Hello all,
Please excuse the long post and thanks in advance to all who take the time to read it and respond.
I'm planning on applying to cognitive/neuroscience based psych programs this year at the following schools: Duke, Columbia, NYU, Princeton, Upenn, Harvard, WashU, Hopkins, Cal, Stanford, UNC-Chapel Hill, Yale, Brown, and Tufts.
Stats:
GPA: 3.5 from degree-granting school; 3.3 when classes taken outside of my degree-granting school are included
GRE: Taking this month
Relevant experience: I've worked for more than 4 years as a lab manager and research assistant in a brain stimulation neuroscience and psychiatry lab at one of the top universities mentioned above. I have coordinated more than 15 clinical and neuroscience studies during this time (i.e. extensive hands-on experience). I essentially know how to setup and run a lab - from grant submissions to employee training, regulatory adherence to running experiments. I am certified to conduct a wide range of neuropsychological tests, have extensive MRI/fMRI experience, I'm certified to perform transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) procedures (in addition to operate a robot guidance system which is the first of its kind in the world). From my initial work (which was mostly clinically focused and took long periods of time to finish) I was able to get my name on two publications and a few poster presentations. Over the last year and a half, I have transitioned into running cognitive neuroscience studies that use TMS to investigate visual decision-making, working memory, visual search and cognitive reserve. Although perhaps only one of these projects will be ready to publish in some form before applications are due, I will be included in all future publications for these projects (and my PI is willing to indicate this in my LOR).
In addition to my experience as lab manager, I also have leadership experience as the co-director of a nonprofit organization that provides medical care and funding for infrastructure in Africa. I have volunteered directly with this organization (spent 2 weeks in the field in Zambia) and an NYC-based inner-city mentoring group (in addition to other community-based volunteering).
I will have letters of recommendation from my current PI, who is the director of a research division at one of the schools mentioned above, as well as the chair of the department of psychiatry at the same school, and a letter from a PI with whom I worked in the past on clinical studies.
One of my top choices is the school where I, my PI, and my department chair work (I mention this only as a potentially unique strength).
I know my GPA is on the weak side, especially for programs which require that I submit all grades from every school attended. Here's where the requested advice comes in: the reason I have gone to multiple schools is because I sustained a traumatic brain injury freshman year. I had very serious cognitive issues for about a year and half after the incident, which made school very difficult. However, I was able to finish my freshman year - despite the injury - with a 3.29GPA. Given the issues I was dealing with, I took the following fall semester off with the idea that I would transfer to a school closer to home that spring. In the meantime, I registered for 4 basic requirements at the local community college so that I could begin in the spring taking core courses for my major. I was told that the grades for the CC classes would not transfer; I only needed a C or better for the credit. Given the difficult issues I was dealing with from my injury, I simply did the best I could, got the C's for credit, and stopped attending the classes so I could focus on getting better. This has of course come back to bite me now that I have to factor four community college C's into my overall GPA. That said, my GPA has a sharp upward trend which correlates with my recovery from the injury (I finished my last year of college with a 3.8 each semester).
My basic question is: will ADCOMS respond to my story and understand my subpar GPA within this context? Will the strengths of my application even get a chance at evaluation or will my GPA get me thrown out right off the bat? I realize these are impossible questions to answer in a speculative fashion (especially without my GRE score), but I'm curious to hear some thoughts and would love to hear from anyone else who has a unique narrative of this kind.
Thanks!