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Hank Scorpio

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Everything posted by Hank Scorpio

  1. It's the same with my program. Below a 3.5 in any course means you lose your funding, and below a 3.0 gets you kicked out.
  2. Hello! I'm also writing my exams around the same time (though a little later, end of September). Mine is a two-day written exam (4 hours/1 question each day) and then an oral defence a week later. But I have a list of five questions I need to prepare answers for, and won't know which two they will be asking me until I go in to write them. My plan is to spend 3 weeks on each question (reading and writing), leaving me about a week at the end to review everything. So for the last 3 weeks or so I've been treating it like a job; doing school work from 9-5 each day, with a couple of breaks and a lunch. The good thing about that is I have my evenings and weekends free so I can clear my head a bit. I also plan to each out to committee members to run things by them to make sure I'm on the right track with how I'm thinking about various questions. Some supervisors will agree to read over drafts of your writing, others may prefer to video chat with you or meet with you to have more of a discussion. I won't be going through any class notes (I don't think) because my comp exams involved working out a specific reading list, some books, some articles. Hope some of this helps, and good luck!!
  3. I find it helpful to think of it this way: if your advising didn't want you, they wouldn't have you. It's not like they make the first round of offers, and then take people they don't think are good enough for the program. For the most part, programs will not keep admitting people until they fill the required number regardless of standard. It's more often the case that if a program doesn't have enough qualified applicants, they just won't fill all the spots that year. All that to say, if you're there then your supervisor wanted you there.
  4. If your friend is interested in coming to Canada, Guelph is decent for continental philosophy (thought not as much as it used to be), and Memorial University of Newfoundland. Memorial has multiple people who are proficient in Hegel, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre, etc. Well worth looking into.
  5. A few days ago I was accepted to Memorial University of Newfoundland's PhD program off the wait-list. IMMENSELY relieved, since I did the unwise thing and put all my eggs in one basket. Guess that makes my applied:acceptance ratio pretty good! But joking aside, pretty stoked. Full funding ($20k/year), plus paid GAships to start. I can't wait. As far as Canadian schools go, MUN is one of the best for continental philosophy.
  6. I know that my father got a job pretty quickly after finishing his PhD...he definitely hit the ground running. My sister is still working on her PhD, but she'll be done a year earlier than everyone else in her program, and she's been working in sociology with Gary Allen Fine (one of the sociology juggernauts), so I suspect she'll do the same when she finishes. From what I can tell, it's all about publications and conference presentations. Also, this is a super good head's up. My department doesn't allow me to work a part- or full-time job outside of school.
  7. I'm 29 and will be starting my MA this year, so I'll be 31 when it's done, and around 35 or 36 when I finish my PhD. I'm ok with that. My father finished his PhD around that time, and has had a fulfilling career and life since then. Got 20 years of teaching in, still does research, etc. My sister will be 36 when she finishes her PhD. Sooooo, my family is a bunch of late bloomers...and that's ok. There's no sense in rushing things...everyone goes at their own pace. I think you'll find once you get to grad school that there are many, many people around your age or older.
  8. So many sighs!! Anyway, this time last year I was working a mediocre job, mentally preparing myself for a forced year off between my BA and MA. All year I've been wishing the year away so I could get back to school. Now that year is over, and I couldn't be more stoked.
  9. Let your deeds, not your words, be your adorning.
  10. Indeed! What does that make me at 29? I crazy cat guy?
  11. This made me laugh hard. Once again GC makes work more enjoyable.
  12. The sure sign of being in America. People get married so much younger there than in Canada. I know that is an off-topic comment, but that's just what came to mind reading through.
  13. I have about a month left of work! It will zoom by because there's a week in the middle where I'm going to Toronto to look for an apartment and to take a little tour of Ryerson University's campus. Then I come back home, work for a week, and I'm gone! For the time being, I spend my days on here, the Ikea website, and the site I'm using for apartment-hunting. 39 days till I leave!
  14. Ah yes! I was thinking more about two papers from students in the same class, especially if it's an author course.
  15. You could use all the exact same sources as another student and it wouldn't be plagiarism.
  16. I will be TA'ing my first term as an MA student. I was nervous, but then realized that no one is banking you already knowing info for a specific course. They are just expecting you to be able to learn it faster than the students.
  17. My own experience inclines me to think it's the latter. Though my summer job is undoubtedly providing a much less warm and supportive environment than yours is, I too find myself less tolerant as the day approaches.
  18. It also depends on what country you're in, apparently. Once thing I (and others) have observed from being on this forum is that Americans tends to apply to sometimes twice as many (or more) schools than Canadians.
  19. New student number does sound exciting! Since I'm going to a grad school here in Canada, I will be deprived of a .edu address and the benefits it entails. Which kind of sucks, because I've heard some amazing things about Amazon Prime, esp. with having to furnish an apartment when I get to Toronto. But I did talk to the department since I started this thread, and they informed me I will be getting my Ryerson email address in mid-August. Closer every day!
  20. Amazon in the US must be way better than here in Canada. Scoping out the Canadian site, it's like $1500 on average for a sofa. Ikea it is.
  21. Aye, I'm in kind of the same situation. I'm going to be driving to my new city in my little Kia Rio, and will therefore be bringing only clothes and books. My apartment will be entirely empty when I get there. I plan on buying an air mattress first thing, and just using it as a bed/couch/chair for a couple days until I can get some real furniture. Sadly, in Canada we don't have quite the consumer supply that the US has, so I can't take advantage of Target, Sam's Club, etc.. BUT, there is an Ikea not too far from where I'll be (woohoo!), so I'll drool over things online until I get there and then buy some furniture.
  22. Yea, I agree with what others have said above...well, with what everyone above has said (except one post..can you guess which? lol). Within reason, it's more being at different stages in life than in age itself that would present a problem. My parents are 9 years apart, and met when my dad was 35 and my mom was 26, but they were at the same stage in life when they met, so it wasn't a huge deal (if at all). For me, I'll be turning 30 in a few months and I would go as low as 25 or so, and as high as 35 or so...but again, just as others said, it would depend on their maturity, their personality, and where they are in life. Best of luck!!
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