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Warelin

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  1. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from lovely coward in You are GREAT!   
    In a few weeks, you'll find out where you're accepted, rejected or waitlisted. By now, I'm sure you're experiencing all sorts of highs and lows. This is a very stressful process. Sometimes, all you want is some news because you're starting to feel down about the process.

    Big News? You're alive.
    -There are currently seven billion people alive today and the Population Reference Bureau estimates that about 107 billion people have ever lived.  -Having just a few coins makes you richer than most people on Earth.
    -You are unique and nobody in the entire world is like you are
    -The opportunity to attend school is something many people don’t have. (Which makes having a college degree even greater!)
    -Most people lack a bed of their own to sleep in
    -Many people on earth lack access to clean water.
    -Cell phones make talking to loved ones easy.
    -You have friends that will always have your back. (And if you don't, message me. Let's talk. And if you do, let's talk anyways)
    -You can enjoy pizza. Or Ice Cream.
    -There are people in your life who love you more than you could ever know -The Internet, n'uff said?   But in all seriousness, try not to compare yourself to others. We have a tendency to look at how great the lives of other people are going without realizing the stresses they're hiding. No matter where you get in or don't get in, please be proud of yourselves. You've worked incredibly hard to get to where you are. An acceptance doesn't determine who you are and a rejection doesn't make you lesser than. It just means not this year. You might realize that your passions change over the course of a year. And you might discover those new interests are really interesting when you do reapply. You might discover some universities that previously rejected you might accept you the following year and viceversa.   Lastly, a word on rankings:
    USNews rankings for English are determined by 14 percent of respondents who were department heads or director of graduate studies. As such, it's hard to take rankings those seriously when a lot of the rankings are based on "name brand". Most departments are only paying attention to a few select schools and placements may vary considerably across specific interests. Follow your heart when making a decision. Happiness is the number one thing that will make you succeed in a program and that happiness will translate to the quality of work you produce.

    Good luck all. You're going to do great!
  2. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from S_C_789 in You are GREAT!   
    Bumping this back up as a reminder.
  3. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from jillcicle in You are GREAT!   
    Bumping this back up as a reminder.
  4. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from writeshere in 2019 Acceptances   
    Congrats to your friend!
    You're slaying this app cycle!
  5. Like
    Warelin reacted to dilby in 2019 Acceptances   
    A dear friend of mine was just admitted to Johns Hopkins! He's an early modernist focusing on melancholy and performance criticism, and has written quite a lot on metatheatre. Hope this info helps you all!
  6. Like
    Warelin reacted to writeshere in 2019 Acceptances   
    Accepted at Johns Hopkins and I am freaking out!!!! ?
     
  7. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from M(allthevowels)H in 2019 Acceptances   
    The standard offer from Illinois is a fellowship plus teaching one course per semester during the first year. The stipend increase during the second year is in exchange for teaching two courses per semester. I'm not sure if teaching two courses is guaranteed. An enhanced offer includes an increased stipend plus no teaching for up to 3 years. I think there's usually a nomination process for the latter.
  8. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from Hard times! in Projected Acceptance Dates for English PHD programs   
    Today, I found myself extremely bored. As a result, I complied a list of when schools typically notify for first-round acceptances using data from the results page. After, I rearranged things in order by  when programs typically notify.

