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av2010

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Everything posted by av2010

  1. I thought when I entered my PhD program (I’m not in rhetoric but mass comm) that life was going to be SO busy and that I would have time for nothing else. That hasn’t been the case. It’s busy, but totally manageable if you are good at time management. I try to be as productive as possible and most of the time I can get away with not working at night when I get home and only a little bit on the weekends. There are weeks that there’s exceptions when you have more to do but for the most part it can be manageable as long as you take the steps to make it so.
  2. Last year! If you have any questions about the program feel free to reach out.
  3. What is the standard for giving authorship to your advisor? I recently wrote a paper, I wrote the paper entirely myself, designed the study, collected and analyzed the data for the most part by myself. My advisor's role was editing the IRB proposal and the paper. I am going to be submitting to a conference, would it be standard/expected to ask if she wanted to be second author?
  4. I took an online GRE class through Princeton review. A little expensive, wait for a sale of $200 off, but it saved my scores.
  5. Are you emailing Amanda Denes? She is usually pretty quick.
  6. FIRST - You as an applicant 1. What did you study in undergrad? Master's (if applicable)? For my undergrad I studied Business Management and then my Masters I studied communication. 2. What were your grades like in undergrad? Master's? Always had above a 3.8 for both degrees. 3. What are your research interests? My research interests are primarily in sexual communication...the intersections between technology and interpersonal relationships (how couples use technology to communicate about sex, improve their sexual relationships, sexual fantasy disclosure, etc. as well as the increased usage of sexual communication in initial interactions and cultural shifts in acceptance and expectations of in computer-mediated contexts). 4. What teaching experience did you have before applying? I have been an adjunct professor at three schools for 2 years. I had 14 classes as an instructor of record of two different courses. Additionally, I have designed a group communication workshop for an honors program at one of the schools. 5. What about research experience? My research experience was limited. I spent a year between deciding to pursue PhD and actual applying building up my CV in both teaching and research. I did not complete a thesis in my Masters so I was starting from scratch. I had completed one study in my program so I turned that into a conference poster presentation. Additionally, I teamed up with a colleague of mine who was doing a study that ended up being a conference presentation and has been under review for publication. I submitted a Great Ideas for Teaching Students paper to a conference to have an additional CV line. Finally, I was working on a study that I turned into my writing sample. 6. What about miscellaneous experience (unrelated to Comm/corporate/private/etc)? None. 7. How old are you (or, what is your age group)? 24 SECOND - Deciding to pursue a Ph.D. 1. What made you decide to pursue a Ph.D. in Communication? I decided to pursue after it was suggested by my advisor that I was capable of such work. I really didn't want to pursue unless I knew I wanted to be in academia. So, I was able to try out being an adjunct first and within the first month of that I knew that I wanted to do this forever. 2. Did you contact faculty at the programs you were interested in? What did you say? How often did you communicate with these people (POIs)? I did. I generally always started with the Graduate or PhD director and made initial contact from there. Often they would then make the contact for other professors that matched research interests. When possible I would either set up visits to the school or would try and meet people at conferences. Usually it was only one or two conversations with each person. 3. Did you visit or contact graduate students? How did that go? I visited 2 out of the 3 schools I had applied for so I was able to get to know grad students in that respect. The visits were very eye-opening and made the decision very easy for me on whether or not it was a good school for me. 4. How did you decide who to ask for letters of rec? Were they all professors or did you get letters from outside of academia? All of my letters were from professors and I strategically picked letters based on who I had worked with the most, and who had the most influence with each school. I analyzed who knew who from what school and maximizing on those professional relationships as much as possible. THIRD - Actually applying 1. How did you look for programs? I started with NATCOM's doctoral guide and then would look deeper into school websites from there. 2. How did you decide where to apply? I had a personal list of schools I was interested in, and a list provided by my advisor that she thought would be a good fit. I would then research the school and what they had to offer, fit, etc. make some calls and then narrowed it from there. 3. What was your biggest priority in a program? Fit and a strong development on both teaching and research. Not a competitive, but a collaborative environment. 4. How many schools did you initially set out to apply to, and how many did you actually apply to? At one point I think my list was up to 7, but I applied to only 3. 5. What were your GRE scores like (either specifics or vaguely)? How many times did you take it? Did you feel good about your scores? Decent. High writing, slightly above average verbal and quant. I took it twice. I would highly recommend for anyone struggling with the GRE to take an online class. I did one through Princeton Review. Expensive, but improved my scores greatly. 