polymer engineer Posted April 24, 2020 Posted April 24, 2020 Hi all, I know it's early but I am starting this thread so that anyone who is applying to the 2021 application season can their credentials or news of offers once they are sent out! Feel free to share anything related to your grad school goals!
polymer engineer Posted April 24, 2020 Author Posted April 24, 2020 I want to share this experience with others and I don't know many people applying for the next enrollment season since I am a couple years out from graduating. Here's the template for submitting your credentials: Undergrad Institution (approx. rank/reputation in STEM): Major(s): Minor(s): GPA in Major: x.xx/4.00Overall GPA: x.xx/4.00Demographics/Background: GRE Scores:Q: xxx (xx%)V: xxx (xx%)W: x.x (xx%)LOR: Research Experience: Publications/Abstracts/Presentations: Awards/Honors/Recognitions: Fellowships/Funding: Pertinent Activities or Jobs: Other Miscellaneous Accomplishments: Anything else in your application that might matter (faculty connections, etc.): Research Interests: Institutions/Programs: Comments:
polymer engineer Posted April 29, 2020 Author Posted April 29, 2020 Can anyone speak to any of the following universities (likes, dislikes, program culture, reputations, life outside of school, etc.)? UT Austin (ChemE), Duke (BioE), U Florida (ChemE), Penn State (BioE), Carnegie Mellon, Northwestern
Uma4783 Posted May 12, 2020 Posted May 12, 2020 (edited) Hello guys. I am a junior chemical engineering major, am not applying for PhD until Fall 2021 however as I am doing a 5 year BS/MS. Having difficulties deciding what tier I would apply to. At the time of applying I will have two posters, 3 years in the same lab, one research internship, plus part of my MS thesis, and maybe a pub if everything goes perfectly. Not sure yet about GRE but I assume it will be okay. The main issue is my GPA, I will have a 3.7 cumulative and engineering at the time of application but that is after 3 retakes and 2 pass/fail (this is for COVID semester). Is this enough to prevent me from applying to high tier schools. I was thinking University of Colorado? Thanks for any help lol. Edited May 12, 2020 by Uma4783
polymer engineer Posted May 24, 2020 Author Posted May 24, 2020 On 5/12/2020 at 10:28 AM, Uma4783 said: Hello guys. I am a junior chemical engineering major, am not applying for PhD until Fall 2021 however as I am doing a 5 year BS/MS. Having difficulties deciding what tier I would apply to. At the time of applying I will have two posters, 3 years in the same lab, one research internship, plus part of my MS thesis, and maybe a pub if everything goes perfectly. Not sure yet about GRE but I assume it will be okay. The main issue is my GPA, I will have a 3.7 cumulative and engineering at the time of application but that is after 3 retakes and 2 pass/fail (this is for COVID semester). Is this enough to prevent me from applying to high tier schools. I was thinking University of Colorado? Thanks for any help lol. I can't say whether or not you could get into a top tier university, but generally that shouldn't stop you from applying. In the application process you want to apply to to 2-3 dream schools, 2-3 realistic, and 2-3 fall back schools. Minimum GPA and GRE scroes are required just for your application to get looked at but they ultimately don't decide whether you get accepted. What schools are really looking for is research potential and your experience speaks to that greatly. A publication will definitely help you a lot! With a GPA of 3.7 and good GRE scores I would encourage you to apply to schools like U Colorado if that's where you want to attend. I have a GPA of 3.5 (with strong upward trajectory) and I plan to apply to UT Austin and I feel like I have a decent shot of getting in based on my research experience if that says anything.
