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Kaitri

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Posts posted by Kaitri

  1. I agree with everyone that A just seems like the better option in all accounts. 

     

    If I were in this situation, I think I would visit B just because I have this urgent need to have all the information I can in order to make a decision.

     

    Also, visiting B will give you a chance to network with people that must be important to you, since they're your 2nd choice.  

     

    Excellent points. As long as visiting doesn't affect your chances of succeeding at your preferred school, $500 isn't enough of a reason not to visit. You will learn valuable info about the other city, and you may meet people who will prove useful to you later in your career. More information + networking opportunities + mini vacation = worth $500.

     

    Just make sure you choose the school that will be the best for you overall - none of us can help you determine which factors should be weighted the highest for you personally. Some people will weight funding over fit, others will do the opposite. Some would suggest that you choose a school located in a city you will be happy to live in for 4-7 years, while others would say that the location doesn't matter that much.

     

    Here's what I would suggest you do when making your final decision:

     

    Step 1: List ALL of the factors that are involved in the decision. Rate each school on a scale of 1-5 for each factor.

     

    Step 2: Review the factors and group them according to a series of high-level categories. Assign each of these categories a unique label (i.e. funding, additional research opportunities, quality of life, climate, etc.).

     

    Step 3: Group all factors together based on their high-level category label.

     

    Step 4: Rank order each of the high-level category labels in terms of what matters most to you.

     

    Step 5: Review the results for each school based on the ranking you just determined. Once you see how both schools performed based on your ranking system, you should be able to choose a school more easily (because one of them will probably outperform the other).

     

    Step 6: Pick a school and give yourself a holiday for the day since you're going to a school you will love, and will be doing something exciting for the next few years.

  2. I know that $500-$600 seems like a lot now, but it's absolutely worth the money to visit the city and college to get a feel for the place. Think about how much you spent on your applications - do you want to waste that money by making the wrong decision and picking a program without completely exploring all of the options available to you?

     

    The more you know about a school, the city and the people who are in and run the program, the better equipped you will be to make an informed decision. 500 bucks seems like a modest investment when it comes to planning the next four years of your life.

  3. We had cheetos and fritos in our student dorm vending machines.  Not that those are bad things ... but a burger sounds awesome, especially if it is a good quality burger!

     

    ...do you honestly believe that any vending machine burger could ever be "good quality"?? :P

  4. This is a bit of a sob story, but I'll tell it anyway:

    I've been dealing with some health issues. I went to see my specialist a few weeks ago to see if the treatment plan he put in place was working. It wasn't. We discovered that my issue hadn't gotten any better, so he recommended that I stay on a medication for the foreseeable future. This medication is pretty much the worst. The side effects suck.

    I left his office and walked home in a foul mood. I can't drink while on these meds, but oh man did I wish for a drink or something to cheer me up.

    When I got home, I checked my email and waiting for me was a message from a POI. She told me that the committee met last week and would be recommending me for admission, and that I could expect an official notice in the coming weeks.

    I went from completely bummed out to over-the-moon excited in under five seconds. :D

  5. Mmmmmm that looks amazing! I'm half danish, and I grew up in a family that is frankly far too devoted to our cultural food and desserts, so I'm surprised that I haven't encountered it (and devoured) it before. I will need to remedy this personal shortcoming ASAP.

  6. In Scandinavia they have a food around easter that my Iranian friend calls "that massive cream hamburger". No meat, just loads of cream in a cardamom bun, with marzipan if you're in Sweden.

     

    It is sort of interactive because you can scoop cream on big bits of bun and dig into the marzipan core and it is PERFECT for stress because it is delicious and a time-wasting opportunity all at once.

    What is this deliciousness called?? Inquiring minds (and hungry stomachs) want to know.

  7. In order to prevent these heart attacks, I have carefully set up a separate mailbox just for applying to grad schools. I thought since I did not use it for anything else, did not fill out forms or subscribe to things or sign up for accounts with it, it will be spam free and any notification I received must be school-related. I was wrong. I forgot that as a Gmail account, it is not exempt from random emails from Google plus and YouTube. Freaking Google plus and YouTube.

    Fortunately though, none of my schools sent me teaser emails. Some stories here sound horrifying.

     

    You're a genius. I'm definitely doing this when I go through the PhD application process.

  8. I'd definitely want to take potions, transfiguration (who wouldn't want to be an animagus??) and herbology. Being good at charms and DADA seems like a smart call, but I'd rather specialize in another area and let other people be the aurors. Oh, and Ravenclaw for sure. I'm afraid of snakes so screw Slytheryn.

     

    (In honour of this thread, I pulled my copy of The Goblet of Fire down from the bookshelf and started rereading it. I'm already 200 pages in.... :D )

  9. Yeah - that's not as relevant.

     

    The person who is managing the philosophy thread is changing it to a surveymonkey link instead of doing a poll through the forum software, which might work better here. Normally I would just offer to write the questionnaire (since survey research is literally my job), but I don't know that much about the U.S. PhD application process.

  10. Some suggestions:

     

    1) Ask about background (i.e. had teaching or research experience).

     

    2) Split the last question into two - a yes/no question (radio buttons, select one response only) and then a series of select all that apply questions for miscellaneous items such as perceived inpact of the visit.

     

    3) I would also suggest asking questions about POI input/interviews.

     

    4) Add a section for "other" to the first question. Some people may get offers despite having very different educational or professional backgrounds.

