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SirGhostus

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Posts posted by SirGhostus

  1. 21 minutes ago, CHP47 said:

    Well, I'm officially out of the running for Rutgers. Fortunately, my other offer is a great fit for totally different reasons, so it will be a different but exciting adventure. Good luck to the other Rutgers waitlisters- I hope you get in!

    Thank you! I'm sure you'll thrive at your offer and wish you the best of luck.

    I'm not feeling too confident about Rutgers at this point, so I'm grateful to have another off as well. I thought my shutout seasons were painful, but somehow the process has been even more taxing this year. Relieved it's almost over.

  2. 10 minutes ago, F22910 said:

    Hey sounds like we’re in a similar boat. Best of luck to both of us! Can I ask if you’ve personally reached out to the grad students you are speaking with? And if they were open to speaking about their program to waitlisted students as well? Thanks!

    I apologize if I'm parsing your question wrong and giving irrelevant info in my answer. I had two graduate students reach out to me yesterday offering to answer any questions I had about the program. I've been kinda hesitant scheduling calls with people from Rutgers just because I'd rather no increase my heartbreak if it doesn't work out. So I replied to their emails with just some vague, general questions and received very open, helpful replies.

  3. 37 minutes ago, CHP47 said:

    I think there are a few of us on the Rutgers waitlist here. Have you heard anything at all from them in the last few days?

    I just got off the phone with the Graduate Admissions Director, and the situation there is this. There are four accepted students who still have not given an answer on whether or not they're going to accept the offer. She expects to hear from one of them today and thinks it's likely they will accept. Two of the other accepted students she expects to hear from tomorrow and is honestly unsure of whether they'll accept or decline. The final student has said that they will not be providing an answer until Friday, and she feels that this student will decline.

    If one of these students declines, I will be accepted. Beyond that, I'm not sure what will happen. The situation seems a bit hectic there since they've never had this many students wait this late to give an answer. How to interpret that, I'm not sure, but I'm crossing my fingers for all of us here!

  4. 1 hour ago, beyondtheheart said:

    Hi guys,

    I'm a long time lurker but I'm basically in the same situation as everyone else. I'm on the waitlist for UIUC's MA/PhD program which I'm really trying to get off of, because I feel horrible for sitting on another offer (and therefore somewhat contributing to the problem of waitlists being backed up.) When are you guys gonna make the call if you don't hear anything back one way or another? Also is anyone planning on declining their UIUC MA offer?? Thanks!

    I'm fortunate that the school I've received an offer from is one I'm currently an MA student at, and I know for a fact that there's no one on the waitlist at that point. Fortunate in the sense that the only emotion I have to deal with right now is anxiety, not anxiety about a waitlist and guilt that I'm going to wait until 11:59:59PM on Friday night to accept my offer if need be.

    That said, as long as you've communicated like tacitus178 suggests, I don't think there's any reason to feel about waiting as late as you need to. Unless, of course, the school whose offer you're sitting on is the one I'm on the waitlist for. In which case, decline immediately ? (That's a joke, I promise.)

  5. I received an (unprompted) courtesy email from the graduate admissions director of the school I'm currently waitlisted at letting me know that while the process has been slow this year, they're going to "again" nudge decision dawdlers. More importantly, she said that "it’s still quite possible" they'll be able to make me an offer and will email me Monday with any news.

    Now, I am not a religious or spiritual man. But if there are any astrologers, divinators, or people who think they talk to God on the phone, would you be able to get in contact with your higher power and ask them how good of a sign this is?

    Oh and doctors. If there are any doctors here, what's a good method for avoiding having a heart attack over the weekend?

  6. 1 hour ago, heterotopia said:

    Thank you! Haven’t yet; will be choosing among Princeton (complit), Penn (complit), and UMich (English). Right now I’m leaning toward Princeton but will still attend open houses for all three to gauge the departmental fit. 

    Congrats on those offers! Sorry to pry, but am I correct that you were accepted to Rutgers as well? If so, did you turn down their offer? Again, I apologize for being nosy; I'm on the waitlist there, and we seem to have fairly similar research interests!

  7. 1 hour ago, Ramus said:

    If your first instinct was to scoff at my initial post, I'd kindly encourage you to read the thread I quote and ask yourself whether you're any different from the folks five years ago who said versions of "I already know the risks," "I'm smart enough to think this through on my own," "I don't really care about getting a job," "a PhD has intrinsic value," etc. I'd also encourage you to ask why, every few years, there are folks nearing the end of their PhDs that come on this site to warn applicants about the state of the field. Perhaps what they have to say is worth reflecting upon.

    The issue is that what you're saying is absolutely obvious to everyone here, yet you insist on using this insufferably condescending middle-class savior tone. No one thinks they're "any different from the folks five years ago." They know they're in the same situation, accepting the same risks, resigned to the likelihood that a PhD will not be profitable because they've heard the warnings already. And they'll still do it despite the risk because, like young people for centuries, they have an ideal and inner drive they want to play out in all of its drama instead of taking the practically-optimized route. (And yes, before you say it, they know--I know--that it will probably end in disappointment and burden them with some regrets, but that's life.) The reason I and others roll our eyes--not scoff, which is a self-congratulatory way to imagine the negative reactions to your post--is because you have not figured out something unique, you have reenacted the most predictable plot in the world. Most people who have advice stemming from an extremely common experience simply give that advice in brief and move on instead of, yes, proselytizing and being dramatic when they are not immediately met with applause and effusive thanks for their effort. So, here is my own patronizing advice to you: try being more like those people who say their piece and then move on instead of the whole performance you're doing here.

  8. Image.jpeg

    I know technically the acceptance into the MA program makes this an acceptance letter, but has anyone ever told Fordham that--although admittedly humorous--it's somewhat tone-deaf to include an overlay of celebratory streamers and confetti when rejecting someone from a PhD program.

    And as someone who just posted an edited decision page as a joke, I wanna be clear: this is not a joke or an edited photo, it's actually what their decision letter looks like.

     

  9. 17 minutes ago, robertsona_grad said:

    Process is utterly cruel. Clearly in violation of multiple protocols established by the Geneva Conventions

    Very true. I have just one thing to say to these unbelievably cruel criminals who flagrantly violate international law, thus dragging the whole human project further down into barbarism: could you pretty pretty please accept me into your profession?

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