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Hanyuye

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Posts posted by Hanyuye

  1. Hi all!

    I FINALLY GOT ACCEPTED INTO A GRADUATE PROGRAM!!! HURRRRRAYYYYY!! After 3 years of rejections, FINALLY FINALLY!

     

    I was accepted into Temple and will most likely attend this fall.

     

    I went to Temple last week for an interview with the Director of the program, and I realized the neighborhood surrounding it wasn't adequate, to say the least.

    Anyone looking for a roommate or have any suggestions on where to live while attending TU?

     

    I'm attending Temple for the MS in Financial Engineering.

  2. Not to come off as critical, but what have you done in the last four years to make yourself a better candidate? I think, almost universally, that those who reported success in this thread had bolstered their GPAs with presentations, publications, internships, work experience, research, or additional coursework. I think it would be worthwhile to ask yourself what you can do to supplement your lackluster GPA.

     

    Good point! I went back to school and minored in geology with the math degree. As for work experience, nothing like that is available in NYC, except for extremely low paying jobs for data entry in a geology/engineering firm or jobs that require extensive experience. As for research, none of that, I've contacted Columbia professors if I could help out in their labs related to geophysics and never got a response from an email or phone call. There isn't one of the few CUNY professors that are close to my research interests, so that's that. Now i'm thinking I should enroll as a nonmatriculate student and take grad courses to get accepted, hopefully....

  3. I keep getting rejected from programs with my 2.9 gpa. Just received a call from a chemical engineering program that my transcript was obsolete. No one has been accepting me and they all remark that the 2.9 doesnt meet their requirement. It's been 4 years applying and no fortune. I'm seriously depressed again, this happens twice a year and dreams are crushed again. I can't move on with my career, can't move on with my academic pursuits, can't move on from home,  CAN'T MOVE ON WITH MY LIFE.

     

    This is so cruel.

  4. Hi all,

     

    I've recently stumbled upon a graduate of Manhattan College and he recommended me to the Petroleum focus for the MS Che program. I also realized they have a cosmetic engineering focus which is a HUGE industry aside from petroleum and there are PLENTY of jobs afterwards in then Northeast to say the least. 

    I initially always wanted to be a petroleum engineer but the Cosmetic Engineer option is incredibly enticing, especially the research in developing products and its incredibly broader use. And just wanted suggestions from fellow engineers...

  5. Question, my third recommender is up in the air. I took an advanced thermodynamics class and the professor who taught it hasn't responded to me for 2 months after 3 emails. Should I ask my manager at work instead for a recommendation? I work in a completely unrelated field and I'm mostly certain that my manager will write a very generic recommendation.

  6. I think it would be easier to make suggestions if you listed your background. We know you have a BA in English and a BS in math. What, if any, geophysics courses have you taken? What was your gpa and GRE scores? Are you going for a masters or phd? How were your LORs? (a guess will do) did you clearly outline your future goals in your SOP? What exactly do you want to study?

    Getting into grad school requires so many hoops...lol

     

    I haven't taken any geophysics courses, CUNY doesn't offer any. My gpa was around 3.1/3.2, with gre, Quant 162, Vebal, 154, Writing, 4. Though I took it three times in 3 years and my highest Verbal was 155 with 4.5 as highest writing.

    I plan to enroll in Masters only, definitely not interested in PhD. 

    As for my LORs, I have 2 from geology professors and I read one of them as she gave them to me to edit and it was superb to say the least. My third one was from my math professor who taught me vector calculus, complex analysis, and real analysis. That professor was mainly a financial engineer and knows nothing about engineering/physics. So I assume the LOR was generic?! I hope not...

    And as for my outlines , in a general sense, I want to have a job as a petrophysicist/reservoir engineer/geophysicist/seismologist. They ALL are VERY VERY interesting to me as I've researched professors with specialties in those areas and they all are again, very enticing. Depending on the professor (if he/she was a petrophysics expert, I would aim towards petrophysics in research). 

    More specifically, seismic interpretations of fluid flow and geophysics of reservoirs. I want to use my geophysics not only for petroleum but also for hydrology. I like many things but not interested in petrology, geophysics of Earth's core, planetary geophysics, that stuff is just not practical to me (no offense to anyone who loves it)

  7. if you want to be in energy geophysics almost all roads lead to houston. I would suggest going to houston. 

    That's my safest bet. Though I have no clue whether to get my third bachelors (yikes, my first was in English 5 years ago and math I finished 2 months ago) and whether or not that will look bad for adcomms, I'm not hesitant with my career choice just that my circumstances prevented me from moving out of NYC and NYC doesn't have geophysics (except columbia but I can't afford 5k per class).

    Should I just transfer for their accelerated programs or just masters again?

