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TexasGuy

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Posts posted by TexasGuy

  1. I love the first paragraph but I think the rest should be rewritten

     

    im facing the same problem.and everyone has a different opinion about SOP's.  I have decided to completely focus on my research interests, future goals, why i want to go to that specific school....but still add a personal touch to it so they get to know who i am .....( i like challenge, am 'passionate'  etc.)

     

    i am saying very little about my past (in terms of work experience) because i feel all that stuff is on the resume..but i will briefly mention the research i've done as a way to transition to my current research interests.

     

    i am really trying to make it no more than 700 words ( a little over a page) I feel if i can accomplish this then it is probably concise and wont bore whoever is reading it.

     

    But yes, rewrite the entire thing without looking at this draft. 

  2. she replied

    Unfortunately the bottom line is the application fee has to be paid before we can admit you. I will go ahead and begin the process to have your fee paid, but it will be quite a while before we can make the offer to you because it takes so long for the fees to be paid going thru the channels at UF.

    I am just shocked by all of this. I'm being asked to pay an application fee that I'm not supposed to be paying. I would love to go to this school but this is all so weird to me. There has to be someone i can call to get this sorted out.

  3. Yes she actually KNOWS that I am a domestic applicant now and she's very aware that the fee is waived for domestic applicants. She has admitted that there was a misunderstanding. But she's still asking me to pay up lol. it's just so odd. I asked if there is any other way this can be resolved and I am waiting for a reply.

  4. ok i applied to the university of florida (chemical engineering) and got accepted. For domestic applicants the application fee is waived.

    Ok I just received an email basically saying "we want to give you an offer but you have to pay the application fee first". I replied and stated that I am a domestic applicant. She then replied and said "Sorry we weren't aware that you are a domestic applicant. Can you pay the application fee anyway? we'll reimburse you in a few months"- those were not her exact words but something like that

    I just think this is VERY odd, especially since i am not supposed to be paying a fee in the first place. I dont even know how to respond to her and I'm scared of saying something that would screw everything up.

    basically- 1) I'm not supposed to be paying an application fee 2) I cant afford it right now......how do say this NICELY??

  5. Bwahh sorry! I misremembered my score - I only got 161. .____. I thought my score didn't seem as bad as I thought it had been when I first got it... sigh.

    And thanks :) My memory is starting to make me question whether I should actually go or whether I'll fail out in the first semester :P

    lol you should be PROUD of yourself for forgetting what you scored on a stupid/worthless test like the GRE and not obsessing over it like i do...

    You're going to have a blast in New York.

  6. Hi @tejasdkulkarni thanks for the heads up. I reviewed for it for 3 months (well not daily of course) and so I'm disappointed with the verbal score. Another thing is that I have friends from china who got 700+ on the verbal section of the old gre even though they can't really converse in english well. (They have access to websites which contain loads of questions shared by other students from China) It was a bit of a slap in the face, getting a low verbal score despite having spoken english since 5. Or maybe I just have poor inference skills, I don't know.

    In your case, your verbal is still high and the scores are not that far from each other which has different implications from mine. Yup, research is OK, I have 1 co-authored (with my supervisor) journal paper and I'm working on another project now. I also participated in a 6 week research attachment in Imperial College London but it didn't turn out quite well. (In short, not very productive but learned a lot from mistakes)

    I ahve seen tonnes of people with 800 M 700+ V scores get rejected by top schools I've seen a number of people get admitted to MIT with verbal scores in the 300's and writing scores in the 3's. It's really is a holistic process They make decisions based on everything, with GRE being the least important part of your file.

  7. i completely understand how you feel...i got a 163 on the math and was pissed (engineering major and i tutored math in college).I was acing the practice tests (which were A lot harder than the math on the exam). I was even more annoyed when i checked the free online diagnostic and found out i got a 19/20 on the first section and a 16/20 on the second section.even though i was confident about every single question. But its very easy to make silly mistakes.

    Same exact situation as you as far as verbal. I was reading these really convoluted passages on the exam and thinking WTF. I can read and write perfectly well- but just could not focus on those BORING passages and started guessing on everything.

    Its frustrating..but its really not worth all the stress. Seriously. Based on admissions results your scores are great for just about any school you want to go to.

  8. based on my credit/ my inability to afford the masters without aid?

    i have delinquent student loans from undergrad....do admissions committees check for stuff like that? Im thinking since they use masters students as cash cows at this particular school, they would rather admit someone who is richer than me..someone who can afford to shell out the 40+ K per year tuition..

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