Jump to content

Soc231160

Members
  • Posts

    39
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Soc231160

  1. This forum has a lot of mixed messages about contacting POI's. In my experience this helped me get into graduate programs. I emailed several professors, introduced myself, said I was interested in their work and why and explained my own work to them, asked them if they would like to talk further about research and the graduate program at their university. Most of the time I got a response. Some reponses were short and essentially said "I would love to work with you if you get accepted but we have no say" but others wanted to talk to me on the phone and meet me in person. Those who I made great connections not only remembered me and were looking out for my application but actually gave me tips on what the ad com was looking for (and how to adjust my personal statement accordingly). I am very much for contacting faculty you want to work with unless it says on the program website not to.

  2. This forum has a lot of mixed messages about contacting POI's. In my experience this helped me get into graduate programs. I emailed several professors, introduced myself, said I was interested in their work and why and explained my own work to them, asked them if they would like to talk further about research and the graduate program at their university. Most of the time I got a response. Some reponses were short and essentially said "I would love to work with you if you get accepted but we have no say" but others wanted to talk to me on the phone and meet me in person. Those who I made great connections not only remembered me and were looking out for my application but actually gave me tips on what the ad com was looking for (and how to adjust my personal statement accordingly). I am very much for contacting faculty you want to work with unless it says on the program website not to.

  3. I think that fit is VERY important and it is the best thing you can do for your application is make everything fit with the department's strenghts! However, I must say that I do think that GRE scores are one of the most important factors in admissions. I know admissions committees will say they are not that important BUT even if the scores are not important to the department or the committee they are important to the college of arts and sciences and to the stats for the program. The higher administration has the funding and they do not want adcoms admitting students without amazing GRE Scores. They hold the money and they want the rankings to say that all of their grad students have this average and it gives them more prestige.

    I was told that having 2 peer reviewed publications and several presentations at conferences will demonstrate that I am a capable researcher and a good candidate for a docatoral program. While this is true, if I do not have the GRE scores to make the higher up admins happy I do not have a shot at most programs.

  4. I know for a fact that last year it was more of an interview invite that an open house invite. Some were admitted before coming others were just invited to the weekend and then found out after the visit if they got in, were waitlisted or rejected. Emory does it this way to I believe.

  5. Hi All,

    I saw two BC postings in the results forum. One by phone and one by email. Anyone care to share more information? Who contacted you, what information did you recieve... etc. Thank you and of course Congrats!!

  6. A round table discussion is less formal than presenting on a panel. Like a panel you still bring research in progress, but it does not have to be as developed as research presented on a panel. The point is to discuss your working research with those working on similar issues so that you can share ideas, help each other develop the research further, etc. It should be an early draft of a paper. The setting is usually less formal as well (with everyone around a table or in chairs in a circle rather then presentation style). Prepare to talk about your research, your main research goals/questions, the work you have already done and where you think it is heading, what areas need to be worked on.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use