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pubhealth2019

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Posts posted by pubhealth2019

  1.  

    On 3/18/2019 at 1:26 PM, HSR_HPM2019 said:

    Wow, ~$7500 is not a lot at all. Other schools are at least the low twenties and Brown is mid-thirties. I could maybe make the mid-to-high teens work, but that is not especially encouraging. I am coming from Boston so maybe I'm just underestimating how much the overall cost of living will decrease

     

    On 3/18/2019 at 7:29 PM, Epidemiology19 said:

    I agree. Assuming that's ~$7500 per year, I know there are several schools that are in the low- to mid-thirties, with full tuition coverage and health insurance included. Hopefully we get a better idea of the funding soon to make a decision!

    Sorry for being unclear, the $7500 is per semester (and I was low the first time, it's actually $7850). And I'll mention that this is the minimum stipend, so you may be able to find an RA or TA gig that pays more. Plus this is beneficial if your adviser doesn't have funding to pay your tuition already. This is my case for the Fall. My adviser only has funding available beginning in the Spring, so for the Fall semester I'm looking for a full-time RA/TA. So all total if you get a full-time RA/TA you're getting your tuition paid for, healthcare, and $15,700 for the year. Not counting whatever you do over the summer. 

    I haven't lived outside of NC, but I do hear from others that cost of living is pretty low here, even though it's comparably high to other places I've lived in the state. I pay $1400/month for a two-bed, two-bath, 1200 sqft. apartment that's about a six minute drive from campus. 

  2. On 3/15/2019 at 2:29 PM, HSR_HPM2019 said:

    I'm also waiting for funding from UNC (HPM). I talked with my UNC buddy (don't know if other departments have this) and he said the stipend he received was doable, but not great, but I would love to know specifics, especially since I'm trying to decide between a couple other schools where I know funding info (and one of them I know for sure will be much better). I know North Carolina has a lower cost of living, but it's probably not THAT much lower, plus you have to have a car to get around from what I understand which is also more money. 

    I don't have a UNC buddy, but I have had the chance to talk to some current PhD students in my department, health behavior. Apparently there's scholarships and grants of course, but for everyone else there's three options for funding: full RA/TA, half time RA/TA, and stipend-only RA/TA (these all have official names but I don't know what they are).

    Full RA/TA: Work 17-20 hrs/week, tuition covered completely, health insurance covered, "full" stipend which is ~$7500

    Half RA/TA: Work around 10 hrs/week, tuition half covered, health insurance fully covered (?), "half" stipend which is ~3500

    Stipend-only RA/TA: No tuition covered, stipend depends on hours worked

    So obviously this isn't very detailed but it's how two students have explained it to me so far. Compared to other schools (ahem, JHU...) it seems like a pretty good deal to me. Cost of living is definitely lower here than the places some folks on this thread are coming from (Boston, NYC, etc.), but is actually a bit high for NC. Maybe I'm spoiled from growing up in a very low cost area haha. Depending on where you live around here, you don't necessarily need a car because Chapel Hill has a good bus system, but it sure is nice to have. Anyway, I work and live at UNC so I'd be happy to answer any questions folks have about the area. 

  3. I've gotten accepted to the MSPH-to-PhD program in Health Behavior at UNC and I'm thrilled! However, this was the only PhD program I applied to - all the others are Masters programs (I don't have any graduate degrees, just undergrad). I've been matched with an adviser and am feeling very overwhelmed because she wants to meet me in person tomorrow and I have no idea what to ask. I feel like I know everything there is to know about Masters programs but have no idea how to judge if this PhD program is right for me. 

    So PhD applicants, what kinds of questions will you all ask of your potential advisers? How will you tackle that first meeting? A PhD is such a huge commitment - what questions will you ask to decide if that program is right for you? 

    Thank you!

  4. HELP! I've gotten accepted to the MSPH-to-PhD program in Health Behavior at UNC and I'm thrilled! However, this was the only PhD program I applied to - all the others are Masters programs (I don't have any graduate degrees, just undergrad). I've been matched with an adviser and am feeling very overwhelmed because she wants to meet me in person tomorrow and I have no idea what to ask. I feel like I know everything there is to know about Masters programs but have no idea how to judge if this PhD program is right for me. 

    So, what kinds of questions will you all ask of your potential advisers? How will you tackle that first meeting? A PhD is such a huge commitment - what questions will you ask to decide if that program is right for you? 

    Thank you!

  5. 1 hour ago, cheesefries said:

    I am not sure. I received an email from the department congratulating me on my acceptance, but I did not receive a formal acceptance letter yet (though in the email they said I should have received it.) I don't know if their submission portal has a glitch or something. I was interviewed in late January though. Keep your head up -- and best of luck!!

    Jumping in to say I received the same email which says I should have gotten an email from the grad school, but I haven't. It makes me feel a bit better to see that someone else is in the same boat. But it's looking like we're definitely in, so congratulations! Are you in for MSPH-to-PhD or PhD only?

  6. On 2/13/2019 at 6:22 PM, cheesefries said:

    Has anyone heard anything from UNC Health Behavior? I had an interview but haven’t heard anything since so I’m getting nervous ? 

    I interviewed the last week in January and haven't heard anything either :(

    I'm applying for the MPH-to-PhD but they told me it's the same process as the regular PhD. Which are you applying for?

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