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empress-marmot

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    Tampa
  • Interests
    rhetoric of science, professional and technical communication
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  • Program
    MA, Rhetoric and Composition

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  1. When I began my MA, I didn't have any set research interests, so I looked around the field and guided my interests towards PTC and rhetoric of science. At the time, I was definitely being careerist. Now, though, I've realized that these are conversations I want to be part of. And in the end if there are no academic jobs for someone like me, the things I've learned from PTC are transferable to the non-academic job market as well. While I agree that scholars shouldn't choose a research topic just because it will lead (maybe) to a job, I think all research is valuable (or perhaps, has to be valued). I've spoken with professors who were steered into certain fields because tenure committees told them to do it--or else. Is their contribution to knowledge less valuable just because it wasn't their passion at the time? I just came from a seminar where the teacher pointed out the dangers of ranking paradigms, so I'm sorry if this comes off as moralizing.
  2. Balancing thesis-ing, researching, teaching, applying, reading, and writing is really hard. I'm kind of glad I have no life, because right now I don't know what I would do without weekends in the office. However, I gave up internet at home a couple months ago, and it's helped me restructure my schedule into something approaching 40-60 hrs/wk. I'm not plastered to email, and I can't stay up late doing research. I can't wait until the last minute to read for class or write papers. (Though sometimes writing papers with just the information I printed out before is relaxing.) Plus, I get to read more at home. Good luck to everyone else!
  3. I presented at ATTW and stayed for Cs as a first year MA. ATTW was really, really valuable. I met so many awesome people who care about the same sorts of things I do. Cs was ginormous and a little harder to network at, but I will admit I didn't study the program beforehand. My university has sometimes funded people who chaired at conferences. You could always contact the conference organizer and ask to volunteer, then use that volunteer appointment to apply for funding. Maybe that will make out-of-pocket expenses a little less. I don't know that sitting in on sessions will help you be a better presenter down the road, though it gave me a much better understanding of what people in R/C are doing.
  4. I took my GREs back in 2013, and I certainly don't plan on retaking. Now, Rhet/Comp-ers in general care less about testing (I think), and there is no reason for me to take the literature test. Still, WT, I think I remember you writing somewhere that your GRE scores were respectable? You shouldn't need to retake. You have it right when you write about programs that look good to you, and finding fit. Given respectable-enough GRE scores, fit is way more important.
  5. I've only been here for a year or so; I don't know anything about downtown Tampa. Somewhere earlier on this thread I wrote that rush hour can be as bad as 10 minutes/mile on the streets around USF. I live about a mile away from campus, and sometimes it's taken me over 20 minutes to get back. (I'm from the middle of nowhere in the midwest, so this past year has been an exercise in city driving.) Of course, as long as you schedule your classes at non-rush hour times, you're totally fine.
  6. Some friends of mine live in Clearwater, and it takes about 45 minutes from campus to get to their place. Once during Friday rush hour (6:30 PM), it took an hour and 45 minutes. I know some (undergrad) commuters who dropped out of classes rather than keep fighting traffic. Maybe if you were able to line up all your classes on one or two days a week, it might be feasible. Anymore than that, and you'll spend way too much time in your car.
  7. When I applied to MA programs, I was accepted to Kansas State and Southern Illinois University on assistantships/fellowships which would have been fully funded. Keep an eye on IL politics though; the state's having some issues funding universities. Here's the thread I remembered. The information is a couple years old, and they may not be Rhet/Comp programs. http://forum.thegradcafe.com/topic/21451-funded-english-ma-programs/
  8. I'm in Rhet/Comp, and I've specialized my research interests to the point where not many programs do what I do. I'll be applying to about five programs, including my current university's PhD. It's probably less stressful for me, because MA students applying to my university's PhD program tend to be admitted. I'm not too worried about acceptances/rejections, though that could always change... But I'm still happy to cheer you folks onward!
  9. If you honestly think that something caused you to do poorly on that final (maybe you were sick, or maybe you studied the wrong material), you might mention it respectfully to the professor. But he may not be able to give you extra credit, or another chance to take the exam. At the university where I teach, giving one student (above all others) extra credit or an extra chance to complete an assignment could get me fired. I can't change an individual student's grade unless I change all of them. Your professor might not be "stubborn," as you write above, but just following the rules of your university.
  10. In my case, the adcomm's going to see that I went to community college for ten years without graduating, due to my enrolling in a music class for college credit in third grade, then dual credit courses through high school. Oops. I'm probably going to contact the departments and clarify whether I have to send official transcripts, though. A couple emails might save me a hundred dollars or so.
  11. You guessed right! Somewhere amid thesis stuff, summer funding (yay!) stuff, conference stuff, and grading stuff, I'm fitting PhD program stuff in somewhere. I really like my school's PhD program, but I'll apply to a few others. I'm looking at the writing and rhetoric programs, as well as programs in professional/technical communication. If anyone has any ideas, I'd love to hear them. It's nice to share another application season with you, WT! I'm looking forward to this fall (probably because it's six months away, and that doesn't even register on my panic-o-meter yet).
  12. Hey, potential Rhet-Comper! As others here have said, look into state programs, particularly ones which will let you teach right away. Try to find programs which fit your interest in instruction. For example, a lot of people in my program are interested in assessment, so that might not be what you're into. If you're accepted to a program, let your future professors know about your career plans. You might be able to teach a wider range of classes or get some administrative experience, which might help when it comes to applying for lecturer positions. Question: do programs in Composition and Rhetoric focus more on pedagogy than programs in Rhetoric and Composition? Is it like reading ingredients lists? I have no idea.
  13. If you have an idea of where you want to do your PhD, why not check out the CVs of the PhD students in its program? See what those people are doing, and what they did during their MA. You are correct when you write that adcomms like to see awards, perhaps conference presentations, perhaps publications, etc (depends on field). I think we can all agree that PhD programs want to see someone who is beginning to know their research area, and has a good idea of the (general) kind of research they'll be doing in that program. Your CV shows that with the type of awards/grants you've earned, what activities you've done in your MA program, etc., etc. Again, activities depend on field/program. For example, my program encourages its students to apply for conferences, but your field/program might not. Better than ranking MA programs, why not choose one that will help you acquire the skills you need for the PhD/future careers? How does the faculty mentor students through the PhD application process? Are they willing to do research with you? What about reviewing conference proposals, or giving career advice? As bhr said, don't be afraid to ask about placement.
  14. There are a few other people with my name running around the world, and one of them has a blog named something like "SassKittenThoughtz102." Obviously, that's not the first result I want people to see if they google my name. I fixed this problem by creating a personal website, a twitter, an academia.edu, a linkedin, and a g+ page in my name. Linking accounts together, so I've heard, makes your accounts appear higher in the results pages. All the accounts link back to my personal site, which has a current cv. Excessive, maybe. But SassKittenThoughtz102 was embarrassing me.
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