged.  For more information about the department and team please visit: http://academics.utep.edu/Default.aspx?alias=academics.utep.edu/comm

     

  2. On Friday, March 18, 2016 at 8:50 PM, kaoticfen said:

    Well hope everyone else is doing good. Im headed to MSU! It was a tough decision as i received funding offers from both schools but ultimately went where the funding was the greatest. Thanks to everyone for the advice and support through this process!

    Congratulations. Knowing you found the right program is huge.

  3. This program went out on CRTNET this morning. If anyone is still looking for a program or has not been admitted elsewhere you might look into it. http://arts-sciences.und.edu/communication/graduate/index.cfm

    This is the message (since it was on CRTNET today I'm guessing she means April 16, 2016):

     

    Pamela Kalbfleisch, pamela.kalbfleisch@icloud.com

    New Doctoral Program in International and Intercultural Communication at the University of North Dakota

    The intent of the Ph.D. program is to graduate students with scholarly competencies enabling them to assume roles as intellectual leaders in international and intercultural communication as well as public intellectuals stimulating discussion of significant communication issues.

    Program is accepting applications from those with master’s or bachelor’s degrees with interest in advanced study in communication. Submit complete applications by April 16, 2015 for best consideration.

    For more information about the program go to http://arts-sciences.und.edu/communication/

    Pamela Kalbfleisch, Ph.D.

    Communication Program

    Graduate Director

     

  4. I lived in Oregon for several years (my undergraduate is from Linfield College and my husband was a grad student in COMM at Oregon State).

    U of O is in one of three uber-liberal areas of Oregon. The rest of the state is extremely conservative. Graduate students are part of a union and their health care plan back in the early 2000s was some of the best in the entire nation. They have a nice library system, and Eugene is only an hour from Florence which is a very nice Oregon beach community - I love the Pacific Ocean and its rugged terrain. In Oregon you don't usually swim in the ocean but you'll get great seafood and the beach is a lot of fun. 

    I've heard good things about the U of O faculty but don't know any specifics. The down side for me is that Oregon public schools are on the quarter system. This means you only have 10-11 weeks to get into a class, so the pace is faster and often you'll just start sinking your teeth into a course when it ends. On the other hand, if you have a class you hate you'll be done with it sooner than on the semester system.

    Oregon is in a rain shadow. You get rain most of the fall/winter - it's not usually heavy and many people refer to "wet rain" or "dry rain." Frequently the rain is enough to use windshield wipers but even standing in it you won't be soaked through for a while. Summers are gorgeous - clear, beautiful. 

    The best thing for me about the Oregon geography is that I could within an hour be in the mountains, be at the ocean, be at a lake, be in a city, be in a sleepy community.

     

    Florida - 

    You also have ocean - it's a little further away to go to a developed area and the beaches are more conducive to sunbathing/swimming so they are a lot more crowded. You're 2 hours from Disney.

    Climate is warmer in the fall/winter than Oregon and overall more temperate.

    The school is the 8th largest university in the US. It is HUGE. It is also on the semester system, which allows you to spend more time in a class. You were admitted with the advisor you want.

    Recommendations - 

    Ultimately, what appeals to you more? Are there faculty in OR you want to work with? Would you prefer the quarter system or the semester system? Since you are admitted to study under a faculty you want to study with in FL, I'd be inclined to lean that way, but at the same time I wanted to study with someone before coming to Oklahoma and my entire focus changed so that he is not even on my committee. That's not uncommon. 

    If I were picking based on climate I would go with Oregon. But you can live anywhere for the length of time you are in a graduate program because you know that eventually you'll graduate. 

    Sit down and write the pros and cons of the academic program as they apply to you. Then go with the one you feel fits you better.

  5. 11 hours ago, TWD2016 said:

    Is it a bad idea to accept an offer to a school you've never visited? Picking UMICH over USF seems like a no brainer, but if I decline USF that means that I'm basically accepting UMICH because I only received those two offers.

    On the other hand, I'm struggling with the idea of spending my own money to go visit USF when Michigan was my first choice and I know deep down it would be kind of ridiculous to turn them down.

     

    Any advice?? so confused right now..

    P.S. this wasn't an issue to people start asking me what if I hate Ann Arbor, which I had never thought about before but I guess its possible....

    In my cycle I only applied to one program because I KNEW it was the right one for me. My husband and I decided that if I didn't get in my first try we'd move here and try to "back door" my way in - but fortunately that wasn't necessary.

    Anyway, I hadn't been here before I was admitted and moved. Not only that, but I'm a cold weather person - my favorite place in the world is Anchorage, AK. I've liked the area a lot more than I expected to, but seriously, grad school is only a handful of years in the grand scheme of things. If the program is right, it's right. 

  6. 2 hours ago, Toast said:

    Hello, everyone! I've been lurking for a while, but this is my first chance to say hello! Congrats to everyone on some really great news and good luck on upcoming news! 

