AnxiouslyAwaitingDecisions Posted February 5, 2019 Posted February 5, 2019 Hi! So I have recently accepted the crushing defeat that came with not being called to interview at any PhD program I applied to. So now I am back to focusing on Masters programs. My concern is that my current GPA at the school I am at is a 3.9, however my GPA from the community college I attended prior is a 2.0 (transferred from community to private college after earning AA) - I am wondering how much this May effect my masters acceptance chances so I can be sure to apply to enough schools to ensure an acceptance somewhere. I also explain the early failures in my essay, and explained why I took time off before completing my AA and transferring. I am applying to General or Experimental Psych programs depending on what the individual program offers. Thanks for any advice!
psychochef Posted February 6, 2019 Posted February 6, 2019 (edited) Master’s programs tend to be much more forgiving and accepting than PhD programs for applicants with terrible GPAs. I had an abysmal 1.9 GPA for my first year and a half of college before taking several years off to work on myself. I then transferred and got a stellar GPA at my final school, as well as excellent letters of rec and several conference presentations. Although my cumulative GPA was well below a 3.0, I received offers at several well-respected master’s programs in psych, including a funded one. I would suggest applying to quite a few programs and not limiting yourself geographically. In addition, some schools will calculate GPA based on the last 2 years and use that number instead of your cumulative GPA. Hope this is helpful! Edited February 6, 2019 by psychochef brighteyes, checkingmyemail, AnxiouslyAwaitingDecisions and 1 other 3 1
b1b5 Posted March 13, 2019 Posted March 13, 2019 On 2/6/2019 at 10:35 AM, psychochef said: Master’s programs tend to be much more forgiving and accepting than PhD programs for applicants with terrible GPAs. I had an abysmal 1.9 GPA for my first year and a half of college before taking several years off to work on myself. I then transferred and got a stellar GPA at my final school, as well as excellent letters of rec and several conference presentations. Although my cumulative GPA was well below a 3.0, I received offers at several well-respected master’s programs in psych, including a funded one. I would suggest applying to quite a few programs and not limiting yourself geographically. In addition, some schools will calculate GPA based on the last 2 years and use that number instead of your cumulative GPA. Hope this is helpful! Which MA was funded, if you don't mind me asking? dancedementia 1
Jung&Psyched Posted March 13, 2019 Posted March 13, 2019 9 hours ago, b1b5 said: Which MA was funded, if you don't mind me asking? I few masters programs that are funded that I came across while applying this year were : William and Mary, Wake Forest, Augusta State, U of Louisiana at Lafayette, U of Southern Mississippi, UNC Wilmington, and Southern Illinois at Edwardsville. I also had an awful undergrad gpa and then got some work experience and retook some courses (and got much better grades in them!) and was accepted to a few of the masters programs listed above so don't lose hope
ResilientDreams Posted March 13, 2019 Posted March 13, 2019 I'm an undergrad at William & Mary and would like to vouch wholeheartedly for my school. The faculty here are really great. Jung&Psyched 1
psychochef Posted March 13, 2019 Posted March 13, 2019 Northern Arizona, New Mexico State, Ball State, Villanova, and Towson are the first ones to come to mind. I also think that maybe Northern Iowa offers funding but I'm not sure. Katie B and Jung&Psyched 1 1
Katie B Posted March 15, 2019 Posted March 15, 2019 I was just looking at Northern Iowa's site for a friend and according to that, they still offer funding for their students!
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