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cbx2v

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Everything posted by cbx2v

  1. @KhalifehA that's awesome! Congrats! I'm looking forward to meeting you in August!
  2. @ECA41 and @devx I know I'm a bit late with this reply but I went to the admitted students weekend and I really enjoyed it! Everyone was friendly, the current students and other new admits were very impressive, and the class I attended was great. Furthermore, they seem to have endless resources and that's very attractive. My visit gave me confidence in my decision to attend Jackson. If you have any specific questions feel free to PM me.
  3. Programs Applied To: IR masters programs, specifically MPP, MIA, MSFS, MA Schools Admitted To: Yale Jackson ($$$$), Korbel ($$$$), Georgetown MSFS ($$), SAIS Bologna ($$), Fletcher MALD ($$), Elliott ($$), SIPA (X) Schools Rejected From: Harvard HKS MPP (booo) Undergraduate School: University of Virginia GPA: 3.77 GPA, Phi Beta Kappa, Dean's List every semester, graduated with high distinction Undergraduate Major: Double majored in Foreign Affairs and Middle Eastern Studies GRE 1: 170 (99%) Verbal, 156 (63%) Quant, 5.5 (97%) AWA GRE 2: 167 (97%), Verbal 158 (70%) Quant, 4.5 (82%) AWA Years Out of Undergrad: 4 years Work Experience: 3 years at highly regarded international relations magazine/think tank as a research assistant/admin person, 1-year internship in Cairo, ~3 years as an intern at the FBI (over the summer, during semesters, not consecutive) doing random admin work. International Experience: 1 year living in Cairo, Egypt after graduation and one semester of study abroad in Scotland (I was evacuated from Cairo due to the Arab Spring and had to go from Cairo to a tiny, cute Scottish town) Languages: 3 years of Arabic at the college level, one year living in Cairo, 3 years of studying under private tutors ~ High Intermediate. Some German from high school and a couple of college courses. Strength of SOP (be honest, describe the process, etc): My Harvard SOP was pretty bad (<= understatement) since that app was due a full month before any of the others, but I worked off of that and ended up with something pretty darn solid (read: awesome ?). A friend of mine kept saying “Make it more personal! Make it more colorful!” and that really helped my essay, which had started off quite dry. I tried to craft my essay as a story—for example, describing the sights and smells with more evocative language, showing rather than telling, and basically using the same rules a creative essay requires. I personalized my SOP to each school, so that half or more of my personal statement changed with each application. For each iteration, I had four or so friends and family members look it over, including a professional copy editor friend. I wrote the analytical essay for SIPA the night it was due and it was not great, but it also wasn’t horrible. I didn’t have anyone look it over. Oopsie. I wrote the second essay for Fletcher over two days and went through six drafts before I was happy. Several people read it before I sent it off. I think that one turned out pretty well, though I wish I had spent more time on it. Strength of LOR's (be honest, describe the process, etc): All of my recommendations were solid. I had two professors from undergrad write as well as my boss of three years. Both of my undergraduate professors had written me a letter of recommendation for my post-college internship. I’m sure this made their recommendations sound fresher because they had written the majority of the letter years ago when we were in more constant contact, rather than four years after the last time they saw me on a regular basis. In my emails to them, I slipped in a reminder that they had written for me before to ensure they hadn’t forgotten about their old letters. I also I sent them a bunch of information on my current interests and activities and ended up meeting one of them for coffee so that they could update their old letters with current info. One of the professors was my major advisor, the other was my undergraduate thesis advisor for a while (my topic changed and, alas, so did my advisor). Also they’re awesome people, so I’m sure they wrote something nice. Boss-Man is a big name at a fancy think tank who has a book under his belt, regularly writes for newspapers and magazines, and often appears on TV and radio. I’ve done a lot of work for him over the years and we know each other very well. He’s also an excellent writer so I’m sure his letter was great. I had been hinting for a long time that I was planning to apply to grad school so he wasn’t surprised to be asked. I was going to ask him in person, but he was traveling a lot when I needed to ask so I awkwardly ended up asking via email even though his office is right next to mine. Boss-Man is also a cool and awesome dude so I’m sure his letter was a good one.
  4. Hi @lanhoang and @nuhanzi the acceptance letter's second paragraph said I got funding and then below the acceptance letter there was a financial aid letter. Congrats to you both on your acceptances!
  5. Thanks for the heads up @BluffIR! I just checked and I'm in with ~$24k/year =)
  6. It's making me want to attend less. I'm getting annoyed that I can't make a final decision because I'm waiting on them.
  7. Accepted but with no funding... oh well, I have good offers from other schools.
  8. Accepted to Bologna campus with $19,500 fellowship =)
  9. I got my decision! I'm in with 20k/year! So excited!
  10. I got an email this morning. I got in with a full ride! I'm too excited for words!
  11. I got an email. Accepted with $8,000/ semester in funding.
  12. I applied! Anyone know what their notification timeline is like?
  13. I think our sample size is too small to prove anything, especially since within that small group there is already an outlier. I'm guessing there is another reason for the change that has nothing to do with admissions decisions.
