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rosebutter

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Posts posted by rosebutter

  1. I got an acceptance to UGA today! It's from the program director and it's unofficial, but they seem to suggest it's all but official and we're just waiting for the Graduate School to finalize everything. I can finally say with relative certainty that I WILL be starting a PhD in the fall! FWIW, the interview weekend was 1/30-2/1, so two full weeks passed. Today was the beginning of week 3 post-interview.

  2. I spoke by phone with a POI at MSU’s plant biology department who told me he is writing a letter to the adcom to advocate for my admission! Another POI there said he would “put in a plug” for me and I had a Skype conversation with a third. My impression is that interview invites will be sent out in early January, if anyone else is waiting to hear back from them. 
     

    Fingers crossed! There are two more December 1st deadline programs I haven’t heard back from (Minnesota and UC Davis). I think I’m the only active user applying for plant bio programs this cycle so I’m just sharing with the void, I guess. 

  3. 5 hours ago, episome1996 said:

    I had totally forgotten to send in my GRE scores for colorado, thought I had chosen all programs that didn't need them. Pretty bad on my part and ended up submitting the application 2 minutes late. Haven't received word that they are working on it but it was successfully submitted taken from an automated email. Think it will still count or no? Paid the admission fee

    I'm sure 2 minutes late will not preclude your application from being considered. The GRE thing kinda sucks, but it shouldn't take more than a couple days to transmit the results. I wouldn't fret.

  4. 17 hours ago, Throwawaydnf99 said:

    I've been wondering, does it matter if you submit you application on say the day of the deadline vs. a couple days or a week prior to the day of the deadline?

     

    Is it a bad idea to wait to the day of to click the submit button, does this push your application to the very bottom of the pile and thus limit the number of available spots?

    I would only worry about getting things submitted as early as possible for programs with rolling admissions. If there is a deadline, submitting the day of should not be held against you, as long as all your materials are in.

  5. 20 hours ago, reprobio_12 said:

    December 1st, although I applied a few days earlier, Nov. 24 I think.

    GPA 3.68 top 10 liberal arts school

    no GRE scores as none of my programs required it

    research experience: 2 summer REUs, research intensive study abroad program, currently on my first year as an NIH postbac. 

    I've currently got one middle author pub and several presentations at national conferences, I would also guess that the department knows my current PI. 

    Good luck to everyone! I'm still waiting on all my other schools and really crossing my fingers on UNC BBSP which is definitely my top pick.

    What program did you apply to at MSU? I applied to Plant Bio and had what I thought was a good chat with a PI via Skype but I haven’t heard anything. :(

  6. First of all, it’s absolutely normal to be scared, anxious and questioning your capability before beginning a masters. I certainly was. If you didn’t feel that way and instead felt very “safe”, I would take that as a sign that the program doesn’t offer you much in the way of growth.
    Even if you end up really struggling, you owe yourself the chance to succeed. If you  withdraw from the program before even starting, you will almost certainly regret it. 
    Regarding job prospects, any amount of time in graduate school, even if you don’t finish the degree, will only be helpful. There is the networking aspect whether you finish your degree or not, and if you do, having been out of the workforce for 9 months beforehand will be much less relevant and having your masters will certainly make you a stronger applicant. 


    Again, you owe yourself the chance to succeed. Anxiety = doubt + hope/excitement. Focus on everything this program can do for you if you put your all into it!

  7. Hi all,

    My applications are all complete and submitted except my third LOR. They are the PI I worked with most recently and they often told me that I would be an excellent PhD student and they personally would be very disappointed if I didn't pursue a PhD, so I am not worried about the strength of their letter. I reached about in August or September about having them write an LOR for me and they agreed. Early-mid October, I submitted my apps and sent out the LOR request forms. Last Monday, I sent a polite reminder that the first deadline is 11/25 and the rest are 12/1 (i.e., 2-3 weeks from the time I sent that email). She has not responded. I know she had a baby (twins, I think) late September or early October and the lab has been scrambling to get results before a certain grant review deadline, so I'm sure she's very busy, but I'm starting to worry.

    I'm considering going by the lab in person - I'm not sure that she will be there (she was very in and out when I worked under her), but I feel like that may be less awkward than emailing her again. Or would that be confrontational? Should I just wait for the deadlines to come and go and hope she turns in my LOR at the last minute? It's too close to the deadline to ask a new person for a letter, and I'm not sure who else I could ask anyway.

    Any input would be greatly appreciated. My apps have been otherwise complete for weeks and it's frustrating to know they won't be reviewed until this LOR is submitted.

