-
Posts
60 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Profile Information
-
Application Season
2016 Fall
-
Program
sociology
Recent Profile Visitors
1,301 profile views
any5's Achievements
Espresso Shot (4/10)
15
Reputation
-
European Lumpi reacted to a post in a topic: Question on GRE scores
-
CrazyPugLady reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
any5 reacted to a post in a topic: Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
-
Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
any5 replied to gingin6789's topic in Sociology Forum
When declining an offer what exactly do you say in your email (and to whom? the DGS?) -
UrbanMidwest reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
Wisconsin sociology has a great agro foods subspecialty. Cornell also in dev. Soc. And thru their ag school
-
well they sent out one email that wasn't bcc: regarding a neighborhood tour, and counted no less than 40 to: addresses..
-
For those of us Wisconsin admits planning to attend visit day, I hope to find you among the *40* prospects who are going !
-
FeelTheBern reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
RandomDood reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
Hecate reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
lioneironaut reacted to a post in a topic: Confessions of a Dropout
-
I am the opposite.. I am "dropping out" of the 'real world' to go back and get my PhD. I have done well for myself over the past 15 or so years working full time in a lucrative industry, but which was ultimately not very personally rewarding or beneficial to society (i.e. capital markets), and where technology was every day creeping in to shunt the mental capacity of its workforce, or eliminate workers (and entire departments) altogether. The grass is always greener on the other side, but the grass is always brown. That said, I know what it is like to work and be self-motivated. I did complete an MA (evenings, but classified as full time) while working days full time. I understand the competition in the labor market. But the competition in this labor market is little different from others. "White collar" jobs are increasingly outsourced to foreign labor or to technology. My brother is a lawyer, went to a great law school and works at a decent firm. He hates every single living minute of it. But he can't leave because he'd never find a job again save start his own practice and struggle in competition with all others who did the same. My best friend growing up is a doctor. Very successful, but never sees his family or friends, is constantly exhausted, and has been so traumatized by stuff he has seen as a medical student and then resident in an ER that he openly admits it has sapped his humanity. His sister is a dentist, that should be better right? Maybe when she has paid off the $275,000 in student debt & professional insurance premiums she owes. Even computer programmers are unable to (often) move up the ladder and get stuck doing the same old repetitive coding on the same sort of projects day in and day out. I rather have the potential for intellectual reward and academic success than have a manager telling me what to do, and who can fire me or downsize me at any moment. Worse, I could be the manager who makes a bit more salary but is even more self-loathing (ask any mid-level manager you may know to confirm or deny). I understand the awkward financial position that many new straight out of undergrad or out of entry-level work find themselves in. The grass has to be greener working for a stable corporation. Right? Perhaps stability (financial or otherwise) is a fair trade for monotony, under-appreciation, and slim chances of breaking through the glass ceiling. At my last job, everybody had at least a Masters degree. It's needed just to get the interview these days. At least with a PhD you can figure out a little bit about how the world works. Or not- but at least you tried and maybe even got paid to do it. Otherwise, exchange that stimulation of the mind for a cubicle, commuter traffic, and truly depressing happy hours
-
Is it worthwhile to ask for a "relocation stipend" instead of asking outright for more academic stipend?
-
I'm going for MORS + Sociology program (joint with bschool).. Its more an on campus interview.. I booked my flights and they'll reimburse up to a certain amt
-
Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
any5 replied to gingin6789's topic in Sociology Forum
Ok, looks like I am in the same boat. I was supposed to get a waitlist email last week but for some reason they never sent it..! -
Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
any5 replied to gingin6789's topic in Sociology Forum
So weird.. I didn't get an acceptance or a rejection email from NYU, but today I got an email inviting me to their Open House visit day.. I called the dept. admin and she said she can't give decisions over the phone, but that somebody should've contacted me days ago... so strange - did they forget to notify me? I am still not sure if I've been accepted.. -
Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
any5 replied to gingin6789's topic in Sociology Forum
with that did NYU invite you to their visit days? -
2016Applicant reacted to a post in a topic: Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
-
Fall 2016 Acceptances, Interviews, and Rejections Thread
any5 replied to gingin6789's topic in Sociology Forum
This is something to bring to the attention of the media.. it's really a bad mistake.. -
I forgot to mention where I'll be: Northwestern/Kellogg on 2/29, Wisconsin-Madison on 3/11, Cornell on 3/14
-
It appears that many of us will be potential cohortmates. It may be a nice idea to coordinate meeting up with each other on visit day(s) so that we at least "know" some people there. Maybe post on this thread your planned visit days and then we can pm each other to coordinate
-
So....I didn't do so well on the 2015-2016 application cycle. Now what?
any5 replied to kelris's topic in Sociology Forum
@kelris, what were your stats so we can give better advice?