    Michigan State-Dec 10? (Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures)
    OSU-Jan 25
    Wisconsin- Jan 28
    Duke- Jan 29
    WashU- Jan 31-Feb 2
    Northwestern-Jan 31-Feb 2
    Berkeley- Jan 31-Feb 2
    Chicago- Feb 1/2
    Minnesota-Feb 2
    Vanderbilt - Feb 2/3
    Texas- Feb 3/4
    Indiana-Feb 3/4
    Purdue-Feb 3-5
    UCLA- Feb 4/5
    Johns Hopkins- Feb 5
    Davis-Feb 5/6
    Penn State- Feb 5/6
    Pittsburgh-Feb 5/6
    Nebraska-Feb 5-7
    NYU-Feb 6/7
    Maryland-Feb 7-9
    Rochester-Feb 8/9
    Emory- Feb 8-9
    Irvine-Feb 8-9
    Illinois- Feb 9-12
    Brown-Feb 10-12
    LSU-Feb 11
    Rice- Feb 12
    Buffalo-Feb 12
    Missouri- Feb 12-14
    Delaware-Feb 12-14
    Kansas-Feb 14
    Carnegie Mellon- Feb 14/15
    Alabama-Feb 14-16
    Cornell- Feb 15/16
    Miami University-Feb 15/16
    Michigan-Feb 16
    Connecticut-Feb 16
    CUNY-Feb 16/17
    Santa Barbara-Feb 17-19
    Stanford- Feb 17-Feb 20
    Princeton-Feb 17-20
    UVA- Feb 19/20
    Rutgers-Feb 19/20
    Harvard- Feb 20-Feb 22
    Columbia- Feb 20-22
    Penn- Feb 20-22
    Utah-Feb 22
    Notre Dame-Feb 23
    Yale- Feb 24/25
    Washington-Feb 25
    Syracuse-Feb 26
    Chapel Hill-Feb 26/27
    Oregon-Feb 27-28
    Iowa-March 2-5
    Florida State-March 4-7
    Mississippi- March 5-7
  9. Upvote
    Warelin reacted to FriendlyNeighborhoodWolf in 2019 Acceptances   
    Turns out I'm waitlisted at Vanderbilt. Pretty stoked for this news. Anyone else here heard back from them?
  10. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from M(allthevowels)H in Graduate Draft   
    I think Application Season is wonderful practice for the Academic Job Market. Each job on the job market will want a number of different documents. The length of these documents will also differ at each school. Application Season (while stressful) allows everyone to become better aquainted with each school they're interested in and learn how to tailor their application to each school they're applying to which is a crucial skill when applying on the Job Market. The practice allows you to think carefully about what you enjoy doing and which schools align well with your interests and your values in the future. (Are you interested in research? Teaching?) Are you sensitive to temperatures? What about area? How do you feel about a large lecture?How do you feel about small schools? After Graduate School, there are a lot more schools which have the potential to hire you. According to World Atlas, there are 3,026 4-year institutions. That's a lot of work to catch up on if you aren't sure what you're looking for within a university.

    I think the biggest part this would cause is a huge increase in the number of applications. Less work means people who aren't passionate might apply anyway to get in. In turn, this will lead to less-interested professors who only applied because they were trying to delay something else in life without really caring about what that thing was. On the flipside, it might also mean that universities will only look at students who listed their university at the number 1 or 2 spot because these students are more likely to accept their offer. I don't see that going well for many people. The SOP is crucial because it allows professors to not get overbooked and different people might be interested in the same professor for different aspects. Without the SOP, professors would have to spend more time looking over applications on top of their additional responsibilities which often include teaching, academic advising, publishing, academic meetings, serving on other committees, applying for tenure/trying to get a promotion and so on.
  11. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from spatial_person in 2019 Applicants   
    "We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for."
  12. Upvote
    Warelin reacted to lyonel_ in 2019 Acceptances   
    Delighted to say that UCSD just warmed this cold MN boy’s heart with an acceptance :‘)
  13. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from The Wordsworthian in 2019 Applicants   
    "We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for."
  14. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from dreid in 2019 Applicants   
    "We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for."
  15. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from ashwel11 in You are GREAT!   
    In a few weeks, you'll find out where you're accepted, rejected or waitlisted. By now, I'm sure you're experiencing all sorts of highs and lows. This is a very stressful process. Sometimes, all you want is some news because you're starting to feel down about the process.

    Big News? You're alive.
    -There are currently seven billion people alive today and the Population Reference Bureau estimates that about 107 billion people have ever lived.  -Having just a few coins makes you richer than most people on Earth.
    -You are unique and nobody in the entire world is like you are
    -The opportunity to attend school is something many people don’t have. (Which makes having a college degree even greater!)
    -Most people lack a bed of their own to sleep in
    -Many people on earth lack access to clean water.
    -Cell phones make talking to loved ones easy.
    -You have friends that will always have your back. (And if you don't, message me. Let's talk. And if you do, let's talk anyways)
    -You can enjoy pizza. Or Ice Cream.
    -There are people in your life who love you more than you could ever know -The Internet, n'uff said?   But in all seriousness, try not to compare yourself to others. We have a tendency to look at how great the lives of other people are going without realizing the stresses they're hiding. No matter where you get in or don't get in, please be proud of yourselves. You've worked incredibly hard to get to where you are. An acceptance doesn't determine who you are and a rejection doesn't make you lesser than. It just means not this year. You might realize that your passions change over the course of a year. And you might discover those new interests are really interesting when you do reapply. You might discover some universities that previously rejected you might accept you the following year and viceversa.   Lastly, a word on rankings:
    USNews rankings for English are determined by 14 percent of respondents who were department heads or director of graduate studies. As such, it's hard to take rankings those seriously when a lot of the rankings are based on "name brand". Most departments are only paying attention to a few select schools and placements may vary considerably across specific interests. Follow your heart when making a decision. Happiness is the number one thing that will make you succeed in a program and that happiness will translate to the quality of work you produce.