  8. Hello all!

    I’ve been in the process of emailing potential PIs for several weeks. Many have responded commenting on the strength of my research background/academic record, etc (I have been attaching my CV), even if they’re writing to tell me they don’t have space in their lab. I’m wondering if this is a generic response to be nice, or if it may bode well for my chances for admission?

    I realize I am probably overthinking this, but most of the programs I’m applying to have fairly low admission rates and I fear that my application may not be strong enough. Should I take this as a sign of encouragement??

  9. I would make your recommenders aware of the situation and let them know that they may not receive an email from the program until the deadline is pretty close, so they may want to have the letter ready to go, and apologize for any inconvenience.

  10. 5 hours ago, Bak3rm3 said:

    I did my UG at UGA at the CCRC which had heavy plant bio focus. I'm not really on that side of bio but my first research experiences was in that building. Its a beautiful campus and that CCRC building I have a lot of memories studying and working there. I think Uni of TN might have a program also that collaborates with ORNL in Oak Ridge with plant bio/microbio focus. 

    Also Cold Spring Harbor has a plant bio program thats pretty up there????

    I’m glad to hear that you had a good experience at UGA. I love that they have an integrated plant sciences program for those who aren’t sure if their interests are more closely aligned to, say, horticulture or  genetics. I will look into CSHL and UTenn!

  11. Hello all,

    I’m starting my fall 2020 applications for various plant sciences programs, but I can’t seem to find any recent posts about my field here. I’m interested in the plant genetics/breeding/biotechnology side of plant biology rather than the ecology side. 

    Is there anyone else out there?? Where have y’all applied/are you looking to apply? My list is UMN, UW-Madison, MSU, UC Davis, NCSU, UAZ, and UGA although I’m worried my application may not be quite strong enough for their programs. 

  12. Undergrad Institution: New College of Florida - small liberal arts college that is not very well known but has a very good reputation in natural sciences to those who know of it
    Major: Biology with a focus in plant cell & molecular biology
    GPA: N/A (school used narrative evaluations and a pass/fail system)

    Type of Student: domestic white female

    Masters: University of South Florida
    Major: Biotechnology
    GPA: 3.86


    GRE Scores (revised version):
    Q: 163
    V: 167
    W: 4.0 (lol >_<)



    Research Experience: Spent the last ~6 months of my master's working in a pancreatic cancer lab doing what my PI described as postdoc-level work (designing and executing in vitro assays using murine PC cells and immune cells with/without drug added, analyzed by flow cytometry) which culminated in a master's thesis. Spent ~3 months learning how to design flow cytometry panels, run samples, analyze data, maintain and troubleshoot machines and ran USF college of medicine flow cytometry core in the director's one-month absence. Wrote a ~150 page undergraduate thesis, including a lit review of cellular and molecular aspects of the plant gravitropic response and a bioinformatics-based exploration of potentially promising subjects of further study to answer remaining questions in the field. NSF REU at UC Riverside using confocal microscopy to study the development of a specific root tissue layer in Arabidopsis. Three month-long intensive research projects in undergrad: one focusing on bioinformatics, one focusing on cell and molecular lab techniques, and one focusing on field work studying disease on a hydroponic farm.

    No publications. :( The pancreatic cancer lab I worked in does have one or two manuscripts in preparation for submission now, on which I'm probably the ~4th author out of ~8 (I need to drop in to talk to the PI about this). Co-author on two presented posters and first author on a third poster.

    Awards/Honors/Recognitions: I received the highest level of Florida Bright Futures scholarship and the second-highest level of secured scholarships for incoming freshman in undergrad. That's really it I think? :(

    Pertinent Activities or Jobs: None :(

    Any Miscellaneous Accomplishments that Might Help: I have written two theses?

    Special Bonus Points: First-gen college student, Pell grant recipient. I think my LORs should be quite strong; one is from my undergrad academic/thesis advisor, with whom I worked very closely for most of my time in undergrad, another is from the PI whom I worked under in the PC lab, and the third will be from the director of my MS program. All three have repeatedly told me that they believe I would be an excellent PhD student.


    Any Other Info That Shows Up On Your App and Might Matter: Not sure...

    Applying to Where:
    U of Minnesota (Twin Cities) - Applied Plant Sciences
    U of Wisconsin, Madison - Plant Breeding and Plant Genetics
    U of California, Davis - Plant Biology
    NCSU - Plant Biology

    MSU - Plant Breeding, Genetics & Biotechnology

     

    I want to apply to two other schools that are maybe easier to get into for similar programs - I fear that the programs I have listed above are simply too competitive. UMN has an acceptance rate of about ~34% for that program but the others are around ~15-20%.
    Does anyone have any suggestions on other schools I should look into? Or do y'all think I have a decent shot at getting into one of the programs I mentioned?

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