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Dewey

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Posts posted by Dewey

  1. 21 minutes ago, gls2814 said:

    POI emailed me after acceptance to see if I'd like to visit the campus and would like to meet to discuss my choosing to go there. 

    How does this response sound:

    • Dear Dr. X, Thank you so much for this opportunity! I am thrilled at the prospect of joining the program! I would definitely like to visit the campus. When would be a convenient time to meet with you? 

    Should I keep it short? I haven't accepted the offer yet but it is my #2 choice (that is in a different field than I originally applied to for the majority of my programs) and I am extremely excited. 

    Edit: Just asking for advice; never been in this situation **squeak**

    You are now in the power position (congrats), so I wouldn’t over-analyze it too much. Your email sounds fine. I might ask if there will be “official” visiting days sponsored by the department and/or graduate school that you can coordinate around.

    This is from a philosophy blog, but some relevant stuff to consider, too: https://leiterreports.typepad.com/blog/2014/03/some-advice-to-prospective-graduate-students-visiting-departments.html

  2. 14 hours ago, _Athena_ said:

    Darn. Have been checking my email all day to no avail...

    Sorry for the misinformation! I do know for a fact that they have made their decisions (according to a friend in the dept.). I assume it’s an administrative thing that’s left for them to do.

  3. 8 hours ago, NTGal said:

    as we are waiting in agony for results, i thought i'd throw out a question about interviews....do programs usually ask you detailed questions about the content of your writing sample? or would questions be more in the realm of how it connects to what you are interested in pursuing further for doctoral research? I used a paper I wrote for a class a year ago. I did read it again, but it's definitely not fresh. If it's typical for interviews to ask specific questions about it, I should probably spend some time studying it...

    In my interview for Yale, it seemed way more about getting a sense of me as a potential colleague, rather than just expanding on my application. They didn't ask about my writing sample (though I brought it up at one point), but did ask some questions about my background outside of academia (this likely matters more for so-called "normative" subfields like ethics/philosophy/theology than the so-called "descriptive" subfields), and also about why religious studies (as opposed to politics or philosophy - both of which I could potentially fit into). They had content-based questions related to my proposal that I was mostly prepared for. All in all, I found it to be a pleasant experience - a conversation rather than a defense.

  4. 14 hours ago, batyah said:

     

    Sorry to hear, @duckie0817. Congrats @Dewey! Very encouraging to hear about someone that persisted after rejections and got in the next year. Did you do something differently this year in your application process? Or focus on some area of improvement? I'm still waiting for results, but thinking ahead to what I will do if this year isn't it for me.

    After I let some time pass, I eventually reached out to professors at places where I was considering re-applying to ask their thoughts. One essentially told me that I got burned on timing (they didn't accept students in my subfield that year), another gave more substantive feedback. I had more to go on the second time around - the first time I was still in an MA program; the second time I had completed a MA thesis and had a clearer picture of a potential research project based on that thesis. I was able to reference specific authors, texts, etc. more confidently, and (I think) had a more compelling case to make for myself in my personal statement.

    As for a writing sample, I actually submitted the same one, but I revised portions of it substantially. One thing I noticed was that in some recent journals, there were articles that intersected with what I was doing in my writing sample (and sometimes by professors at the institutions I was applying to!), so I updated the sample to reflect that. Hope that helps - happy to talk more about it if you DM me.

  5. On 2/14/2020 at 12:41 PM, Fiat said:

    I am not sure about Harvard. UChicago's decisions normally come out in the first week of March, though in the past years people were posting results around Feb. 27. Yale's decisions come out on March 15. 

    I think soitgoes was referring to PhD programs, which release decisions considerably earlier. Last year Yale’s PhD decisions came out around February 15 (give or take a day or two). Chicago was the same day, if I remember correctly (it was a lot of rejections for me in one day!). MTS/MAR/MA won’t be until March, I’d bet. 
     

    It’s curious why Yale is taking so long! Interviews happened a few weeks ago.

  6. I was accepted to Brown via email today (Religion and Critical Thought subfield). This is my second time applying, after a round of 6 “NO” replies. For personal reasons, I am not even sure if I’ll enter a PhD program next Fall (there’s a lot going on in the background here that I won’t get into), but just wanted to tell people who don’t get in the first round that hope is not lost!

  7. Technically, all PhD departments at Yale are supposed to interview, assuming this policy is still in effect. That said, I'm sure there are professors out there who don't do it.

    My interview is later today, but it seems like it will be just a brief chat on the phone. 

  8. I did my undergrad at Princeton years ago. It would be wise to read some articles/books from the current key players in the REP subfield. The senior faculty include Andrew Chignell, Eric Gregory, and Leora Batnitzky. To the extent that analytic/continental distinctions matter, Chignell is the most deeply steeped in Anglo-American philosophy, and does a lot of work on Kant as it pertains to analytic philosophy of religion (read any of his articles on Kant to get a taste). Gregory is more likely to be the adviser if you are interested in Christian ethics/theology. His approach tends to be more “analytic” also, as the field of religious ethics tends to be (it bears a lot of similarities to political theory and moral/political philosophy, with *perhaps* a greater appreciation for culture and/or history than those fields typically allow for). I’d take a look at his book on Augustine and liberalism. It’s pretty representative of the sort of style he operates in / traditions he takes part in. I don’t know much about Batnitzky, but she would be someone to research if you are interested in Judaic studies and the associated figures (Levinas, etc.).

    The sort of poststructuralist, deconstructivist, phenomenological approaches (to lump a few distinct traditions haphazardly together) that you find used by people working in theology at, say, Chicago are in short supply in the Princeton department. I’m sure there are students there who do work that feels more “continental,” but I would imagine that they are swimming upstream to a certain extent.

    Ultimately, though, I would read some of their stuff and see if you take to it. If you do, I’m sure by looking at their footnotes you can determine what sort of courses would be favorable to take in your MDiv program. Good luck!

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