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unclejoecannon

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Posts posted by unclejoecannon

  1. I want to start by saying I have not reviewed their methodology. I do know, however, that some of their numbers appear to be off for programs that I have some information about. For example, one program is listed as funding none of its first-year students. This is not entirely accurate as they do fund most of their first-year PhD students. That said, there could be something strange about how certain stats are calculated.

    I am also interested to know the time span of their data. Primarily because one school is listed as having only 52% of its PhDs in academic jobs. This contrasts with the last five years of placement which seems to suggest that the number is closer to 80 or 90%.

  2. I want to start by saying I have not reviewed their methodology. I do know, however, that some of their numbers appear to be off for programs that I have some information about. For example, one program is listed as funding none of its first-year students. This is not entirely accurate as they do fund most of their first-year PhD students. That said, there could be something strange about how certain stats are calculated.

  3. Ok, will give you more info.

    5. Fellowship covering full tuition + living expenses + stipend until completion of Ph.D. degree in the U.S.

    I think the fellowship will be the key for you. You have a great profile, but more importantly you have your "own money" so to speak. That is to say, a program can admit you and it will not cost them anything since you have outside funding. While I doubt anyone would let you in solely because of this, I really do believe that this can work to your advantage if a program is trying to decide between yourself a similarly qualified applicant.

    What area do you want to study?

  4. Without going into too many boring details, I went into a PhD program straight out of undergrad and decided a few years in that it was not a good fit for me and that it was time to move on. I am currently in the processing of reapplying to PhD programs and this experience, along with my time in grad school, has demonstrated that I had no idea what I was doing the first time around. That said, I figured I would share what I have learned in the hopes that it might help some people out there who like me were, whether they realized it or not, in over their head. That said, I begin with the caveat that I can only speak from my own experiences and those of the people I know from grad school so this is an inherently biased sample.

    1) Rankings are useful, but they should not be the sole determinant of where you apply. I made the mistake of applying to only top 25 schools in a specific geographic region. In doing so I missed out on a lot of good schools that would have been a great fit. More importantly, the rankings, especially at the top, can be entirely uninformative. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. could not place a single student at an R1 for a number of yeras and they would not drop out of the top 10. Similarly, there are mid ranked schools who do a great job of training grad students and have amazing faculty and placement records that will never crack the top 15 (for a number of reasons). Lastly, some top schools have a large number of graduate students. This can be both a blessing and a curse. It can be a curse if there are 3-4 people in your market year who all do the same thing and want to work with the same people.

    2) Placement records can be misleading. What you really want to know is where their PhDs have received tenure. There are many people who get top 15 or top 25 jobs and then fail to produce and are denied tenure. While the school may not be at fault for this, if there is a repeated pattern of this it may well indicate that students are not properly trained.

    3) Look for schools that offer a research design and dissertation writing class. I have known a number of people who have struggled to write or even formulate dissertations because they had no idea how or where to begin. Having a course that forces you to think about what you want to do for a dissertation and then helps you make progress toward that goal can be invaluable.

    4) Lastly, do not be afraid to leave graduate school or look into other programs if you are not happy. I know that this is not exactly cheery, but it is a piece of advice I really wish someone would have given me. A lot of very smart capable people, some of whom are very successful political scientists, have attended multiple PhD programs. More importantly, there are a lot of smart people who have, for whatever reason, decided that grad school is simply not for them.

    I apologize if this is a bit disorganized and rambling, but I really do hope it might be helpful for at least a few people who are new to this whole process.

  5. Agreed.

    My situation (and I know people have skewered me for this, but please try to be kind):

    Yale MA - financial info forthcoming (there is a possibility of full funding)

    Madison PhD - full funding

    Chicago PhD - waitlisted currently, but had a great visit, so i'm optimistic

    You need to carefully consider the type of signal it will send to people in the discipline if you turn down a good program like Wisconsin to go get an MA, even if it is form Yale. I am not saying that it might not work out wonderfully for you, but people talk and it is hard to tell how this move will be interpreted. Furthermore, the people at Wisconsin could easily be at a Harvard or Princeton when you next go out to apply and it is very likely that they will remember you, which could be good or bad.

  6. At the risk of asking a stupid, slightly off-topic question, what do you all suppose the appropriate attire is for these events? I neither want to arrive in nice slacks and a tie to find everyone else in jeans and hoodies, nor to roll up in my Communist Party t-shirt (you know, the one with Lenin and Mao, et al drinking from red cups, that only polisci people laugh at?) to find that I am embarrassingly underdressed. Thoughts? (Particularly from anyone who's been to one of these shindigs before...)

    I would prepare for a mix. You probably shouldn't need anything dressier than business casual, and I truly doubt you will even need that. At the same time I would NOT wear jeans a t-shirt. Jeans and a button down shirt or sweater are more than acceptable, but you probably should leave the Communist Party t-shirt at home :)

    To be cliche, first impressions matter!

  7. On 2/26/2010 at 8:09 AM, postgrad2010 said:

    I have been waiting for UCLA, Pittsburgh and Washington University in St. Louis

    but haven't heard anything from them so far, shall i assume it's a rejection?

    I know that WashU sent out notices at the end of January, early February. That is strange that you have not heard anything.

  8. I think it also depends on which subfield you want to pursue. If for instance you want to do theory then a poor performance on the Analytical writing section would probably not bode well. However, I think the others are quite correct, a strong writing sample and statement can make up for a moderate score on the Analytical writing section.

  9. So much for decisions going out this week... I guess they're just overwhelmed by all us Commodore hopefuls.

    From the results section it looks like notification next week would be more or less consistent with the past few years. Although it could very well be the case that they have made decisions and are just waiting to get final approval from the grad school, etc.

  10. For another update: I recently talked with someone at the school and they said they expect to have a class of 6-7 students. The school got a record number of applications ("hundreds") and I think things are currently winding their way through the bureaucracy.

    Does this mean they have made a decision or are still narrowing it down? Just curious.

  11. Mr. Speaker (I'm looking to study Congress in grad school so I get your username rolleyes.gif )- Vanderbilt is my undergraduate alma mater and I was a poli sci major there. Although I didn't apply, only because I think it's important to do graduate studies somewhere different than where one does his undergraduate studies, as I recall from talking to professors in past years, they usually didn't accept people until late February and didn't reject people until early March. For you and anyone else who gets in and is interested in American politics, feel free to PM me on here if you have any questions about particular faculty members/Nashville/the school/the department. It's an awesome place! Best of luck to you!

    Did you have much interaction with Bruce Oppenheimer? Or any of the other American Politics faculty?

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