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eucalyptus

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Posts posted by eucalyptus

  1. Hey there, I'm applying to mostly Developmental programs (a couple of Cognitive ones also). I'm interested in language evolution (& acquisition) so it can fall in either field, and there aren't a ton of profs working on it. The only program I've heard from so far is a request for a phone interview from Johns Hopkins - just got an email today from my prof-of-interest asking to talk tomorrow.

  2. You could also try checking out labs/departments at other schools you're interested in to see if they'll take you on as a summer research student. Lots of labs (in psych, at least) do official summer research programs, and many others might take you on without an official program for it. You might even get a chance to work in a lab you'd like to join as a grad student!

  3. I got my first interview invite yesterday (yay!) and I have a few questions.

    -They have offered to pay for travel and lodging. I would like my partner to come up for part of the weekend since he will be relocating with me if I attend the school and he hasn't seen the area before. We can pay for his travel on our own obviously but is it a faux pas to see if the hotel room could be booked for two people? I feel like it's slightly more awkward since we are unmarried.

    -The interview is for Neuroscience but I am also applying for the Psychology program at the same school. Should I let the professors I talked to in Psychology know I'll be on campus interviewing for the other program? When I spoke to them last they indicated that it was likely that I'd get an interview for Psychology as well. I feel like it would be awkward to not mention that I'll be around. I am also secretly hoping that I could interview for both programs the same weekend to cut down on travel but I suspect that's not going to happen, oh well.

    Generally, I would say that you can always get two people into a hotel room that's been booked for one person, but at interviews sometimes they'll have you share a room with another interviewee. So definitely check with the department and it will probably be alright, but if they want you to share, offer to pay for the other half of the hotel room.

  4. i don't get how people can make fit paragraphs work....haha everyone seems to do them yet when i tried to change 1 paragraph it felt off......like i wrote a new SOP for each school......because i tweaked how all my experiences were relevant to the research at the school and i had a differnt aim at each school. i love overthinking 2pg papers! haha.

    Well, I did make substantial changes to the entire second half of my SOP for each school. I proposed slightly different research (or phrased it in a different way) at each place, and had a couple of paragraphs about prior experiences that I added/removed based on what I was proposing. I also made a few tweaks in wording. But there was still a distinct fit paragraph where I stopped talking solely about myself for once and wrote about the school I was applying to!

  5. You almost certainly won't get both stipends. Usually you get just the stipend from the external source, and the department uses the money they're not spending on you on someone else. A lot of places will give you a "top-up" to your external stipend though (maybe $5000/year), as an added incentive for students to apply for external money.

  6. How many profs is too many to mention your SOP? At one of my programs, I'm mentioning all 6 members of the Developmental Psychology program. Two of them are potential advisors (I'd really love a co-advising arrangement), and I'd like to do a project with either of another two. The final two profs teach and research on areas that are clearly related and would be the "broadening of my foundational knowledge". Is this total overkill? Should I cut the mention of the final two profs so they don't think I'm just trying to name everyone in the program?

  7. When you go to an interview, are you told ahead of time which 4-6 professors you'll be speaking with? I imagine that this would be useful information so that you've read up enough about them.

    Also, I know there is generally a lot of socializing with current grad students. Do they actually have any bearing upon admission decisions? Or is it just a case of... if you do something truly horrendous in front of them (getting hammered, being a jerk, etc) then it will get back to the admissions committee informally?

  8. Congrats! I was wondering if I'm too late to contact some profs (I am still more than a month out... I wasn't going to but not I'm rethinking) and this gives me some confidence.

    I really don't think it's too late - I emailed the bulk of my profs about a month before the deadlines and every one of them wrote back. None of them seemed affronted at the short notice.

  9. My private university transcripts were covered by a one-time transcript fee (I think it was $50 or something) paid freshman year. Now, I just go online and request them whenever I need them. I actually have a stockpile of like 5 or so at my house that I can send out whenever I need them. My study abroad transcripts are $6 each, plus a processing fee of $5. My MA (public) university is $2 each. And my current (PhD, public) university is $6 a pop. I prefer what my undergrad did, obviously.

    My undergrad school's fee for transcripts is $20 each! It really sucks. Luckily my grad school gives them out free, but you have to wait ages while they send them across the pond.

  10. I just had an awesome prof-contact experience, which I would like to share:

    This afternoon, I made some panicky last-minute changes to my list of schools (whose applications are generally due December 15) based on research fit - removed two schools, added one. For the school I added, I emailed a couple of professors there for the first time (yes, less than a week before the deadline) and within 30 minutes received the most enthusiastic reply ever! It was long, detailed, and mentioned over and over just how much he wants a student with my interests and experience. Plus, I'd asked about the opportunity to work with animals even though I was pretty sure he wouldn't have any; turns out he really wants to collaborate on animal research but didn't have a student to do it, and he could easily send me to the monkey labs at Yale or Duke.

