Hi everyone! Sorry for any grammar mistakes. English is not my native language. I’ve been a long-time lurker of this forum. Decided it’s time to finally post a few concerns/questions I had.
Background: I am a 28-year-old woman interested in applying to MPP/MPA programs in America. I graduated from a large state college in California in 2013 with a degree in economics and biostatistics. However, I BOMBED college. No excuse- I joined too many clubs, had health problems, and just made some aweful mistakes leading to poor time management. As a result, I graduated with a low GPA (3.0), with several Cs, Ds, and Fs on my transcript (mostly in biostatistics ). I took the GRE and did average (165 V -> 96%, 158 Q -> 67%, 5.0 AW -> 92%).
Since graduating, I've spent 7 yrs with NGO consulting organisations to help local human rights advocacy NGOs build stronger programs and partnerships with local governments, both in America and my native country in eastern Europe. Now I’m back in America, working with a human rights advocacy expert (and professor of a very elite private institute in California) to conduct research on the impact of public-private partnerships in the eastern European human rights space. After these experiences, I want to go to public policy school to expand my knowledge of shaping policy in the human rights arena.
With that said, I recently applied to two MPA/MPP programs and got dinged from both (SAIS and SIPA). I really believe my grades were the culprit. My letters of recommendation were from my current supervisor (the professor I’m working with, also an alumnus of one of the two schools); and my 2 former managers from my previous organisations.
I’m now wondering whether to re-apply next year. My top schools would be SAIS, SIPA, Fletcher, and Ford. I may add 1-2 more realistic options.
Now, I wanted to ask the Grad Café Community if you believe that a horrible transcript can be overcome? If yes, then what would be a suitable path forward (i.e. take more quants classes)? If no, then how difficult is it to grow in human rights space without a master’s degree? I want to work for a large human rights advocacy organisation (like Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, etc.) but the mid-level positions and above all require a masters.
Thanks for reading my long post! Your thoughts would be very welcome.
Concerned Applicant