    Good luck all. You're going to do great!
  16. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from S_C_789 in You are GREAT!   
    In a few weeks, you'll find out where you're accepted, rejected or waitlisted. By now, I'm sure you're experiencing all sorts of highs and lows. This is a very stressful process. Sometimes, all you want is some news because you're starting to feel down about the process.

    Big News? You're alive.
    -There are currently seven billion people alive today and the Population Reference Bureau estimates that about 107 billion people have ever lived.  -Having just a few coins makes you richer than most people on Earth.
    -You are unique and nobody in the entire world is like you are
    -The opportunity to attend school is something many people don’t have. (Which makes having a college degree even greater!)
    -Most people lack a bed of their own to sleep in
    -Many people on earth lack access to clean water.
    -Cell phones make talking to loved ones easy.
    -You have friends that will always have your back. (And if you don't, message me. Let's talk. And if you do, let's talk anyways)
    -You can enjoy pizza. Or Ice Cream.
    -There are people in your life who love you more than you could ever know -The Internet, n'uff said?   But in all seriousness, try not to compare yourself to others. We have a tendency to look at how great the lives of other people are going without realizing the stresses they're hiding. No matter where you get in or don't get in, please be proud of yourselves. You've worked incredibly hard to get to where you are. An acceptance doesn't determine who you are and a rejection doesn't make you lesser than. It just means not this year. You might realize that your passions change over the course of a year. And you might discover those new interests are really interesting when you do reapply. You might discover some universities that previously rejected you might accept you the following year and viceversa.   Lastly, a word on rankings:
    USNews rankings for English are determined by 14 percent of respondents who were department heads or director of graduate studies. As such, it's hard to take rankings those seriously when a lot of the rankings are based on "name brand". Most departments are only paying attention to a few select schools and placements may vary considerably across specific interests. Follow your heart when making a decision. Happiness is the number one thing that will make you succeed in a program and that happiness will translate to the quality of work you produce.

    Good luck all. You're going to do great!
  17. Upvote
    Warelin reacted to Bopie5 in Funding/Decision-Making Spreadsheet for Schools?   
    This thread 
     has a spreadsheet that @Warelin made listing the general funding packages of a lot of schools!
  18. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from vondafkossum in You are GREAT!   
    In a few weeks, you'll find out where you're accepted, rejected or waitlisted. By now, I'm sure you're experiencing all sorts of highs and lows. This is a very stressful process. Sometimes, all you want is some news because you're starting to feel down about the process.

    Big News? You're alive.
    -There are currently seven billion people alive today and the Population Reference Bureau estimates that about 107 billion people have ever lived.  -Having just a few coins makes you richer than most people on Earth.
    -You are unique and nobody in the entire world is like you are
    -The opportunity to attend school is something many people don’t have. (Which makes having a college degree even greater!)
    -Most people lack a bed of their own to sleep in
    -Many people on earth lack access to clean water.
    -Cell phones make talking to loved ones easy.
    -You have friends that will always have your back. (And if you don't, message me. Let's talk. And if you do, let's talk anyways)
    -You can enjoy pizza. Or Ice Cream.
    -There are people in your life who love you more than you could ever know -The Internet, n'uff said?   But in all seriousness, try not to compare yourself to others. We have a tendency to look at how great the lives of other people are going without realizing the stresses they're hiding. No matter where you get in or don't get in, please be proud of yourselves. You've worked incredibly hard to get to where you are. An acceptance doesn't determine who you are and a rejection doesn't make you lesser than. It just means not this year. You might realize that your passions change over the course of a year. And you might discover those new interests are really interesting when you do reapply. You might discover some universities that previously rejected you might accept you the following year and viceversa.   Lastly, a word on rankings:
    USNews rankings for English are determined by 14 percent of respondents who were department heads or director of graduate studies. As such, it's hard to take rankings those seriously when a lot of the rankings are based on "name brand". Most departments are only paying attention to a few select schools and placements may vary considerably across specific interests. Follow your heart when making a decision. Happiness is the number one thing that will make you succeed in a program and that happiness will translate to the quality of work you produce.