6. How did you frame your experience/interests/fit in your statement of purpose? Did you focus on something more heavily than other stuff (like faculty or experience)? I focused on trying to communicate my interests and how I thought they fit with the school and department/faculty specifically. I wanted each school to be able to see a clear place for me in their department. 7. Did you feel good about your applications? Why or why not? Some days yes, some no. I knew my research experience was lacking, but my teaching and grades/scores were up there. I didn't know if I was even on remotely the right track with my personal statements, or how good my writing sample was. 8. If you knew then what you knew now, what advice would you give yourself? Just to relax and that it'll work out. FOURTH - GETTING IN (OR NOT) - feel free to update/answer later 1. How many programs did you get into (and which, if you don't mind sharing)? I was accepted into all 3 programs that I applied for. 2. How many were you waitlisted for? Did you make it off the waitlist? None. 3. How many were you rejected from? None. 4. Did you get into your top program? Did you expect to get in? Yes, I did get in. Again, yes and no. I truthfully thought I might only get into one school. 5. Did you receive funding? Yes, full funding from all. 6. Once you've made your decision...how did you decide which school to attend? I visited the schools and just went with my gut feeling and consideration of funding offers. 8. What do you want to do with your Ph.D.? Academia forever. FINALLY 1. In retrospect...what was the best part of the application process? Absolutely nothing, it is miserable. It is long, tedious, and stressful. 2. What was the worst? Everything. I think the application process is so challenging just to weed out another 10% of applicants who won't go through the trouble. 3. What advice do you have for future applicants? Start early so you aren't rushing. I started looking at schools Summer and Fall of 2015, focused January 2016-May 2016 on GREs and a research project. May 2016-November 2016 on personal statements and writing sample.
  7. Are you in the same subarea? I know you do rhetoric, does he do so too?
  8. Oh no I've been hopeful for you two that you'll be able to be together.
  9. I have lived in New England for my whole life so I'm used to the cold and snow, etc. Everyone here has mentioned some good things but just a few things to keep in mind: be aware that the elevation in Colorado is higher. For many people, they are unaffected. When I've been both my sister and I for the first couple days our ears would randomly pop or get small little nosebleeds. I'm sure this isn't very common, but your body sometimes has to adjust to the change in elevation. As someone mentioned, invest in a good pair of boots. All college campuses require a lot of walking and there's nothing worse than wet feet on a winter, or even rainy day. Get yourself both winter and rain boots if necessary. The coat mentions are good as well, both a toasty winter jacket, and I think a raincoat is a godsend for anywhere that you live. Just be prepared with layers-scarves, hats and definitely gloves. This is not essential but is always a big help. For many years I drove a regular car, and snow driving is tricky but not impossible. 2 years ago I made the switch to an SUV and it's great, not having to be overly concerned with snow driving (within reason) pack an emergency car kit. You never know what can happen so having everything you need in your car in the event of snow or breaking down. Besides the usual jumper cables, etc. I always have in my trunk a bag with: extra pair of boots/sneakers, gloves, scarf, hand warmers, blanket. I also keep a little mini shovel in the event that I need to shovel myself out. Sometimes snow can fall fast and you're parked for awhile. If a plow goes by it will push snow up to your car. I also keep a small bag of kitty litter in the car to put under tires in the event I get stuck on snow or ice. Do a full search on boulders weather. I have always thought of Colorado being extremely cold and snowy but it's not that bad in many areas. Embrace the new climate!
  10. Anyone attending uconn for fall 2017?!
  11. I wish the programs that I'll be turning down were the ones everyone on here is waiting for so my decisions could give some others some good news or closure! I seem to be the only one that applied to any of the schools on this thread ha!
  12. I'm just amazed at how fast everyone, myself included, found out about everything. I was honestly expecting March!
  13. @ejpril88 it's interesting how much overlap seems to exist between the regular contributor's to this boards research interests, possible future collaborations?!
  14. @phdthoughts sounds interesting! my primary research interest lies in the use of technology in romantic relationships to communicate about sex (i.e. sexting, sexual fantasies, dissatisfaction) as well as increased usage of sexual communication via digital mediums in initial interactions. My secondary research interest is drag relationships, and drag families.
  15. @DBear your timing is impeccable, just received the admission email from Milwaukee. 3/3!
  16. It's so nice that we have built up a little mini support system on here of fellow communicators! Btw, anyone on here going to ECA in Boston in March?
  17. I've found that there are no websites that completely capture exactly what every program is doing. Part of what I did was just taking the time to go through each school listed on NCA's doctoral program guide and take a quick look at their website. Yes, there are many schools but it only takes a couple of minutes each to determine if they have anything close to the domain you're interested in. Once you get that list, then dig a little deeper and see exactly what they offer in terms of faculty research and coursework. It's time-consuming but through that methodology I was able to create a larger list of programs that were meeting my needs, and then through conversations with grad directors was able to narrow that down to apply to just 3 schools of which I knew I'd be a good fit, and they would be a good fit for me as well.
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