  8. Oregon State has a good reputation and Corvallis is a great place to live.  Having lived in both Galveston and Corvallis, I would pick Corvallis over Houston.  The friends I knew when I was there in the engineering programs were very pleased with the placement rates OSU had as well.

     

    Good luck!

    Thank you Lyrehc! I do like Corvallis, all the nature and openness. Though I have to apply as a transfer for their 5 year program (I think they have it) or apply for the masters spring semester. Does OSU have a strong petroleum presence? I didn't notice any petroleum concentrations in their catalogue

  9. I have a friend who is stuck in the software sector with a BS in Land Use Planning...so you're not alone.  If you want (and can afford) to take a job in the field you want, do it!  The Southwest has a lot of energy sector jobs.  You'll find geology is big in Texas, Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. 

    Or maybe I misunderstood and you are actually looking to transfer within the company you're currently in?  Either way, if it's available and out west is where you want to be, definitely do it. 

    Here are some internships opportunities as well that may help your university of work applications in the future:

    http://www.geosociety.org/links/intrnshp.htm

    Hi geographyrocks.

    My company is only located in New York but many other hospitals throughout the country utilize EPIC EMR (Electronic medical record) software. So I can get a job at a hospital in Houston or the places listed and take classes on the side. So you suggest I just to the 5 year program (or 3 years) or keep applying to masters programs and hope to get accepted/cry if I get rejected?

  10. Hi all,

     

    As the summer goes by, I keep thinking of how my life would be a million times better out of New York and enrolled in a geophysics program but fortune as evaded me yet again. Currently, I'm a software analyst for a software company that is used nationwide.

    I have the ability to apply for a job in Houston and take undergrade/graduate courses at University of Houston or Rice in geophysics/petroleum related

     

    Or take a job in Denver and apply for UC at Denver or Boulder at take related courses.

     

    Or San Diego and Corvallis, Oregon and so the same.

     

    I'm asking because Houston is the center of the energy sector and I thought it was by default to move there. My job is no way related to the energy sector and I've been applying for entry level positions for months now with even ones that only ask for Math majors but no luck there.

     

    You guys have any suggestions? I'd greatly appreciate it

  11. And the Oklahoma State rejection came in today, good thing I got the balls up to apply for UT, I ended up getting into my "long shot" and getting denied from other schools that I thought I had a far better chance.

     

    Same with me, A&M and Oklahoma in the mail. I got in no where, but congrats! Guess I'll be applying for jobs now and hoping for spring semester.

  12. I kept meaning to add in on this threat.

     

    I applied with a 2.47 GPA (I brought it up to 2.85 by graduation), and got into 4/5 of the MAs that I applied to (well, one was an MS), including a couple that are among the top in my field. I explained it in my SoP, and had outstanding supporting materials (strong LoRs, an assistantship on a journal, volunteering at a major conference, great GREs). Honestly, I think it comes down to convincing them that the student you will be for them is not the student you were when you got those bad grades. Obviously that's not going to help with schools that have instant cuts for certain GPAs, but I think most schools, if you look like a serious candidate, will at least see what you have going on.

    THANK YOU man, so much inspiration. GodSpeed!!!!

  13. I know I've had lots of help from here, I want to thank all the folks here gave me suggestions with applications.

    Unforunately, I just received my last rejection from University of Oklahoma, just 1 hour before graduation ceremony. Now I'm torn as to what my application is lacking as no one ever responds to my emails in a conclusive manner and it just seems like the easiet things that everyone else does to acquire information, I have to climb Mt. Everest just for that same data.

    I don't know how to approach this summer, should I apply for the spring or look for jobs in the oil and gas sector and somehow get my foot in the door? Either math majors aren't wanted anymore or I'm just not cut out for grad school.

  14. My undergrad GPA is 2.76 and I was accepted into Brown University for my Masters today. I'm in shock, but very excited. I submitted my acceptance of the offer just a few hours ago. Very excited. 

    Did you have work experience, or internships, or recommendations from directors for that? Congrats!

  15. This advice is pretty good, though I have managed to get a masters in geology without having taken a single geology course, and also be admitted into multiple PhD programs in geology. There are a lot of CS, Chemistry, Physics, Math people who go into the numerical/theoretical side of geology without ever taking a course. That being said, learning geology is still required, just on one's own time.  

     

    Though, I'm on the bad-luck end of a math major wanting to get into Geophysics, I usually browse all the grad students and their bachelor backgrounds and math isn't popular among the admitted students.. Why is that?? Or do grad comms prefer physics majors?

  16. Wow, the day I ask them about my status, I just got rejected from UBC. I don't understand what graduate schools need from an applicant. Math major with geology courses, interested in geophysics considering there are no schools that offer geophysics in NYC. I'm stuck here, dreaming of stars, wthhhhh???

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