    I'm soooo unbelievably excited about this!!!

  11. First post, yay!

    I'm taking some extra college courses to compensate for a weak college GPA (2.99, wish I could round up) and show that I can do the work in an MA/IR program somewhere. My instructor is a grad student, so if I asked them for an LOR would that hurt my application? I understand that for a PhD you want to go with high-profile professors for LORs, but what about for a masters? I don't plan on applying to the top tier (HKS, WWS, Fletcher, etc) so perhaps other schools are more flexible.

    Thanks and I look forward to sharing our hopes/fears/freakouts together.

    In general you want to make sure that the person writing your letter has the credential you're going for. In this case, if the grad student in question has a Masters degree or is past the first 2-3 years of their PhD program, they pretty much have the Masters you're going for, so it's fair game.

  12. Absolutely DO NOT attach it without talking to your PI first! You are essentially putting this paper into public domain by attaching it as a writing sample, because if it is interesting, it will spread outside the adcom to their colleagues who are working on the same problem. You may find yourself scooped.

    It is difficult to overstate the care you need to take with this. If your advisor gives it the go-ahead, then they likely know best, but talk to them first unless you want a letter of rec to disappear.

    That's true, I didn't consider that the paper might make it out of the adcom. I'll definitely check with my supervisor before sending it.

  13. When I applied out of undergrad, I got into 2/6 of the PhD programs I applied to. Then I went to one of those, and a year and a half in my supervisor moved to another country. So now I'm reapplying, with an almost-finished Masters thesis. Hopefully I can get into some of the programs that rejected me three years ago!

    My predictions:

    There are 2 that I feel pretty confident about (including one top choice).

    And 2 that I really don't think I have a chance at (the other two top choices *sigh*).

    Of the 5 in the middle, I'm guessing I'll get into 2.

    I'd really love to get into more than one program, just so I get to agonize over the choice!

  14. None of the programs I'm applying for (Psych) require a writing sample, but many suggest that you can attach a paper or other material if you would like to. I've written a research paper covering a bunch of my Masters work that is currently under review for publication. Is it okay to attach this to my applications? I ask because it hasn't yet been accepted, and if/when it is, it'll probably have to be edited. So, the current form is not the "official" form that it will (hopefully) one day be appearing in. Is this something to be concerned about? Also, my mom (who used to be a researcher) is neurotic about idea-stealing - do I really have to be worried about that when sending my paper with my applications?

  15. I'll do one better than that, eucalyptus--I'll PM you with an article. I hope you enjoy it.

    By the way, I see that you're interested in Columbia. Who are you interested in working with there? I know a thing or two about the department :)

    I was thinking about Ann Senghas and Herb Terrace, but I actually decided to drop Columbia from my list a few weeks ago. I think their work is great but it is a little too tangential to what I want to do... which I realized as I was trying to write emails to the profs. *sigh*

  16. Hey Palindrome, would it be possible to tell me who this prof is that you're talking about? I'm a psych major (cog sci in undergrad) with an interest in both language and primates, so I'm highly curious (and don't worry, my app list is finalized already so I won't try to steal him way from you!). You can PM me if you like.

  17. I think this is a fairly common response to starting grad school. In my case (a PhD program in the UK), I'd moved across the ocean from all my friends, family, and boyfriend to a tiny isolated town. I definitely spent the first semester feeling isolated and overworked, but things changed sometime during my 2nd semester. Finding a new social life wasn't an easy task and kind of happened by accident - I moved desks from one communal grad student office to another, and magically found myself with people I enjoyed hanging out with. The workload also became more manageable and interesting as time went on, partly just because I got used to it and was able to finish stuff faster. And research definitely got better once I was past the reading/planning stage and into the doing/getting-results stage. I think moving straight from undergrad to a PhD is a really big jump and one that takes some getting used to. It takes a while to forge a new identity as a researcher rather than a student and you can feel incompetent at the beginning. But in my case it was worth giving it some time, as things definitely got better!

  18. One of the department websites for a California school actually said "because we guarantee funding for all students admitted and international students are liable to pay higher fees, it is extremely unlikely that international studetns will be admitted."

    I had a prof from a UC psych department tell me that although she thought my research idea was great, it was "virtually impossible" to get in as an international student this year, unless I was bringing my own funding.

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