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cavalior7005

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Posts posted by cavalior7005

  1. @CHOCCOCO This is just my personal opinion - it's fine. While I don't believe all men act one way and all women act another, if you're not comfortable with a male living in your space, than you have every right to not room with one. Be kind in how you phrase the rejection and I think the other person should understand. 

    That being said, I've lived with just women and I've lived with men and my roommate experience was 95% affected by who they are (as a person), not just their gender. Best of luck!

  2. @magnetite I was (one of a few) rejected from Yale after their open house a couple years ago lol

    I wouldn't be too nervous about other open houses, because I honestly think I was rejected for 100% the right reasons (the advisor I wanted to work with totally didn't click with me, AND I really didn't know enough to start a PhD program, luckily, I do now and am going to my dream school with my dream advisor!).

    The open house was really eye opening and I met some great, interesting, and intelligent people. I hope you have the same experience (but maybe with an acceptance!) :) 

  3. Hi everyone,

    I have been on this site for a while (long story, ask if you want more detail - I was all around rejected my Fall 2017 cycle. The Fall 2018 cycle, I got accepted to some places but there was an issue with the my top choice advisor leaving her school so I waited another year to reapply where that advisor now works). I just received the acceptance letter/email for my top choice w/ a great fellowship so I can finally start my PhD! 

    I'm mostly posting if people have questions about my experience and/or need a little story of inspiration. Getting completely rejected the first year really sucked, but looking back, I really had no idea what I wanted and it showed in my application. Now, I know more about my interests and am more confident in my choices (of school, advisor, subject). Hope you are all doing well!

     

    Stats info(? if that matters)

    GPA 3.2 at a prestigious school in biochemistry

    GRE V/Q/W 160/161/4.5

    Other stuff

    1 year of research in undergrad which led to a senior thesis entailing a presentation and defense

    1 publication published, 1 submitted publication waiting for edits

    presented at AGU and some other poster sessions

    worked for 2 years at a national laboratory doing related work

    Field Non traditional stable isotope geochemistry 

     

  4. I'm not in a similar situation, but one of my friends went back to school at age 45 with 2 kids and having done service jobs up until that point. She got her second BA (she got one decades ago in music) in Geology and now is in a PhD program and rocking it. I don't think she has plans to go into academia after her program, but she seems happy and focused and fulfilled. Just my two cents - best of luck!

  5. @JJtheJetPlane Every field has their own timeline. For instance, chemistry programs apply in late October to early December, but hear back in January. If you look up your program + school in the results search, you should get a pretty good idea of when you will hear back. From my understanding, geosciences typically send out acceptances from January to March but with the majority of them coming in February. Hope this helps!

  6. Background: Biochemistry undergrad, hoping to earn a Ph.D. in Geochemistry (stable isotope geochemistry/cosmochemistry interests).

    I have a few calls, lunches, etc. with potential research advisors coming up. How best should I prepare for these? I expect that I should read their most recent papers and most cited ones, but beyond that, what else might be expected? Since they aren't formal interviews, might it be more about how our personalities mesh?

    I understand there won't be one answer applicable to all cases, but any advice would be greatly appreciated!

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