  14. Thank you to both of you! I really appreciate your input. I agree that I'm overthinking this-- something I have done throughout this entire application process... Also, my math does not at add up at all. It's closer to eight months. I was worried and tired and wrote this post without double checking my math. If I can figure out when I actually started volunteering I'll call the school and let them know, otherwise, I'll let it go since probably doesn't matter that much. Thanks for your help!
  15. Hey all! I just finished applying for several schools, and on a couple of my resumes I have an incorrect date range for one of my volunteer activities. I (think) I accidentally added an extra six months to one my volunteer positions. I had guessed on the range because I couldn't remember-- my old resumes use a vague "Winter 2014 to Present" and the email I used to set up the volunteer opportunity deletes anything over 1.5 years old. So I guessed February, primarily because I remembered it sucked outside when I went for the interview and the weather in February sucks. I haven't looked at my LinkedIn in a while and lo and behold that volunteer opportunity was listed on there as October 2014 to present. So I am (guessing) that's the right date. I mean who knows. Maybe I put it wrong on my LinkedIn too... If it is right then my guessing is way off. Should I contact the schools and tell them the dates for that position are off?
  16. Mine was tell us about a favorite childhood memory. I don't think I did so hot with it. I was more expecting an interview type question and the minute prep doesn't give you much time to sift through memories to find a good one. Good luck to everyone else!
  17. Yeah, that makes sense. Thanks for the advice!
  18. Dumb question, but what do you guys think about using two different fonts for my application package? I want to use Garamond for my resumes and Georgia for my statement of purpose. I think that the Garamond is easy to read in the resume and makes it look classy, whereas I think Georgia looks a little better on the writing samples because it's so easy to read. Thoughts? I'm just worried that I'll look sloppy if I use two different fonts... Also, doubled spaced for the SOP, yes?
  19. I'm applying to masters programs in public policy (IR focused) and I'm wondering whether I made a mistake on one of my LOR picks. I chose my current supervisor (been there for three years and he said he would write me a stellar rec letter) and two of my professors from undergrad who had written me letters in the past. Now, thinking about it, I'm wondering if I should have asked a supervisor from my year long internship after college rather than having two professors, since these programs are professionally focused? I just picked the two professors because they had written me supportive letters previously. This internship was abroad and now that I'm working on my statements, resume, quant resume, etc. I realized that a lot of my best stories/ experience comes from my time at this internship. Will it look weird that I didn't get a letter from them? I have just enough time to switch out letter writers, though it obviously wouldn't be optimal... Thanks!
  20. Sorry for the delayed reply! Thanks for your help! I'm the only one who has ever done anything for this guy, so I just suck to the facts as you suggested. Thank you for the advice!
  21. I'm applying to the Harvard Kennedy School and they want a weird hybrid resume/CV that's two to four pages in length. I want to highlight some of my leadership positions, but I've only been out of college for four years and I'm a little sparse in that area, especially on positions with fancy sounding titles. I am the low man on the totem poll at my job (research and admin at a highly regarded think tank/magazine). Should I include leadership positions I had in college or would that be going back too far and make me sound a bit juvenile? Another question-- Just last month, I was picked to be a board member of my local PBK chapter. However, since this just happened I haven't really done anything yet and I'm not even up on the website as a board member. Is it worth it to include? Thanks!
  22. I took the GRE twice, because I wanted to get up my math score since I'm applying to public policy programs. First GRE V: 170 (99th) Q: 156 (63rd) Writing: 5.5 (98th) Second GRE V: 166 (97th) Q: 158 (70th) Writing: 4.5 (82nd) As you can see, my verbal went down slightly, my writing went down a good bit, and my quant only went up a smidgen. How will schools view this? Will it look bad that I was only able to improve my quant score slightly, while my other two scores went down? I know it depends on the particular school, but any indication you can give me on how an admissions comittee would view these scores would be helpful. Thanks!
  23. Boss man asked for a paragraph on what I'm most proud of at work and what I've learned in the years I've been here before he writes his letter of rec. I'm wondering how self-aggrandizing I should try to be. He told me not to be modest-- and that he would punch it up in his actual letter -- but I don't know where the line is. Also, I hate talking about myself and don't know what to write or how much detail I should get into... Any tips would be appreciated.
  24. I think the most effective way to conquer the GRE verbal section is to read, and read, and read some more. I got a 170 on verbal the first time I took the test (166 the second time) and I think it's because I read constantly. I did some flashcards, but I didn't find them particularly helpful. It's great if that random word happens to show up on the test, and they're good to do while you're waiting for the train/bus/doctor/whatever, but for the most part I found them unhelpful. For magazines, I would recommend the New Yorker and the Economist and if you're interested in politics, you could throw in Foreign Affairs. I think the New York Times is a great newspaper to read for GRE prep. It might also be good to read some Scientific American articles, because the GRE will sometimes hits you with a science passage. Reading good, well written books is also great prep. The list of Booker Prize winners is a good place to start if you need book recommendations. If you only have time for one thing, I would recommend reading the New Yorker.
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