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VoidInColor

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Posts posted by VoidInColor

  1. I was waitlisted by my first choice school and accepted to my safety school. I accepted my safety school's offer on the 15th, and today (17th) they sent me the GRA contract. I have not signed it yet, since I wanted to check with my first choice to confirm that there was not a slot for me. However, after everyone had ended up choosing where they wanted to go, the internal fellowship I was waitlisted for at my first choice had open slots. Since they got more funding, I've been accepted to my first choice. I haven't signed anything for the safety school or put down any deposit, just sent an email saying I'm attending. How do I go about telling my safety school that I'm no longer attending? Do I just thank them and vaguely refer to changing plans? I'd like to do this as politely as possible.

  2. I fairly recently heard back from a program that I had previously interviewed with. I was rejected, and the grad coordinator said it was mainly because the adcomm didn't think my research interests were a good fit. However, I was very specific in my personal statement about my (fairly niche) interests, so they knew what I was interested in before I interviewed. Why would they bother interviewing me if they knew my interests weren't a good fit? Did they think they would change my mind or that I would have reconsidered in the two-ish months since I submitted an application? I'm not super crushed, just very confused.

  3. Now that it's the new year and schools are opening back up, I'm reaching the point where, for some of my schools, if I don't get an invite in the next few days I'm not getting one at all. Trying to decide whether to try to make a few of the January 15th deadlines...

  4. 9 hours ago, RachanaDS said:

    Check out Buffalo's Biomedical Sciences Program. Here's the link..

    http://medicine.buffalo.edu/phdprogram/about/why_choose.html

    And then there is Virginia Tech's TMBH program, kinda new so underrrated but it has some great professors. And here you go..

    http://www.tbmh.vt.edu/about/index.html#

     

    Thanks for the VTech mention, I didn't see it when I first looked at the school and the program actually looks like it might have some research that matches my interests (which is a rarity). Depending on how things go in the next week I'll definitely consider applying.

  5. Being with family this season actually stressed me out more and is why I actually went back to my apartment a week an a half before break was over. All my relatives kept asking me was where are you going, what do you want to do, which program is your favorite? I don't know dad, I have to visit them, that's what interview weekends are for. Stop hounding me and making me freak out about it. I'm not "going" anywhere yet, since nowhere has accepted me yet.

  6. I know Penn CAMB cancer bio is probably done, but is there any hope left for CAMB MVP? And I haven't heard about anyone that applied to comparative biomedical sciences at Cornell (Ithaca). Just getting a bit worried and wondering if I should maybe try to apply to some schools with later deadlines just in case.

  7. I'm just sitting here forcing myself not to mindlessly refresh this thread and telling myself "Void, you still have one more final to go, just give it a day and you can freak out all you want." Plus some of the schools I'm applying to have Dec. 15th or Jan. 1st deadlines (or later), so I'll be waiting for a while...

  8. Ok, thanks. Everyone here is so helpful :)  I also had a question about my planned structure for my SOP. The way it's looking now, it's going to be the thing I like and how I got interested-> why this program is a great place to study the thing->what I've done (research etc.) to be qualified to study the thing. Most of the prompts for the schools I'm applying to say something along the lines of "Describe your motivations and qualifications for attending graduate school." I've seen some conflicting advice about whether a story in the introduction is a good idea or if you should just get straight to the point. The thing is, I'm interested in parasitology and every time I mention that to a professor or adviser, the first question they ask is how I got interested in the field, which requires a brief story about 9th grade biology. Then they get surprised I've suck with it for 7+ years. So it seems like it might actually be a useful contribution to an SOP, since professors all seem to want to hear it. Am I going down the wrong path here? 

  9. On 11/5/2016 at 7:02 PM, VoidInColor said:

    Undergrad Institution: Large, generic state school, not particularly highly ranked

    Major(s): Biology, Biomedical Science

    Minor(s): None

    GPA in Major: 3.87 Biomed, 4.0 Bio

    Overall GPA: 3.9

    Position in Class: Not given

    Type of Student: Domestic white female

    GRE Scores (revised/old version):

    Q: 160 (76%)

    V: 164 (94%)

    W: 4.0 (59%)

    B: Not taking

     

    I’m retaking the GRE in about 2 weeks, which should bring my quant up. Writing I have no idea, standardized test scorers have never liked my writing even when I was in elementary school. Comp and lit were fine, but I just can’t figure out standardized tests.

     

    Research Experience: Not much consistent research. Two summers working on two “mini” projects each, one bacterial and the other cell/tissue oriented. They kind of need explaining, which I intend to do in the SOP. Two semesters in a neurology lab doing intracellular motility, and I’ll have a third before I graduate. I’m working on an honors thesis in that lab. 

     

    Awards/Honors/Recognitions: Requisite dean’s list mention, National merit scholar, full ride from the state for being a national merit scholar, an “academic excellence award”

     

    Pertinent Activities or Jobs: President of my university’s student branch of the American Society for Microbiology. A summer internship in a hospital microbiology laboratory.

     

    Any Miscellaneous Accomplishments that Might Help: So my academic history is kind of complicated. I graduated HS with my AA at the same time, so I’m finishing my dual major in three years. So I’ve been in college full time for 5 years but only 3 years post-HS, which has limited the time I had for research (especially since no one at my uni will take any students until they’ve taken the basic core major requirements).

