
chigirl2014
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Gender
Female
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Location
Chicago
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Application Season
2014 Fall
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Program
Higher Education Administration
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I went to northwestern for undergrad and took a couple classes in the MFT program. First, the classes and professors are really great. I'm not interested in this area at all, but I still learned a lot and found them to be incredibly interesting. Second, the rent in Chicago/Evanston is not necessarily cheaper than NYC. Yes you might get a nicer space for your money, but a studio in a good apartment building near campus is still going to cost at least $1200 per month. Just something to think about. As someone who has gone to northwestern I do think the reputation is worth the money. I've seen how going there has REALLY helped in my own job/educational pursuits. But that's just my personal opinion.
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Taeyers reacted to a post in a topic: I don't want to belong to any University that will accept people like me as a member
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wanderingwondering reacted to a post in a topic: I don't want to belong to any University that will accept people like me as a member
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gretagarbo reacted to a post in a topic: Evanston, IL
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I did my undergrad at Evanston. I think someone above mentioned a SEVERE SHORTAGE of housing and this is definitely accurate. My friends and I applied for a (very nice) apartment in Evanston at thanksgiving and did not hear back until the following June to sign the lease for that September. I would say to get on finding a place as soon as you know that you are going there. If you are willing to start your lease in July or August (since school starts in September) some landlords are willing to work with you to find something quicker or make your rent cheaper. Also, to everyone else about safety: do not live west of dodge in Evanston. My uncle is a cop there and this is where he always drew the line of safe and unsafe for me. And do not live in Rogers Park. It's not fun and not worth it.
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Intellectual_Lensings reacted to a post in a topic: Teach for America?
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ctcpx084 reacted to a post in a topic: Teach for America?
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Hey SoCalGuy, I don't think many people have made their finals decisions yet. Which would explain the lack of replies. That being said: Masters Gpa: 3.6 (top 15 university) Stats: 162V/159Q/4.5W Background: straight out of undergrad Applied: Vanderbilt, Northwestern, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, University of Michigan, Boston College Rejected: n/a Going: Vanderbilt
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I have a LOT of friends who have gone into the TFA program over the past three years. Out of the 20-30 people I know who have entered, only 3-5 are actually interested in becoming teachers. The rest are using is at a stepping stone to law school, business school, or as a way to delay "getting a real job." (Although the program is very hard so I'm not sure why they took this as an "easy" path). I also know 3 people who have dropped out of the program between the first and second years. Just thought I would offer this perspective. If you are really interested in being a teacher, I would not recommend the TFA pathway.
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babycakes reacted to a post in a topic: I don't want to belong to any University that will accept people like me as a member
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microarray reacted to a post in a topic: I don't want to belong to any University that will accept people like me as a member
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PhDerp reacted to a post in a topic: I don't want to belong to any University that will accept people like me as a member
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I went to Northwestern undergrad and everyone there hates it when people and especially sports channels abbreviate it "NW" or "NWU." Northwestern is one word. ONE WORD. The abbreviation is NU: Northwestern University.
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Comparing Ed Policy at Stanford, Harvard, and Vanderbilt
chigirl2014 replied to PerfectSummerDay's topic in Education Forums
Go with vanderbilt. You are clearly so much more excited just writing about it here. And in every category you listed vandy's "pros" versus the others' "cons". It seems like you know what you want to do. Also it's not as if you are talking about Harvard or Stanford versus some unknown school. Don't forget that vanderbilt is a "name" as well. Plus, as a school of education vanderbilt has the best reputation and ranking of the three. Hope this helps. -
chigirl2014 reacted to a post in a topic: Finding a roommate?
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chigirl2014 reacted to a post in a topic: The sub-3.0 GPAs ACCEPTANCE thread
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Check out the vanderbilt vs harvard post. I just wrote about my answer to this there.
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Harvard vs Vanderbilt: Higher Ed Masters
chigirl2014 replied to chigirl2014's topic in Education Forums
I think it's going to be pretty impossible for me to get off work. Plus, I used to live in Boston so it's not really necessary for me to go. -
Harvard vs Vanderbilt: Higher Ed Masters
chigirl2014 replied to chigirl2014's topic in Education Forums
I'm HEAVILY leaning towards Vanderbilt. Here are the reasons why: 1) as someone directly out of undergrad I think the two year program is better because it will give me the chance to get the experience I need. If I already had a career in this field and simply wanted to get a degree to advance my career then a one year would be better... but I'm not. 2) Vanderbilt has an entire ten building campus for it's school of education. While Harvard's is limited to "a few buildings." The amount of funding and energy the school puts into their program says a lot. 3) Vanderbilt is invested in ME. They want to help with my resume, my interview skills, they want to put the effort into getting me a job and know where I am 5, 10, 15 years down the road (and most of this starts before I even get there). With both schools at 95%+ job placement within 3 months of graduation... I think I'm fine career-wise going to either. 4) Vanderbilt's school of education is ranked number one in the country. They have this reputation for a reason, and more than anything going to grad school is about learning and developing skills for the future. I think I will learn more at Vandy. 5) The chances of me getting hired at Vanderbilt out of a GA/Internship when I graduate are greater than the chances of getting hired at Harvard 6) Nashville > Boston for me 7) Finally, I've realized that going to a school just for the name is not a good enough reason to go there unless you are also absolutely in love with it. I don't want to regret missing out on a school I really love for the name somewhere else. (And let's not forget that Vanderbilt is also a "name" school) -
Just got my decision email
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chigirl2014 reacted to a post in a topic: Unreasonable decisions and lack of transparency
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Harvard vs Vanderbilt: Higher Ed Masters
chigirl2014 replied to chigirl2014's topic in Education Forums
Thanks everyone for all of the input so far. I really appreciate it and welcome any more advice that people might have. I think that the biggest factors in making this decision are the things that the schools won't give me a straight answer on. I know that both have job placement rates around 95% after three months of graduating. But does this mean 95% get their first choice job or are even placed at a job within their desired field?... who knows because it isn't info that they are giving out. Also, would the internship I might do be in Vanderbilt/Harvard's admissions office or in a random school in the area? Also something I don't know because their are no promises or guarantees. For now I guess I will just eat some sour candy and watch ghost hunters until Harvard decides to grace us humans with their admissions decisions. -
I went to Brandeis for the first year of my undergrad. I'm from Chicago and ended up transferring and doing the last three years at Northwestern. I would say if you are used to living in a city and that's what you want then Boston is great but Brandeis is not. In my whole year there I maybe went to the city half a dozen times. Even though the school has a train stop and shuttles, they are unreliable at best. And trust me... You do not want to get stuck in Waltham at night. I once found myself stuck there for hours when I went to pick up a prescription from Walgreens. If you want more info feel free to pm me.
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I called HGSE this morning to ask when their visit days will be because I have to let my work know if I potentially need any days off in the next six weeks. The person that answered was not very nice and didn't not want to help me/look up the information. When I asked if there was someone else I could talk to that might know she put me on hold to "ask a collegue." When she came back she told me that she could not tell me the dates and it would be sometime in April. :/
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I went to Brandeis for a year and then transferred to another school. I would say to make sure that you have your own transportation (the school is in the middle of nowhere and the public transportation sucks... Even getting to the grocery store is a huge hassle). Also, if you aren't a democrat/liberal you may have a problem getting along with the people. Finally, Judaism is a huge part of campus life. HUGE. Just some things to consider.