If you receive an acceptance letter into a Ph.D. program (in this case, math), including funding details, from the department chair, is there any chance you will still be denied admission by the graduate school admissions committee? The line in the letter reads: "This offer is contingent on your being accepted for regular admission into the Graduate School."
Is that secondary acceptance just a formality, or do the grad schools sometimes override the particular dept/program to which you're applying?
Question
NameTK
If you receive an acceptance letter into a Ph.D. program (in this case, math), including funding details, from the department chair, is there any chance you will still be denied admission by the graduate school admissions committee? The line in the letter reads: "This offer is contingent on your being accepted for regular admission into the Graduate School."
Is that secondary acceptance just a formality, or do the grad schools sometimes override the particular dept/program to which you're applying?
Thank you for any and all insights!
Edited by NameTKtypo
3 answers to this question
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