heistotron Posted May 31, 2020 Posted May 31, 2020 On 5/24/2020 at 11:15 AM, daromi said: I can't say whether or not you could get into a top tier university, but generally that shouldn't stop you from applying. In the application process you want to apply to to 2-3 dream schools, 2-3 realistic, and 2-3 fall back schools. Minimum GPA and GRE scroes are required just for your application to get looked at but they ultimately don't decide whether you get accepted. What schools are really looking for is research potential and your experience speaks to that greatly. A publication will definitely help you a lot! With a GPA of 3.7 and good GRE scores I would encourage you to apply to schools like U Colorado if that's where you want to attend. I have a GPA of 3.5 (with strong upward trajectory) and I plan to apply to UT Austin and I feel like I have a decent shot of getting in based on my research experience if that says anything. On 5/12/2020 at 7:28 AM, Uma4783 said: Hello guys. I am a junior chemical engineering major, am not applying for PhD until Fall 2021 however as I am doing a 5 year BS/MS. Having difficulties deciding what tier I would apply to. At the time of applying I will have two posters, 3 years in the same lab, one research internship, plus part of my MS thesis, and maybe a pub if everything goes perfectly. Not sure yet about GRE but I assume it will be okay. The main issue is my GPA, I will have a 3.7 cumulative and engineering at the time of application but that is after 3 retakes and 2 pass/fail (this is for COVID semester). Is this enough to prevent me from applying to high tier schools. I was thinking University of Colorado? Thanks for any help lol. I agree with @daromi A 3.5GPA seems to be the "cutoff" for the most tippity top schools and even so, upward trajectories are very favorable and the entire application is still likely to be considered holistically. Anecdotally, I know a couple people with <3.6GPAs and no publications still get into CU Boulder's PhD program in ChemE -- your chances for CU Boulder seem to be very solid.
2020bioE Posted June 14, 2020 Posted June 14, 2020 On 5/12/2020 at 9:28 AM, Uma4783 said: Hello guys. I am a junior chemical engineering major, am not applying for PhD until Fall 2021 however as I am doing a 5 year BS/MS. Having difficulties deciding what tier I would apply to. At the time of applying I will have two posters, 3 years in the same lab, one research internship, plus part of my MS thesis, and maybe a pub if everything goes perfectly. Not sure yet about GRE but I assume it will be okay. The main issue is my GPA, I will have a 3.7 cumulative and engineering at the time of application but that is after 3 retakes and 2 pass/fail (this is for COVID semester). Is this enough to prevent me from applying to high tier schools. I was thinking University of Colorado? Thanks for any help lol. Chiming in -- I applied for the 2020 Fall cycle and I received admission to a top-5 BIOE program with a 3.6 GPA from a public university. I wouldn't say that your GPA is worrying as long as the rest of your application (letters, essays, etc) is solid.
heistotron Posted June 15, 2020 Posted June 15, 2020 (edited) I'll start: Undergrad Institution (approx. rank/reputation in STEM): R1 Public, US News Top 100 for National Universities (top 50 for ChemE grad schools) Major(s): Chemical EngineeringMinor(s): Biological EngineeringGPA in Major: 3.84/4.00Overall GPA: 3.79/4.00Demographics/Background: International Male, Asian GRE Scores: haven't taken; practice tests consistently 165QQ: xxx (xx%)V: xxx (xx%)W: x.x (xx%)LOR: 1x strong (from main PI), 1x good (from summer REU), haven't decided 3rd (probably from instructor I TA'd for) Research Experience: 2.5 years materials science research in undergrad, 1 summer REU in biocatalysis Publications/Abstracts/Presentations: 5x posters (including regional & national conferences), 1x oral presentation Awards/Honors/Recognitions: 2x poster prizes, year-long research fellowship & travel award from my home university, engineering scholarship Fellowships/Funding: Ineligible for everything as international ? Pertinent Activities or Jobs: ChemE tutor and TA'd a couple classes, Other Miscellaneous Accomplishments: N/A Anything else in your application that might matter (faculty connections, etc.): One of