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ajollycossack

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Everything posted by ajollycossack

  1. As a law student, I think this is big (along with having some sort of discernible quant background). LS admissions are very "congrats, you have two numbers that look good on our statistics for US News rankings, you're in." That doesn't fly in actual policy programs.
  2. Accepted to Chicago CIR! Anyone else here?
  3. Me! I'm a grad student in a different division here applying to a joint-degree program. I submitted way back in September or October, have essentially forgotten about ti for six months... and now the anxiety has returned and I just want to know which school's classes I'll be taking next year.
  4. I'd also advocate looking at things you can do online. I had a semi-similar situation (I had been working full time in DC, and had to move home to Denver, actually, to help out with some family stuff). Before I left DC, I set it up so that one of the jobs I was doing I could do remotely. Obviously, that doesn't work for everything, but you may be able to find some interesting things to put on your resume that way. I also started studying a new language with all the free time. As said above, take advantage of the universities in your area. If you're going to be home for six months before you can consider taking a job overseas, I'd also look at public service stuff in your area. I'm personally of the opinion that, at least for a lot of grad schools, volunteering, interning, or even short-term working in public service can make you really stand out. Interning at local government agencies or advocacy/charitable groups can also be incredibly interesting, get you employer references, and demonstrates "real world" experience to an extent that research positions don't. The French speakers I knew in Denver would volunteer with the local African/Francophone immigrant population--anything like that in NC? Or, given your interest in public policy (idk what kind), working someplace like a DA's office could both bolster your resume and give you insight as to what kind of work you want to do. tl;dr find local public service options.
  5. If it makes you feel better at all, when I was applying to law school, one of my LOR writers--arguably the most important one, both a big-name scholar and my thesis adviser--just never turned the letter in, after months of promising he would. Still got in pretty much everywhere I thought/hoped I would and then some, just had to learn the hard way not to ask him for any help on my MA application. (The reassuring part was meant to be that it might not necessarily hurt you!)
  6. Howdy all. I'm going to eschew the questions because I'm in a weirdly narrow situation--I'm only applying to one program, the 1-year MA in International Relations at UChicago, as part of a joint degree program - I'm already a grad student here. I submitted back in September because, you know, classes started then. So now I get to hang out until March, I guess. So yeah, if anyone's applying to/excited about Chicago - hi!! I'm really excited about the chance to potentially get some great formal training in research and putting together a potentially-publishable paper; I met with one of the program preceptors last week and had a great chat about that. I'm very much hoping that the fact that I'm already enrolled at another division here at the University helps with admissions. (Though if anyone has any numbers on Chicago CIR...)
  7. Hey all - would anyone be willing to read a (mostly complete) first draft of my statement for an MA program in International Relations? If yes, I'm very grateful and will PM it to you. Thanks thanks thanks!
  8. OK. Thank you for the reassurance. I could try and reach out again, I just feel like the chances of him actually following through are about nil. I know the professional recommender will definitely go to bat for me, though.
  9. OK, long story short--I know you are supposed to have three academic LoRs, and I'm only two years out of undergrad, so honestly I should just have three academic LoRs. My issue is that one professor, who has promised me a letter in the past, just doesn't deliver. And not just any prof, my thesis advisor, whose classes I took for half of college (a very "abstracted professor" type). I applied to law school this past cycle (I'm going for a JD/MA this upcoming year), and despite repeated promises to upload a LoR, he just... never did. After about six months, I gave up. I don't want to try asking him again, both because I don't want to be a letter down at the last minute, and because I'm still pretty upset, to be honest. I have two other academic letters, from reliable people, but I'm wondering if it will hurt me to use as a third letter someone from my office, who is sort of a "big name" in the relevant field. He also wrote me a letter for law school (he stepped up at the last minute when Space Cadet never turned his in). Will this really hurt my application? Should I start reaching out to professors I don't know very well to see if they're willing, just to get that 3? Input appreciated--thanks very much. And sorry if this has been asked and answered anywhere, I haven't been on GradCafe in a couple years.
  10. Can't wait to speak at an info session about Fulbright tomorrow, still not knowing my status... woo! Will be able to tell all the prospective applicants my tale of woe and misery.
  11. apologies, I am being too Russo-centric Georgia sounds amazing, and you'd definitely eat better than those in the cold, hard north.
  12. Also a Russkie applicant, yea? I'm looking at last year's date of the 11th, trying to be optimistic we'll hear a little earlier...
  13. You are completely right! I tried actually reading the website, gasp, and found it. Thanks very much.
  14. Hey everybody, I've got another question. I'm assuming this is very, very much country dependent, but does anyone know the typical start date? (I'm applying for Russia, but I doubt anyone knows off the top of their head exactly when one particular program begins.) I know I've heard a sort of generic "late August" for in-country orientations--does that sound about right? I'm trying to figure out if I should take a summer internship I've been offered.
  15. Need more alcohol to cope with wait.
  16. Howdy! Also an ETA applicant, no previous English-teaching experience. I'm applying to Russia, though, and they explicitly said in the description that no experience is required for the Russia ETA program; I don't know if this is different for Germany. (I have tutored some Russian, which I tried to highlight in my panel interview, but.) (Also, hi to a fellow Denverite!)
  17. Random question, and this might vary a lot depending on country: does anyone know when (if you're an ETA candidate, at least) you find out what city you're going to? I was under the impression it was not at the same time you received the notification email. Or maybe in countries that aren't Russia, you have more of an idea of what the potential sites are?
  18. I'm an ETA applicant to Russia, and since I bet I wouldn't have BBC, I'm sort of just picturing myself sitting in some sort of dark, Soviet-era dorm, in a corner, watching pirated Series 3 on a crappy Siberian Internet connection and maybe throwing back some vodka. It feels very authentically Russian. (Though IF I HAD BBC ZOMG SUCK IT FRIENDS.) You've probably said up there as well, but where are you applying? and I applied for the Critical Language Enhancement Award to fill my copious free time, but if I don't get that... um... studying British television in the Russian context? (Actually, I think I said something about working with the disabled population, but I can't entirely remember what was actually on the app? Hrm.)
  19. Also have nothing to add, other than that your wonderful Sherlock and John icon is wonderful.
  20. Also, for the rest of us, would like to point out that if you compare with last year's spreadsheet, that's a couple weeks earlier for both Brazil and Peru.
  21. I've somehow ended up being much more anxious now. Was completely chill until the interview, and now am having pretty regular freak-outs.
  22. I did mine via Skype. It was actually a surprisingly stress-free experience; she even said that it was not to talk about the typical interview questions, though we did talk about the program and teaching a bit, but really just to see that we could get along in the language. (Like, I talked about what I was hypothetically do on my first day of class, but also got asked about what I do in my free time and what TV shows I watch.) Oksana was very nice and friendly to talk to, so don't worry! Are you also a graduating senior?
  23. Back again. Not sure if anyone else is doing a Russia app on here, but I figured I'd post what I learned. After my lang interview, I asked my interviewer when answers will go out, and she said they're hoping to have their list ready to send to the US on March 1, but of course that it could be later. So, Russia applicants, hopefully just a little over a month to wait!
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