    I did do a study abroad, and at a top 20 world university, if that ranking makes any difference. It’s also a university that’s known for the field I’m interested in, which is why I wanted to go there in the first place. I haven’t seen anyone mention this yet since everyone seems to be in molec bio/micro but I’m certified to work with laboratory animals already and have a lot of experience down in our vivarium.

     

    Special Bonus Points: Does being female still count? I don’t think so…

     

    Any Other Info That Shows Up On Your App and Might Matter: More transcript weirdness. The only non-A’s I have are three B+ from my study abroad semester and a B+ from the semester right after in a film analysis class I had to take as part of my university honors requirements. I don’t know what that says about me to the adcom.

     

    Applying to Where: This is a strange spread, but bear with me, I’m interested in parasitology and this is where it is. Mostly infectious disease/immunology and veterinary biomed/pathology programs.

     

    Emory University

    Cornell University

    University of Pennsylvania

    University of Georgia

    Texas A&M University

    University of California-Davis

    Tufts University

    University of Florida

    Louisiana State University

    Oklahoma State University

    Baylor College of Medicine

    Royal Veterinary College: This is actually a public health/infectious disease masters I’m applying to as part of a Fulbright application.

     

    The thing I’m worried about most is my lack of research experience, and that my academics make it look like I’m someone that does nothing but study all day. In reality, I’m just good at school and very, very bad at talking to professors about things that affect my future, which makes interviewing a very daunting prospect. Any comments/advice would be appreciated. And sorry if this got too rambley, I tend to type in a very stream-of-consciousness kind of way and I have a lot of thoughts about this

     

    Just adding some updates. As far as the GRE goes, the unofficial scores (because they haven't scored writing yet) are V: 170 (99%) and Q: 159 (73%). A bit disappointed I couldn't get my quant up higher, but my composite went from 324 to 329, so a net improvement I guess. As far as research goes, I'm doing a lot of data analysis right now so my name's going to be on the poster some of the grad students in the lab are presenting at ASCB in December. I'm not going, because undergrad and finals week.

     

  10. Undergrad Institution: Large, generic state school, not particularly highly ranked

    Major(s): Biology, Biomedical Science

    Minor(s): None

    GPA in Major: 3.87 Biomed, 4.0 Bio

    Overall GPA: 3.9

    Position in Class: Not given

    Type of Student: Domestic white female

     

    GRE Scores (revised/old version):

    Q: 160 (76%)

    V: 164 (94%)

    W: 4.0 (59%)

    B: Not taking

    I’m retaking the GRE in about 2 weeks, which should bring my quant up. Writing I have no idea, standardized test scorers have never liked my writing even when I was in elementary school. Comp and lit were fine, but I just can’t figure out standardized tests.

     

    Research Experience: Not much consistent research. Two summers working on two “mini” projects each, one bacterial and the other cell/tissue oriented. They kind of need explaining, which I intend to do in the SOP. Two semesters in a neurology lab doing intracellular motility, and I’ll have a third before I graduate. I’m working on an honors thesis in that lab.

     

    Awards/Honors/Recognitions: Requisite dean’s list mention, National merit scholar, full ride from the state for being a national merit scholar, an “academic excellence award”

     

    Pertinent Activities or Jobs: President of my university’s student branch of the American Society for Microbiology

    A summer internship in a hospital microbiology laboratory.

     

    Any Miscellaneous Accomplishments that Might Help: So my academic history is kind of complicated. I graduated HS with my AA at the same time, so I’m finishing my dual major in three years. So I’ve been in college full time for 5 years but only 3 years post-HS, which has limited the time I had for research (especially since no one at my uni will take any students until they’ve taken the basic core major requirements). I did do a study abroad, and at a top 20 world university, if that ranking makes any difference. It’s also a university that’s known for the field I’m interested in, which is why I wanted to go there in the first place. I haven’t seen anyone mention this yet since everyone seems to be in molec bio/micro but I’m certified to work with laboratory animals already and have a lot of experience down in our vivarium.

     

    Special Bonus Points: Does being female still count? I don’t think so…

     

    Any Other Info That Shows Up On Your App and Might Matter: More transcript weirdness. The only non-A’s I have are three B+ from my study abroad semester and a B+ from the semester right after in a film analysis class I had to take as part of my university honors requirements. I don’t know what that says about me, but I have a tendency to panic.

    Applying to Where: This is a strange spread, but bear with me, I’m interested in parasitology and this is where it is. Mostly infectious disease/immunology and veterinary biomed/pathology programs.

    Emory University

    Cornell University

    University of Pennsylvania

    University of Georgia

    Texas A&M University

    University of California-Davis

    Tufts University

    University of Florida

    Louisiana State University

    Oklahoma State University

    Baylor College of Medicine

    Royal Veterinary College: This is actually a public health/infectious disease masters I’m applying to as part of a Fulbright application.

     

    The thing I’m worried about most is my lack of research experience, and that my academics make it look like I’m someone that does nothing but study all day. In reality, I’m just good at school and very, very bad at talking to professors about things that affect my future, which makes interviewing a very daunting prospect. Any comments/advice would be appreciated. And sorry if this got too rambley, I tend to type in a very stream-of-consciousness kind of way and I have a lot of thoughts about this

    raw

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