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ImpulsiveNixie

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Posts posted by ImpulsiveNixie

  1. Haha true, but I definitely have other schools that I'd prefer to attend. I'm definitely extremely grateful that I at least got into one school! I'm going somewhere! haha :)

     

    So, keep that in your mind and I guarantee that you will enjoy your Spring Break! I mean either that or do like Lily does in How I Met Your Mother and get the "Kennedy Package" wherever you go (ie constant supply of drinks). 

     

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  2. I think the worst part of my anxiety is knowing that I'm going to be getting mail acceptances while I'm gone on spring break, and neither of my parents will be home and none of my roommates will be able to check our mail at school either. So much for relaxing over break, right? Ugh.

     

    Buuuuut on a positive side: It looks like you already have an acceptance so you can relax a little because you only need one! :) 

  3. Thanks for asking. My husband and I have a child together, and I am simply not willing to take my son away from his father while I go to school. While my education is important my family comes first. So my plan if I don't get in is to work as an assistant for a year and reapply. I might also be able to continue assisting my professors on the grant/research work as well. 

     

    Okay, ya that totally makes sense and the circumstances. I know there are online programs too. Your follow-up/year off plan seems totally legit though.  Really, good luck to you! 

  4. Hey,

    Due to my husband business I am only going to be applying for the SLP program at the UO. Anyone else apply to the UO as 1st choice or even 2nd? What about as a back up?! 

     

    What is your back up? I ask because I feel like that is such a huge risk - applying to only one program. I really want to work in the SLHS field and moving away from my SO will suck but I feel like in the grand scheme of life it will only be a 2 year separation that will be filled with monthly visits and summer breaks and winter breaks and skype and whatever else we can do... 

     

    Really, I do wish all the best. 

  5. Also, I think everyone is guilty of over exaggerating the difficulty of situations to people who are below us (like grad students to undergrad students) Even now, when I hear students a year below me talk about classes I had to take last year or the year before, my classmates and I have the natural instinct to say "just wait until *insert name of higher level course*!"

    I'm not trying to say that everyone is over exaggerating by saying it's hard. I just think that everyone deals with the difficulty of situations differently, so you won't really know how hard it is until you get there. :)

     

    I agree with this. I think this is why each year has levels and goals to meet. You know, to prepare you for the next level. 

  6. The sappy, saccharin coated message will appear in 3...2...1...

    I really have to say how impressed I am with the amount of support and the words of encouragement from those posting on this blog. In good news and not so good news, everyone has really positive and uplifting things to say. So often, at least with the blogs and comments I regularly read on the interwebz, there are people just trolling for the opportunity to post negative, degrading responses. Kudos to all of you - what an amazing community of people we have here, and I imagine, in our field as a whole! :)

    I think we are so busy being hard on ourselves that we don't want others to feel that way too. :):):)

  7. So, as with any graduate program the difficulty is not in the classes but in the program itself.

     

    Here is what you makes programs difficult:

     

    Time. Grad programs (in general) are going to demand so much time from your life. You are going to have to balance clinic (session plans, sessions, session evaluation, clinic team meetings, etc) and school (tests, quizzes, homework, group projects, readings, etc). You must be capable of time-management.

     

    Nothing goes according to plan. Sessions. Academics. Research. You much be flexible and just go with the flow.

     

    Criticism. You are going to be receiving a lot of feedback. There is going to be good - you're awesome, you did perfect - feedback but there is also going to be a TON of bad - you shouldn't have done that, you might want to think about it this way - feedback. This is particularly hard because we all have been pretty much amazing through our undergrad. Grad programs tend to accumulate a ton of perfectionists and with good reason. We are the ones that realized that we wanted to go beyond undergrad and did everything in our power to do so. You must have the ability to accept criticism. 

     

    Group projects. Your cohort in grad school will be with you from now until you retire. They are your peers. Each person you study will resemble a personality that you could potentially work later on down the road. You must be able to work around your differences in style (and not the fashion kind) and personality and work towards the common good. You are going to be working with these individuals in class, in clinic, with clients... You have to learn to rely on them for support. It was easy in undergrad to handle group projects because you knew that you would never have to deal with them again. That is not the case in grad school. 

     

    We all will have strengths and weaknesses in grad school. You will succeed by learning your weaknesses and turning them into strengths. 

  8. UGH. I think I have the best interview fml story yet.

     

    First...I am sitting here waiting for my host to come onto Skype and I decide to check my phone. Awaiting in my inbox is a rejection email from the University of Iowa. I mean, I knew this was coming but NICE TIMING! lol.

     

    Then, as soon as I (nervously ) log in and the interview begins, my dogs see something outside and start barking madly. I excuse myself to go and tell them to kindly shut it. As soon as I sit back down, my cochlear implant battery DIES!!!!!! Why I didn't think to check this before, don't ask me. 

     

    I think overall it went pretty well, until they asked me about my GPA, which is "lower than the rest of my application would indicate" and I kind of stumbled. I gave a generic answer that I wasn't as focused as I should have been in my first and second year but really amped up my act in my 3rd and 4th year.

     

    I guess there is nothing to do but laugh and hope for other interviews/acceptances, right?  :P Thanks, bratty dogs/dead battery. 

     

    OMG!!! You are seem so positive!! I would be worked up and crying.  Oh dogs... >.<

  9.  

    I'm pretty anxious waiting for more news this week... I assembled a 500-piece puzzle (you can get one at the dollar store) last night, which seemed to calm my nerves a bit, but today I'm back to crazily refreshing all the pages I have open in my browser again. Uhh...I even just caught myself refreshing my Amazon seller inventory page... Looking forward to the end of this madness :P

     

    PUZZLES!!! :wub:  :wub:  :wub:

  10. Waitlisted at my top choice, Fort Hays State!  Excited! :)  given my low GPA, a wait list is all I could ask for from any of my schools I applied to!   :)

     

    Seriously awesome! I can definitely tell that you are dedicated to this field and it's good that they can look beyond the GPA. 

     

    Oooooh I wonder how caterpillar did - her husband applied there too, right? 

  11. I just have to say that I am really excited about this forum because all of you understand the anxiety and the work that has been put into this field. We are all understanding of how competitive it is and what an accomplishment it is to be accepted into a program. In my outside life very few understand the accomplishment. I just want you all to know that you all have worked hard and no matter what March brings you have worked your butt off - so rejoice in that feat!!

  12. I thought about emailing, as well, but then I decided not to for the reason that I don't want them to think I'm begging them. Sure I want them to take a closer look at my application and really consider me, but what if you end up rubbing them the wrong way by sending them an email? 

     

    To second this: It could be an email to someone who doesn't even sit on the committee and they are aren't going to forward the information on to someone that does. Besides, excessive emails and phone calls annoy the committee. Campus visits help but it is also very late to be planning that because many campus require way-in-advance notice. 

     

    You have strong stats. Your GPA improved with your Post-Bacc and your experience, I'm sure, helps you. You've got this! 

  13. While this isn't a sure bet but it was recommended to me, look at schools that have a high regard for research. Most schools that have a current/strong research base tend to emphasize EBP. 

     

    If you want a program that emphasizes research - do your own on the school. Decide what you find interesting then look up the most current literature. Look up the researcher (where they teach, who they are affiliated with), the school, the program. That's how I selected all of my schools. 

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