my recommenders did their postdoc at MIT, but I feel this holds true for a lot of recommenders Research Interests: Catalysis (either protein based e.g. biocatalysis or materials-based e.g. zeolites, porous materials) Institutions/Programs: All for PhD in ChemE Loooooong shot (UC Berkeley already discourages internationals from applying to begin with) : UC Berkeley MIT If lucky: UC Santa Barbara UMinnesota UW Madison UT Austin Northwestern Columbia UPenn Johns Hopkins Should have a reasonable shot at: Cornell CU Boulder UWashington UArkansas UVA *How I feel about my chances are based off of discussions with my advisor, as well as having seen admission stats/class profiles at programs that release them Comments: Edited June 15, 2020 by heistotron
polymer engineer Posted June 15, 2020 Author Posted June 15, 2020 Undergrad Institution (approx. rank/reputation in STEM): Virginia Tech Major(s): Chemical Engineering, Focus in Polymers Minor(s): none GPA in Major: 3.61/4.00 Overall GPA: 3.51/4.00 *upward trajectory, >3.8 my last two years Demographics/Background: male, white, US citizen GRE Scores: haven't taken it yet but I'm targeting >= 165 V/Q, and 4.5 W Q: 169 (highest practice score taken so far) V: 155 (highest practice score taken so far) W: 5 (highest practice score taken so far) LOR: 1 research advisor in undergrad (strong), 1 PhD scientist I know in industry, 1 post doc or PI from research experience post college Research Experience: 2 years undergrad (polymers, additive manufacturing, rheology), 3 years industry (porous membranes, surface science), 3 months university lab (neuroscience) Publications/Abstracts/Presentations: 1 co first author publication, 1 poster presentation at graduate student assembly, a couple posters and presentations in industry Awards/Honors/Recognitions: Scholarship (x2), Deans list student Fellowships/Funding: n/a Pertinent Activities or Jobs: EHS internship, Project manager for research group in industry, tutored calc and chemistry, STEM mentor for high school science projects Other Miscellaneous Accomplishments: rode bicycle across US for charity Anything else in your application that might matter (faculty connections, etc.): Research Interests: biomaterials, regenerative medicine, polymers Institutions/Programs: Duke (BioE), UFlorida (ChemE), UT Austin (ChemE), Northwestern (BioE), Penn State (BioE) Comments:
heistotron Posted June 15, 2020 Posted June 15, 2020 3 hours ago, polymer engineer said: Undergrad Institution (approx. rank/reputation in STEM): Virginia Tech Major(s): Chemical Engineering, Focus in Polymers Minor(s): none GPA in Major: 3.61/4.00 Overall GPA: 3.51/4.00 *upward trajectory, >3.8 my last two years Demographics/Background: male, white, US citizen GRE Scores: haven't taken it yet but I'm targeting >= 165 V/Q, and 4.5 W Q: 169 (highest practice score taken so far) V: 155 (highest practice score taken so far) W: 5 (highest practice score taken so far) LOR: 1 research advisor in undergrad (strong), 1 PhD scientist I know in industry, 1 post doc or PI from research experience post college Research Experience: 2 years undergrad (polymers, additive manufacturing, rheology), 3 years industry (porous membranes, surface science), 3 months university lab (neuroscience) Publications/Abstracts/Presentations: 1 co first author publication, 1 poster presentation at graduate student assembly, a couple posters and presentations in industry Awards/Honors/Recognitions: Scholarship (x2), Deans list student Fellowships/Funding: n/a Pertinent Activities or Jobs: EHS internship, Project manager for research group in industry, tutored calc and chemistry, STEM mentor for high school science projects Other Miscellaneous Accomplishments: rode bicycle across US for charity Anything else in your application that might matter (faculty connections, etc.): Research Interests: biomaterials, regenerative medicine, polymers Institutions/Programs: Duke (BioE), UFlorida (ChemE), UT Austin (ChemE), Northwestern (BioE), Penn State (BioE) Comments: I can't help but think places like Columbia/UPenn would be great in terms of tissue engineering research. They both have strong BME programs and their proximity to medical campuses only help (from my understanding a lot of faculty are funded by NIH grants). polymer engineer 1