  11. Well, of course it is about fit, but individual departments do express preferences one way or another, and this is not just always a historically-driven assumption. My statement about NYU is fact -- they prefer to train students themselves.  I am sure that goes for other departments as well.

    The MA/BA debate is ongoing.  There is a poll over in the Philosophy board that I think could be helpful here too where people are marking outcomes and degree statuses...

     

     

    ....interesting....

     

    I stand corrected. Thanks NOWAYNOHOW. :)

     

    Would anyone consider doing something similar for anthro?  Is there a thread buried on these boards that indicates preferences for particular schools, or is it just "common knowledge" across most American schools? I'm asking because I'm doing a M.A. in Canada this year, but hope to apply internationally for my PhD next year.

  12. As someone who knows absoltutely nothing about the U.S. application process, I probably shouldn't chime in here, but I think some of you are missing a key point: as many people have said all over these boards, the most important characteristic is overall fit with a program, which is likely evaluated through a number of factors that change from year to year. If schools had hard and fast rules (or "preferences") for previous research experience or degrees, then they couldn't pick the students who fit best with their current program needs. NYU sociocultural may have chosen 6/8 students directly from undergrad last year, but they could choose 5/8 students with M.A.s (and two with MPHs, and one with a M.Sc.) next year.

     

    My point is this: all this speculation is useful when trying to construct a solid application, but don't let heresay about prior experience prevent you from applying somewhere where you genuinely believe you will be a good fit. 

  13. My secret dream when creating this thread was that all future rejection comments would be Harry Potter related. Will you be helping me reach that dream?

     

    You posted that Beauxbatons result, didn't you?

     

    As a fantasy genre-lover, I freely admit that I would also appreciate it if this thread devolved into a Harry Potter discussion hole. It's gotta be better than dealing with the stress of waiting for acceptance/rejection letters.

     

    Actually, screw just talking about it. I'm going to take a few hours and reread one of the books. That's gotta be the best way to get my mind off things. :D

  14. I'm facing a similar quandary. I know that some programs that I applied to will not get back to me until March/April at the absolute earliest (one may not reply until May). I have one acceptance pending, but they want me to respond by the end of next week. I'm torn - I like this program, but the others will likely offer me more opportunities after graduating (and they fit better with my research interests).

     

    So, should I accept the one program that has offered me a position, should I ask for more time (knowing that the outstanding programs won't get back to me for months)? If I accept now and get into one of the other programs in a few months, is it acceptable to change my mind months late?

  15. He started it.

     

    Part of me thinks he started this thread because he's bored. He's a troll, plain an simple. He posted, we responded. He's probably sitting at his desk somewhere enjoying a bag of popcorn waiting for more of us to post speculative comments that are almost as outrageous as his initial/follow-up posts.

     

     

    Based on his discussion of his research, I would not want to work with the OP. IMO listing a bunch of publications that are still in review comes across as resume padding at best. At worst, sharing information about an unpublished discovery with another lab would probably disqualify someone from collaborating with me forever. It's terrible, but my department has had projects we were never able to publish because a naive fellow shared data or signed over the PI role to someone they shouldn't have. If someone shared our results or that we had successfully invented something before we had even written the paper, I would see that as a huge betrayal.

     

    I also don't find it credible to claim to have been the first individual to do something-- ever, but especially if your project has co-contributors. I am also publishing with just a BA (and overseeing subspecialty medical fellows, so I must be the real genius, right? :P ), and IMO in that position you need to be especially clear about what you contributed and why your work specifically was needed. The OP comes off like it's just a feather in his cap to have these PhD-level contributors, rather than actually needing their contribution. That is almost never true of anyone, let alone someone like the OP.

     

    The OP just really comes across as someone I wouldn't trust to be a collaborator in research. I can't really tell if that's because of naivete or actual dishonesty, but as a researcher I wouldn't personally care to find out.

     

    This thread has, however, sparked an interesting conversation about labratory work, collaboration and intellectual property. I think that themmasses' comment is bang on - trust and collaborative ability is such an important part of the academic process for some fields; I think it would be easy for intelligent yet arrogant/entitled applicants to get themselves blacklisted based on offhand comments made in their SoP.

  16. I'd also recommend checking the bedbug registry (http://bedbugregistry.com/metro/toronto/) before deciding on any particular location. I've dealt with an infestation once since moving to Toronto and it was one of the worst experiences of my life. I stopped sleeping and was a ball of stress every time I stepped foot into my apartment. And unfortunately, bedbugs are everywhere in Toronto.

     

    I've lived in downtown Toronto for four years now, to all lurkers or potential York/Ryerson/U of T students: feel free to PM me with questions about the city anytime you want. I can tell you anything you want to know about looking for a place, preferred neighbourhoods, awesome restaurants/cafes to try, where to go shopping for food, and what it's like dealing with life in Toronto.

  17. When it comes to the professional world, I doubt any of the Canadian schools would look bad on a resume. The academic world cares a lot more about where you completed your degree; the professional world cares about how hard you work, how good you are at handling stressful situations, and how competent you are at your chosen profession. I have been working professionally for the last five years, and none of my employers has cared where I completed my education.

     

    Considering that many people enter the health care profession after completing a MPH (rather than continuing to do academic research), then I would suggest choosing a school with the best connections to solid health networks that is in a city where you can actually see yourself living for the foreseeable future. Once you make connections within a particular health care network, it will be easier to find a position locally once you graduate.

     

    I would rank my program choices by proximity. I currently live and work in Toronto, and my SO has a job here as well. I wasn't able to consider any schools outside of the GTHA, since we need to be close to his workplace.

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