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cabraloca

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Posts posted by cabraloca

  1. So I'm calculating costs to start graduate school and thinking that I need a new computer, I just don't know which one to get.

    I want something that is fast, good with multiple apps (PowerPoint, Word, Adobe pdf reader, Gmail, Netflix, YouTube) but also... I think I might want to get the diploma in Cultural Studies, and I would really want to up my game visually and get a Macbook Pro just because of the image, audio and visual quality. However, I also see that it is more expensive compared to other laptops. What other alternatives do I have? I don't have a desktop and my old laptop is practically dead so I really need to buy something now to get me through.

    All advice is welcome. I'm just trying to figure out if it's worth it.

  2. I have a letter from my Program saying that they have recommended me for Admission by the Graduate School, but the Graduate School has yet to send me an official letter offering me admission. Is that normal? I am so worried that something could potentially go wrong! Shouldn't I have like my finalized TA appointment by this point as well or is the letter detailing the ranges of payment for TAships enough at this point?

  3. So basically, I got accepted into my dream school + dream program. They are offering full tuition remission, healthcare + a monthly stipend thru TAships which are enough to get by. However, the first check comes in October and I need to be there by mid-August, get me a new laptop, books and school supplies, as well as pay for a security deposit + two months of rent & food before I see their money. I've figured I will need around 5k to start graduate school.

    The program I've been accepted to is Gender and Women's Studies. Most of my work and research has been volunteer work and organizing for a very young collective of queer & trans people so money is not a plenty-- is it okay to ask them if they could cover my airfare for the beginning of the school year? Or is that completely inappropiate, unthought of, and I should just open up a GoFundMe instead and sell my body?

    Please let me know if you have any experiences similar to these. I have a phone interview to set the details to my move to the US next week so I really want to have my thoughts organized by then.

  4. I am honestly wondering the same thing, and I am moving from out of the country. So according to my calculations I need around 5k to move to the US to start grad school. That's including airfare, two months rent + security deposit (move-in date is August 15th but the first check comes in October), two months food, supplies, books, and a new laptop. I was thinking of making a GoFundMe if I can't raise half of it by May.

  5. 19 hours ago, imogenshakes said:

    For sure! SB's day is March 10th (NEXT WEEK! AHHH) and Davis's is April 4th. I wish it wasn't so far away, because I just want to KNOW, but I'm trying my best to be patient.

    I am also pretty concerned about the living situation in SB. I got a great offer of funding, but it's about the same as my offer from Madison, which is obviously a much cheaper place to live. My mentors are helping me compose negotiation emails as we speak in hopes that each of them might up their offers a bit. The major difficulty for me is that I can't even find roommates, as I'll be moving out there with my partner...so there's a perk in that we'll have two incomes, but it's still insanely expensive, especially if we can't get into family housing (the waitlist is 12+ months for families without kids. Ugh.)

    You should definitely NOT be asking for more money from a school you already know you may not go to. I would only do ONE negotiation email to my TOP and FIRST choice. Why? Professors will probably have to pull some strings to get you that money. If you're going to decline, the Professor will have gone through that trouble for nothing, and I'm sure that won't put you in a very good position from then on. Even if you don't pick that school, your POI might be someone you may want to work with. Don't get on their bad side just because you want more cash.

  6. On 25/2/2017 at 1:28 AM, OccasionallyCaffeinated said:

    I applied to 8 top-20 schools and didn't get into a single one, or waitlisted. I have a coauthored pub and worked at a big well known demography center. I can see (from my lay person acceptance-less POV) points of improvement, like producing a much better writing sample and doing better on my quant area of the GRE (though got above 90 for everything else).

    I cried yesterday, because I'm a very neurotic future forward, long term thinker, and getting rejected from grad school was like... a shattered dream. Who am i, if not a future Dr./life long bookworm/baby sociologist?? As corny and pretentious as it sounds, academia was really important to me, my identity and my future. It's been hard as a first generation college student, to not read my rejections as a sign that: you're not only under-qualified, you can't even sell yourself or dress yourself up pretty on paper. 

    At the same time, I recognize that academia is also one of the least meritocratic fields out there (let's be honest, entry level investment banking may be more diverse nowadays  -_-), kids from PhD families are most likely to get into these programs, the type of stuff you do in academia you can get do in many other jobs, and the growth we have in industry and other fields is bigger and more likely.

    Sad truth is: I'm more likely to land a $70,000 entry level marketing gig right now (srsly) than get into Columbia, and I'm not sure what message to take from that. What I can glean is that I'm not quite sure this is a race I want to keep running in. 

    I'm gonna swim around the corporate world for a bit (I'm 24 ATM) and if by my late 20s I start getting that urge to write a literature review, I'll reconsider reapplying. 

