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gellert

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Posts posted by gellert

  1. Answer with the schools you're applying to that match the given school best in terms of research fit. It can help you look focused and passionate about the subject.

    If you're truly uncomfortable saying the other schools you're apping, though, I doubt anyone would hold it against you if you left it blank. But it CAN be turned into an asset to your application, as said above.

  2. Wow, so much dislike. Maybe I was offering a link to be helpful, in case the OP hasn't seen that section already? The link's not helpful?

    The results pages also exist so that people can look things up in a systematic way and not have to hunt here and there for threads that might have dozens or hundreds of posts so it's most beneficial to report things there.

    If I took a guess, I'd say it's probably because of these reasons:

    i) The results board doesn't necessarily include all the necessary information that people might want to find in this thread. For one, it usually only includes date of notification. Secondly, if anyone else includes other information, it's usually GPA + GRE which are the least important factors of admission.

    ii) It doesn't offer the ability to respond and congratulate fellow applicants, or offer consolation when someone doesn't get in. The results board, as I said, is good for impersonal date-checking. Not for what it sounds like the OP intends this thread to be.

    iii) This guy has three posts and your first response to him was something about how he ought to know there's a whole other section dedicated to this on the site already. It comes across as a little harsh, especially to a reader who might remember how nervewracking it was trying to write that first post coming out of lurk-dom.

    OP - I think this thread is a great idea. Other subforums have done similar things in the past, and the results board is kind of worthless imho for anything other than date-of-notification-checking because it doesn't have the information I find most relevant.

  3. omg I think I am done with all my essays. :unsure:

    I'm really not sure how I feel about this. They will never be perfect.

    ETA: Has anyone else still not sent their LOR writers copies of their NSF essays? I didn't want to give mine to anyone but the adviser who was reviewing them for me until they were in half-decent shape. Is it too late for that, with only two weeks left on their clock?

  4. Doubt it. Two of those Cs are C+s, and you only have three total? I'd be concerned if this was in your proposed graduate field of study, but unless you specifically want to study the history of economics in grad school, I wouldn't get all torn up over it. :)

    Most things we as applicants see as red flags are barely even a blip on the adcomms' radar, as I've learned from my adviser after much anxious bellyaching over minor flaws on my own record.

    Good luck!

  5. MOO, I would give myself and the readers the benefit of the doubt. That is, I would assume that they know that I know that they know that I know that they know that I know that I am going to take advantage of a program's diverse curriculum and do coursework relevant to my interest. Instead, I'd use the space to develop further a point in my SoP or to make a new point altogether.

    Just my $0.02.

    iawtc. It might not hurt to mention specific courses (though if done the wrong way, it could sound pandering), but you could use that space so much more wisely. I'd recommend spending some time focusing more on what you've learned from prior research experiences or gaps you perceive in the field rather than listing out your entire proposed first year schedule. This might just be a personal preference thing, though.

  6. ^ I think it's nice of them when they do, but "owe" us one? No. They don't owe us anything at all until we've actually matriculated. I think you're right, though, that it is quite frustrating when they don't reply to so much as just say "Yes I am" or "No not this year." :/ (Voice of experience)

  7. ^ Same, by multiple tenured professors and even a DCT. Professors are very busy people. Attaching an unrequested CV carries the implication that you think so highly of yourself that you expect them not only to send you a brief reply about whether they are accepting students (and it is very nice of professors to do this, but let's not kid ourselves -- they don't have to), but to read your entire CV as well and give you some sort of feedback on your fit with the program, and to trust the attachment doesn't contain a virus.

    One prof told me that he automatically throws all emails with unsolicited attachments into his email's trash without reading them. So. Take that as you will.

  8. ^^^ Excellent advice.

    I had a phone conversation with one of my top POIs in October, and I was actually really surprised when he hardly asked me any questions at all. I had to lead the entire conversation. It definitely threw me off, but I know I was able to show that I knew enough about his work to ask questions about that, and enough about grad school in general to ask intelligent questions about that process. Don't take your POI not asking you questions about yourself as a sign of disinterest; it's just a different technique.

    Relax before you go into it! I did mine really stressed out, wearing a sweatshirt on the top floor of a house that had the heat on too high and I was nervous. Bad plan. By the time I was done I was drenched in sweat and felt like I'd just run a marathon while my POI stood on the sidelines and demanded that I recite all the cranial nerves.

    Relaaaaaaaax.

    One of my undergrad advisers told me that there's no way you can mess this up. Not unless you do something truly horrendous. They aren't looking to accept or reject you based off this conversation. Even if you do really well, this won't get you in. It'll just get you a careful look on your app once it's submitted. And if you're nervous or flustered, it won't get you rejected, either.

    Good luck! :)

  9. All right, we're in that final stretch before December deadlines! Where do you stand? How much more do you have to do? How are you feeling?

    I'm editing SOPs right now and still waiting (im)patiently for one of my transcripts to get mailed to me so I can scan it into apps. (Wth, I ordered it over a week ago!) Also working on the last bits of my NSF app. I'm more excited than stressed, though. (So far, anyway.)

  10. Hello all -

    quick question about the "Presentations and Publications" section of the Previous Research Essay.

    I have a couple publications in preparation (none actually submitted/published yet), one a couple weeks from submission and the other a month or two. I've referred to both in my essays, but want to include them in my presentations and publications list so it's clear that I really do mean they're in prep and have co-authors and titles and all that jazz. Legit?

    Thanks!

    I'd say it's fine! I'm going to be doing the same with an in prep manuscript and an under review one. Just make sure it's listed clearly as such!

  11. Two questions, one for-real and the other just ... yeah.

    1) As a senior undergrad, what to put as the institution at which you'll be doing this research? Just your top choice, or the best fit for your proposal, or where you think you'll be most likely to get in, or what?

    2) Anyone else still have at least one essay completely unfinished? (Not in terms of outlining, just...no draft yet.)

  12. There has been some disagreement on whether this is SUCH a good idea or not... I'm wondering, might this vary by program?

    General consensus from what I hear is that yes, 9 times out of 10 it's a very good idea. For the profs who don't like being contacted, it will generally say so on the website. If not and it's a personal thing for them, worst that can happen is ... absolutely nothing. They just won't read it. They're not sitting around vindictively taking names of students who contact them like "muhahahaha this student did something that vaguely annoyed me but is typical of the field! I shall be sure not to accept her, regardless of how well-qualified her application is! muhahahaha!" ...You know?

  13. Yes and no. I don't think this is any indication of whether or not you will definitely get in. All you can really read into this is that he thinks your qualifications, experience, and interests are a good match for him and the program. But even if he likes what he sees, he hasn't seen your transcripts, GRE scores, LORs, SOP, hasn't interviewed you, and -- most importantly -- hasn't seen all the other applicants. He's seen one facet of your application and it was good.

    But as I said, I do think this means that you chose a school well (good fit, etc). All other things being equal, I'd say you could assume you have a decent shot. Unfortunately, all other things usually aren't equal, so at the moment it's still impossible to say.

  14. I don't think it will hurt you at all. In fact, I reckon you'll be in a pretty good position, as you'll have the coveted "life experience" -- and, if you're being funded to continue doing research in a master's program, with luck you'll have even more pubs and presentations under your belt by the time you're applying. Compare that to the straight-from-undergrad "superstars" with their lone sixth-author pub and collection of posters, and you'll stand out brilliantly.

    Not to knock straight-from-undergrads, as I am one myself. But the point is, extra research experience is never going to be looked down upon. Continue to learn, get a great LOR from this guy, retake the GREs, and reapply. You'll be fine. :)

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