Hi everyone,
New here, seeking a little guidance! I'd really appreciate any advice you all have.
I've been working in economic consulting ever since I graduated from college in 2008. While I am quite happy with my job for the time being, the expectation is generally that we ship out after 3-4 years and go back to school because of the limited advancement opportunities without an MBA or PhD. With this in mind, I'm preparing to apply to stats PhD programs this fall for entry in fall 2011.
I'm looking for statistics PhD programs that would offer faculty and research opportunities with an applied social science focus, specifically in education and economics. There seem to be a number of universities that have interdisciplinary groups bridging statistics and these fields, e.g. Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science and U Washington's Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences. Am I on the right track in thinking that a school with these sorts of groups will offer what I want, or will most of those be directed at students actually in social science departments? I'd really appreciate any suggestions for specific programs that anyone here has to offer. So far I've found this professor at Northwestern who seems like he does a lot of what I want to do, but obviously more options would be great.
I'm not sure how competitive of programs I should be aiming for - here's what I've got:
- white female, US citizen (which I'm told will be help me?)
- B.A. in mathematics in 2008 from a top liberal arts college
- 3.9 GPA overall, close to 4.0 in major
- senior thesis was a group research project related to random walks (but no other academic research experience )
- haven't taken general GRE yet, but only 63rd percentile on GRE math subject test from senior year of college because it had been four years since I last did calculus
- some coursework in statistics: probability theory, mathematical statistics, regression analysis, survey sampling analysis
- some coursework in computer science: introductory CS, data structures
- fairly extensive pure math coursework: calculus sequence, linear algebra, real analysis I & II, abstract algebra I & II, topology, complex analysis, number theory
- lots of experience with SAS (from my job actually), and some experience with R, S-Plus, Stata, Java programming, LaTeX (from college)
Thoughts? (And thanks in advance, of course!)