    Good luck all. You're going to do great!
  19. Upvote
    Warelin got a reaction from lyonel_ in 2019 Applicants   
    They did the same thing last year. https://www.thegradcafe.com/survey/index.php?q=ucsd+english&t=a&o=&pp=25
  20. Upvote
    Warelin reacted to havemybloodchild in Here Comes the Sun/ Waitlist Movements   
    Waitlisted for Oregon state's MA.
    I guess my application isn't total trash after all ?
  21. Upvote
    Warelin got a reaction from schlum in 2019 Acceptances   
    I'd like to add to this a bit more. If you had the perfect responses, you wouldn't need the degree because you'd be publishing in top-tier journals through your original contributions. I think the important question you need to ask yourself is whether you'd thrive somewhere where things may or may not be cut-throat or whether you need a more collaborative community. There is no right or wrong answer. Some people do really well and compete better and write better when the community actively supports them and they can push themselves to publish. Others need a more "competitive" community in order to feel motivated to do their work. We all respond to things differently. When you're making your choices, think carefully about the work environment, the location, funding (Do you want roommates? Can you afford rent without roommates?), the atmosphere, class sizes and so on. Think if that's a place that you'll be happy at because if you aren't, your work will suffer. Depression is a really real thing in Academia and the best way to combat it is by choosing a place which you feel would make you happiest. What that happy thing doesn't depend on rankings or professors, it depends on you. As such, only you can decide what things are needed to make you happy.
  22. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from a l l c a p s in 2019 Acceptances   
    I think @j.alicea brings up a good point. Each program has different strengths and might stress different things differently. Some programs stress teaching; some stress publications.Some really stress how to compete for external funding. All of these skills will help you out differently on the job market. On the same note, it's hard to say how accurate TT placement is because not everyone is interested in a TT-job. Some people have already decided that they want to stay in the area and as such will not be entering the National Job Market. Instead, they're focusing on getting to know the community well to apply for Dean or other high-level Administration positions. Because this is likely to change with every cohort, placement rates become a whole lot murkier.

    @sad_diamond: I was fortunate enough to receive several offers last cycle. I ended up turning a highly-coveted fellowship offer from the "best-ranking" college to accept an offer at a different college that better aligned with my interests. I have no regrets. I had long conversations via e-mail with all the colleges that accepted me before I reached my decisions. I learned many wonderful things about all of them but ended up going with what felt right to me and where I could envision myself for 5- 6 years.
  23. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from dreid in 2019 Acceptances   
    I'd like to add to this a bit more. If you had the perfect responses, you wouldn't need the degree because you'd be publishing in top-tier journals through your original contributions. I think the important question you need to ask yourself is whether you'd thrive somewhere where things may or may not be cut-throat or whether you need a more collaborative community. There is no right or wrong answer. Some people do really well and compete better and write better when the community actively supports them and they can push themselves to publish. Others need a more "competitive" community in order to feel motivated to do their work. We all respond to things differently. When you're making your choices, think carefully about the work environment, the location, funding (Do you want roommates? Can you afford rent without roommates?), the atmosphere, class sizes and so on. Think if that's a place that you'll be happy at because if you aren't, your work will suffer. Depression is a really real thing in Academia and the best way to combat it is by choosing a place which you feel would make you happiest. What that happy thing doesn't depend on rankings or professors, it depends on you. As such, only you can decide what things are needed to make you happy.
  24. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from a l l c a p s in 2019 Acceptances   
    I'd like to add to this a bit more. If you had the perfect responses, you wouldn't need the degree because you'd be publishing in top-tier journals through your original contributions. I think the important question you need to ask yourself is whether you'd thrive somewhere where things may or may not be cut-throat or whether you need a more collaborative community. There is no right or wrong answer. Some people do really well and compete better and write better when the community actively supports them and they can push themselves to publish. Others need a more "competitive" community in order to feel motivated to do their work. We all respond to things differently. When you're making your choices, think carefully about the work environment, the location, funding (Do you want roommates? Can you afford rent without roommates?), the atmosphere, class sizes and so on. Think if that's a place that you'll be happy at because if you aren't, your work will suffer. Depression is a really real thing in Academia and the best way to combat it is by choosing a place which you feel would make you happiest. What that happy thing doesn't depend on rankings or professors, it depends on you. As such, only you can decide what things are needed to make you happy.
  25. Like
    Warelin got a reaction from SomeoneAcceptMe in 2019 Acceptances   
    I'd like to add to this a bit more. If you had the perfect responses, you wouldn't need the degree because you'd be publishing in top-tier journals through your original contributions. I think the important question you need to ask yourself is whether you'd thrive somewhere where things may or may not be cut-throat or whether you need a more collaborative community. There is no right or wrong answer. Some people do really well and compete better and write better when the community actively supports them and they can push themselves to publish. Others need a more "competitive" community in order to feel motivated to do their work. We all respond to things differently. When you're making your choices, think carefully about the work environment, the location, funding (Do you want roommates? Can you afford rent without roommates?), the atmosphere, class sizes and so on. Think if that's a place that you'll be happy at because if you aren't, your work will suffer. Depression is a really real thing in Academia and the best way to combat it is by choosing a place which you feel would make you happiest. What that happy thing doesn't depend on rankings or professors, it depends on you. As such, only you can decide what things are needed to make you happy.
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