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Joan Callamezzo

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  • Application Season
    2015 Fall
  • Program
    Art history

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  1. I use zotero because its free and easy to use, but I find it can be pretty buggy in MS Word.
  2. You can upload word documents into the google drive, and then open them as google docs from the drive. That way you can sort of toggle between formats. Worst case scenario you can always just manually type in your footnotes..
  3. If you're interested in the "socio-historical context of architecture" you should really consider an art history program. You will probably only have to take one semester/quarter of methodology course work, and if you're at one of the serious architecture programs (like Harvard or MIT) you can take your exams on architectural topics. I'm very familiar with the field, and I'm not sure that someone from one of the programs you've named would be competitive against a Harvard or MIT history of architecture PhD. The people hiring architectural historians are primarily art history departments and architecture and design schools. They like Art History PhDs.
  4. I'm sorry, but this is really bad advice. All of your posts to this forum about how allegedly terrible "top" programs are do not ring true and just make it seem like you are trying to justify your own choices/program. There is nothing "atrocious" about going to a top school. There are plenty of opportunities at Harvard, Princeton, Yale, etc to put together "interesting multidisciplinary thesis committees." Maybe in the 80s and 90s the top programs were academically conservative, but that is certainly not the case anymore.
  5. Yes they are taxable. The rate varies by state and residency. You need to check to see whether or not your school deducts taxes from your stipend. If they don't you will need to declare the stipend amount as "other income" when you file your taxes. There will be someone at your university who can work with you on this.
  6. I don't want to get your hopes up, but I wouldn't totally write off Bryn Mawr yet. Maybe this year is different, but in the past they have notified really, really late and by snail mail. I applied last year and I didn't get my acceptance letter until mid March (around the 15th maybe?) and there was no admitted students day. Again, this year could be different..
  7. IMO that list is pretty dated, plus Harvard is way too low and Berkeley is way too high. The fact that Berkeley always comes out on top of this lists makes me really question what kind of matrix they are using. Berkeley has great placement, but a very precarious funding situation, that is not competitive with Harvard, Yale, Columbia or IFA.
  8. German is relevant to essentially every field of Art History because the discipline started in Germany. It's certainly relevant to renaissance and baroque, and you will have a hard time doing historiographical work and taking your exams without it. I wouldn't worry about not having when you apply though, you can work on it during your first couple years.
  9. I have no personal experience, but I have a friend who was accepted and chose to attend a different school. Her main issue (which is confirmed by their website) is that they seem to place very regionally, and at fairly low-tier schools and institutions. For whatever reason the program does not much national recognition. So if you really want to stay in the south it might be a good fit - if not, I'd look elsewhere. Looking at their website, they only offer 3-4 grad seminars a semester, which honestly is not ideal. They do seem to be heavily geared towards medieval/early modern though, so that's good for you. However - I have to give *major* side-eye to their ZERO non-western offerings. It looks like they have specialists in andean archeology and african art, but they haven't taught classes the last two years.. Medieval and early modern are rapidly becoming cross-cultural disciplines, and you will have difficulty on the job market if you can't show that you're taking part in those conversations. Ideally you'd want to be able to take classes in Islamic and transatlantic topics.
  10. Disagree here. There is no reason an advisor needs to be "supporting" you during the application process. The odds of each applicant who reaches out to a POI actually attending the program are low - most applicants won't be accepted into the program, and of those who are accepted many will choose to attend other programs. It doesn't make sense for advisors to get overly invested, even if they really do like an applicant and want to work with them. You can't expect an advisor to court you - maybe some people have this experience after they've been accepted and are deciding between multiple offers, but not as a perspective applicant. I am a little surprised at some of these comments. What OP has described is a normal to above-average level of response from a POI. As someone said above, just apply to the school, visit if you are accepted and make your decision then. It is not possible to get a good idea of someone's personality or character from these types of communications. When I was applying to PhD programs it was actually the prof who was the most receptive and welcoming to me that turned out to be a HUGE asshole, while my current advisor (who didn't even respond to my inquiry) is the greatest mentor I could ever ask for.
  11. Heh. To be honest this sounds like typical senior faculty behavior. A lot of amazing profs get to where they are by being greedy with their time and generally not paying attention to anything/one they can get away with ignoring. Sure there are some amazing, hands-on professors who genuinely love working with students, but they seem to be the exception rather than the rule. The fact that he would even agree to email you back - let alone *speak* to you - is actually a pretty good sign. I'm not sure what your undergrad background was like, but a lot of students (myself included) are given a rude awakening when they realize that PhD advisors are not like liberal arts school advisors. A lot of them just really cannot and will not be bothered. And you will learn that it actually isn't bad, and you'll become more independent and grateful of the attention that you do receive from your advisor. I can barely get my advisor to respond to my emails, but I wouldn't trade him for the world, because he is an incredible scholar and always comes through for me when I need him. If you want to work with a big name professor you are more than likely going to have to put up with a big ego.
  12. I had a couple schools that did not ask for a CV but I just uploaded one anyways. Every app I've ever filled out had a space to upload "additional materials."
  13. Is that from the Art History website or the grad school website? Those are very, almost arbitrarily high cut offs. I'm actually pretty shocked. Especially the AWA score, considering that part of the test is an absolute farce. I wouldn't really worry too much about it. I didn't apply to Columbia, but I scored lower than you and still got into multiple ivy/top 10 programs. The GRE can make or break you when it comes to qualifying for university wide funding at schools that don't guaranteed fellowships, but otherwise it means almost nothing.
  14. Where did you get this list? I don't think its accurate at all. I don't think a single Art History faculty member would say that Princeton is the top program. I'm not even sure if Princeton would say they are the top program (they are having a LOT of problems lately). The top ten is right more or less, but I would disagree on the order. I also think Penn and especially Stanford should be much higher, and Wisconsin much lower. WashU has great placement, but its such a different sort of program that I'm not even sure you can rank it with traditional AH depts. Long story short - it's weird list. I wouldn't let this have any sort of real bearing on how you make your program choices.
  15. Wisconsin, Delaware, SMU, Syracuse, Tufts, UC Riverside, Washington and Oregon are a few that come to mind. I highly doubt they fully fund *all* students, but I know these schools have at least 1 or 2 funded MA spots.
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