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Fruit

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Posts posted by Fruit

  1. Harris School applicant here, although for the next deadline—I simply do not have my life together enough to apply so early. I was considering the MSCAPP first, but my current options are 1) MPP, 2) MSCAPP. 

    Sending you positive vibes as you finish up your application this week!

  2. On 9/13/2020 at 3:49 PM, 2711383 said:

    To the MPA/ID? Nice! What's your background? It seems like around 60% of the class usually majored in economics, so a lot of my stress with this program definitely stems from having a political science background.

    I have a computer science background, so there are some transferrable quantitative skills but definitely lacking in the economics background (compared to say, econ majors.) I haven't had a chance to listen to an admissions webinar to hear their answers on how quant they want applicants or students to be. That being said, I do believe the general statement, "We want to see if you can learn what we teach you" probably has some truth. Hopefully other folks have a better understanding of what they're looking for in the quant realm.

  3. I'm feeling a little anxious about the application cycle, but I'm following through because I know putting the application process one more year is not ideal in my situation. I'm not as anxious about financial prospects at the moment, but that may change once offers come in (or don't.) Are you leaning towards a certain direction at the moment?

  4. Hi! I worked as a data scientist out of undergrad at a big tech company, and had the privilege of meeting folks from across a spectrum of life and professional experiences: from career changers, to pipeline-from-CS-programs, PhDs-turned-data scientists, etc. Seeing that we're all humans, have made mistakes, I don't see why you can't become a data scientist—especially since you've demonstrated you are more than willing to pursue that path through your classes, kickass GRE score, etc.

    I have a friend who did a career change, went to the data science program at USF, and is now working as a data scientist; it was fascinating seeing the parallels between our career paths. Feel free to PM me for more details or questions!

  5. On 6/5/2020 at 5:52 AM, GradSchoolGrad said:

    I always appreciate people who are interested in immigration policy because I don't hear about people interested it in it that much. I think you are asking too broad of a question for anyone to coherently answer. Immigration policy is insanely huge in terms of coverage, probably equal to if not in greater scope as security policy (granted security always gets a lot of attention and money).

    I recommend you narrow down your focus first in these 3 ways.

    1. Area focus? Are you talking about US, somewhere outside of the US --> If so where? You have to start somewhere and can't say everything.

    2. What aspects about immigration do you care most about? Healthcare? Law enforcement? Labor? Legalities? Politics and Policy making? Economics and finance? 

    3. What type of job do you want to have with immigration policy? Corporate government affairs? Non-Profit? Federal government? Local and state government? Researcher? 

    Once you narrow down your interests, people can be better able to help you because depending on your answer, it can yield many different recommendations.

    These are great clarification questions! For some odd reason, I always think that people can read my mind and answer these broad questions. ?

    1) Definitely U.S., with a preference for coastal immigrant populations/major immigrant enclaves along the west coast. This is mostly due to personal upbringing and my affinity for the communities I currently work with.

    2) I haven't been able to narrow this down yet, but my two main interests related to immigration policy are somewhat different. The first is deconstructing the immigration/refugee deportation pipeline or fighting criminalization of immigration. The second is analyzing and developing labor, housing, and language access protections. In my mind, the latter falls more into general immigrant welfare, so I haven't been able to bucket this well.

    3) Non-profit or local/state government, although I currently work in immigrant affairs at a local level and see the major downsides of government work/public administration. I'm also currently exploring what it means to be a researcher-practitioner, which doesn't seem to align too much with my hopes of being fully immersed in community work. My ideal role at the moment would be to work as a legal/policy advocate for an organization such as the California Immigrant Policy Center or the Asian Law Caucus.

    Thanks so much!

  6. Hi everyone! I'm interested in studying immigration policy and am having a hard time narrowing down schools or programs. Some advice has pointed me towards law school with strong immigration law training (not what I'm looking to do the moment), other suggestions have pointed me towards going for Oxford's Migration Studies (not confident I want to go abroad) or pursuing a PhD (definitely not!)

    Is there a public policy school that is known for having strong U.S. immigration policy offerings, either in research centers, faculty research focus, or connections with external groups (think tanks, advocacy groups, even local government?) The closest I've found is USC's CSII, but I'm not sure this is connected to the Price School.

    Would love any recommendations or suggestions on which schools to really look into; happy to elaborate more on my motivations, skill set, or further interest in a public policy school over other programs. Thanks so much!

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