    This is why I think you shouldn't feel bad. We already know it's not based on merit. My friends who have gone on to do their MA's or PhD's all have two PhD parents who worked at our home University, who knew all the professors since they were in their twenties, so they were always getting the better grades, better jobs, better advisors and, therefore, better LORs. I'm not saying they aren't smart, but I think I'd be at that level too if I had that access to books and critical scientific thinking from a young age.

    There is a million reasons why graduate schools don't accept students: funding priorities, class diversity.... maybe they don't have someone working on your academic interests right now and aren't able to provide that for you, maybe there is no funding for someone with your specific profile, or maybe... it's just the elitist US education system spitting you out. And I don't think we should be hurt when THE SYSTEM is at work. Maybe lets be joyful instead that we're not getting sucked in right away, before we have time to create a critique of our own.

    Also, this:

     

  7. On 2/24/2017 at 10:10 PM, Anzi said:

    Hi, Cabraloca. This is Anzi. I also applied for the GWS MA program at UM-Madison. But till now I haven't received any message from them. Would you like share some details with me about the "waitlist" you mentioned before? I am really anxious. Just got the rejection from Cultural and Social analysis dpt. in NYU.

    Sure. I got an email from the Director of Graduate Studies saying they are short on funding, but that I'm at the top of the waitlist. This means they already sent out admits to a group, they're waiting to hear back and if one of the candidates has alternate plans, they will call people on the waitlist. I don't know the exact rank, they just said "at the top". They also asked to set up a phone interview which will be happening tomorrow. And they said they should inform me of an opening before or by April 15th.

    I think at this point it would be perfectly okay to call the school and ask the program if all admits and waitlists have been sent. And check the portal again just in case!

    Best of luck!

  8. Hey everyone. I just got waitlisted for the Gender and Women's Studies MA program at UW-Madison. This is my top choice and the best fit for me out of all the programs I've researched. Please, if you get an admit and are thinking of accepting an offer somewhere else, decline your admit to UW-Madison as soon as possible so a spot can open up for me. <3 I will be forever thankful.

  9. On 17/2/2017 at 3:30 PM, Globex said:

    Hi everyone,

    I am applying to MA programs to study transnational African American culture.  I have been accepted to Indiana, The Ohio State University, Wisconsin-Madison and waiting on UCLA.  If anyone has any information on these programs I would appreciate it! 

     

    Also, Is it fair to assume that UCLA has already sent out all there acceptances?

    Thanks

    Out of the three, I would say Wisconsin-Madison is your best bet. I spent a year of my undergrad there as an exchange student and got to see first hand the quality of the Department. I was in Gender & Women's Studies so some of our best classes shared the same professors. Also, I would say the campus community in Madison, the student movement and everything going on with anti-racist activism is also a pretty good reason to go there. We are talking about the university made famous by having a "The Problem of Whiteness" class. Their professors are the best of the best, very forward and radical thinking. I think you'll have a great time learning and becoming if you do decide to go to Madison.

  10. Basically, we were in contact before I submitted my application. Given that I attended this school as an undergrad for my study abroad program, I already know the professors in the Department I'm applying to. They said "they would be happy to have me and would put in a good word with the admissions committee (not that it was needed)".

    I submitted my application on the Dec. 15th deadline and now I JUST CAN'T with the anxiety. I know that the results usually have come in February but that's because they used to have a Jan. 15th deadline which was changed THIS year. If they changed the deadline this year, it must be because they need to know their admits before their usual time, or am I just psyching myself out?

    Should I email them again? I don't want to come off too impatient or like I don't understand the universities times and processes - I know that's probably a somewhat irrational fear because these processes do cause a lot of anxiety and it's hard to organize life without knowing where you will go for the next couple of years so it is founded that we should be given some timeframe for things but... GAH. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

  11. Just do it! Whether you get it or not, at least you asked. The same thing happened to me actually, but I had even less time (four days). I had to hunt down professors at their offices and ask them in person. They all said yes happily. Best of luck! Don't forget to breathe!

     

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  12. @Frontline I would just do a simple e-mail and then send them SOP,  CV and writing sample if they ask for more info. This is what I did and if interested, professors will be the ones to ask you to send them more information about yourself! That, and, if they are in the admissions committee they will probably already have access to your information anyway. Hope this helps!

  13. My situation may be a little bit special, since I am applying to the school where I did one year studying abroad. Since I knew some of the professors already, I emailed two of them with whom I had the best learning experiences and are the closest to my research. They both emailed me back saying they would be happy to recommend me and to have me back at the University. This is of course good and comforting news, even if it is not at all an official admission. So I would definitely shoot an e-mail and share a little about yourself and why you're interested in working with them. Good luck to all!

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