    I've currently been accepted to UT-Austin, Utah, and Missouri, but I'm still waiting on Ohio University. I've heard back from every other program, and I'm about an inch from calling it a loss. Does anyone have any news? 

    On another note, I really want to visit Utah but it may not be financially viable-- does anyone here have any experience working with their students or faculty? They were my first choice, because I research ability in communication, so their faculty fits my research well, but I'm a big fan of community... and I hate the thought of accepting without meeting anyone or experiencing their department. 

    I have not been there but I've heard good things about the Utah faculty and department. Outside the university the culture is heavily Mormon, but inside is an academic oasis. The people I know who were there still like it. And Dr. Middleton is great help to me with my forensics team.

  7. 11 hours ago, kaoticfen said:

    Just got my acceptance letter to Oklahoma University!!! Weird too as i got it late 11:30pm central time. Thanks so much @God (see what i did there =) )  headed out to their welcome weekend too. Should be a fun next couple of weeks.

    I look forward to meeting you then.

    Who else is it who applied to OU?

  8. On 2/12/2016 at 9:40 AM, kaoticfen said:

    Okay! The difficult part is waiting of course. Do they interview students there for the PhD or is it an outright admit? This whole admissions cycle has been interesting how each school responds with offers, funding and rejections

    Yeah international makes it difficult but not impossible. More than half of my cohort in my MA program at MSU were international students and most had funding opportunities (usually the ones who did had good GRE/TOEFL scores) If i was not successful this iteration i was hoping to apply to LSE PhD in media and communications as I've always welcomed the opportunity to study abroad. Well hopefully you'll hear good news from UPenn and you wont have to worry about next year =)

    They don't interview.

  9. On 1/8/2016 at 6:43 AM, smw0805 said:

    Wow - that really is quite a difference. I will definitely keep that in mind if I have to choose between the two. I'm from Australia, so the west coast definitely sounds more like home. 

    It really depends on the university. Each has its own culture. I lived in west coast states most of my life and there are schools where the faculty are extremely formal there as well as schools that are informal. There are faculty who went to east coast schools at my university and things were very informal. Not only that, but faculty members are individuals and how things operate can vary widely even in the same department. Where I attend there are faculty who go out to have a drink with graduate students and faculty who never meet with students outside of their offices. 

    The best advice I can offer is do everything you can to get a feel for where you apply. I *love* OU. Seriously I cannot imagine attending anywhere else - the fit has been amazing. But I am an individual - one of my cohort members has felt like a fish out of water because that person's research interests do not mesh well with the department which is not something that was considered at the time the admission offer was accepted. Fit with faculty research interests, fit with other students in the department, fit with personalities - these are all valuable considerations.

  10. On 12/23/2015 at 3:44 PM, gradswag said:

    Hi everyone!

    I am looking for a place to commiserate a bit about applications. I am currently applying to about 7 interpersonal/health comm programs (UCSB, UConn, Rutgers, Penn State, Univ of Oklahoma, UT Austin, and Arizona State) and am ready to cry a little bit about this process. I have a solid GPA/GRE, a few conference papers, teaching experience, and I met nearly all of my POIs at NCA this year, but I still have a nagging feeling like I am just going to get rejected from everywhere I applied. 

    I hope you guys are doing alright through this process! 

    Hang in there.

    FWIW, I'm at OU and I love it here.

  11. On 11/16/2015, 4:41:46, kumitrue said:

    hej!

    I am looking for a PHD communication/media program where it would be possible to do research with a focus on the internet activism/social activism (like social movements activism on SNS). UCSB seems a nice choice, but currently i'm looking for programs that are not in top10. 

    Any suggestions? 

    I love my program at OU and there are faculty who would love to guide you through that type of research.

  12. As an instructor I don't have a problem with students hiring a proofreader. I want the ideas and content to be their own, but some people need more help in the presentation than others. Plus, I focus on students using the speech format of narration, thesis, intro, body points, review, conclusion, peroration whether assignments are written or spoken. A writing center or proofreader may be able to help with mechanics, but they aren't going to be as aware of format - that is all on the student.

    Haven't you had classes or taught classes where students exchange rough drafts for peer edits? Or group papers where students divide up the work - someone may focus on technical information and someone else may polish the writing because the group members have different strengths. Hiring someone because you're shaky in mechanics is, in my opinion, using resources that are available and not cheating.

    I'm in communication so maybe this is more discipline specific.

  13. Top universities usually look at a student holistically. GRE scores, letters of reference, undergraduate institution, GPA at both the undergrad and master's levels, area of research interest, publications, etc. I went to an unknown school for a degree in a field that does not relate to my current field at all. I got into my first choice school on the first try and am fully funded.

    There are those who look askance at WGU but if your entire application packet looks good I don't think a degree from there would be a deal breaker.

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