polymer engineer Posted June 25, 2020 Author Posted June 25, 2020 This was posted in last year's forum. Found it really helpful so wanted to share with this group as well! https://imgur.com/a/Tng2r
heistotron Posted June 25, 2020 Posted June 25, 2020 13 hours ago, polymer engineer said: This was posted in last year's forum. Found it really helpful so wanted to share with this group as well! https://imgur.com/a/Tng2r This is great! I do want to note though, that for a lot of schools outside the top 5, accepted GPA doesn't necessarily mean enrolled GPA (which is usually lower). Understandably, the strongest candidates (usually with very high GPAs) will be admitted at a lot of programs, but are less likely to commit if it's not a UC Berkeley/Caltech/MIT etc. Thus, even schools in the lower top 10 e.g. UT Austin may see a drop between accepted GPA and enrolled GPA, as candidates who are not as strong and without as much offers are more likely to commit. In their 2017-2018 data, UT Austin's average accepted GPA was a 3.88, but had an enrolled GPA of 3.83. Source: https://gradschool.utexas.edu/admissions/where-to-begin/admissions-and-enrollment-statistics Mind you, they're not big drops to begin with at a top 10 program like UT Austin, but less competitive programs are more likely to see bigger differences between average and enrolled GPAs. What this means is, if you see an average accepted GPA that makes you hesitate to apply to a program, more often than not your chances aren't as bad as you think. Finally, people that post results + stats on Gradcafe also heavily skew towards the most competitive/highest achievers and may not fully represent the applicant pool. Still, there are some exceptions like MIT in the provided link with an average GPA that's pretty much in line with official stats. polymer engineer 1
Uma4783 Posted July 4, 2020 Posted July 4, 2020 On 5/24/2020 at 2:15 PM, polymer engineer said: I can't say whether or not you could get into a top tier university, but generally that shouldn't stop you from applying. In the application process you want to apply to to 2-3 dream schools, 2-3 realistic, and 2-3 fall back schools. Minimum GPA and GRE scroes are required just for your application to get looked at but they ultimately don't decide whether you get accepted. What schools are really looking for is research potential and your experience speaks to that greatly. A publication will definitely help you a lot! With a GPA of 3.7 and good GRE scores I would encourage you to apply to schools like U Colorado if that's where you want to attend. I have a GPA of 3.5 (with strong upward trajectory) and I plan to apply to UT Austin and I feel like I have a decent shot of getting in based on my research experience if that says anything. Thank you much so much for your advice! I hope you get into your dream school. I worry a lot about things like GPA lol.
Uma4783 Posted July 4, 2020 Posted July 4, 2020 (edited) On 5/31/2020 at 11:33 AM, heistotron said: I agree with @daromi A 3.5GPA seems to be the "cutoff" for the most tippity top schools and even so, upward trajectories are very favorable and the entire application is still likely to be considered holistically. Anecdotally, I know a couple people with <3.6GPAs and no publications still get into CU Boulder's PhD program in ChemE -- your chances for CU Boulder seem to be very solid. Thanks for replying heistotron. I really love colorado's program. What backgrounds do those people have if you don't mind me asking? (if you know). What kind of research did they do in school? Or did they go into industry first? Are they on this forum? Sorry for all the questions lol. Edited July 4, 2020 by Uma4783
Uma4783 Posted July 4, 2020 Posted July 4, 2020 On 6/14/2020 at 1:19 PM, 2020bioE said: Chiming in -- I applied for the 2020 Fall cycle and I received admission to a top-5 BIOE program with a 3.6 GPA from a public university. I wouldn't say that your GPA is worrying as long as the rest of your application (letters, essays, etc) is solid. Thank you 2020bioE that makes me feel a lot better lol, if you don't mind me asking what kind of research experience did you have in school? Congrats on getting into such a good program.
heistotron Posted July 7, 2020 Posted July 7, 2020 On 7/4/2020 at 9:50 AM, Uma4783 said: Thanks for replying heistotron. I really love colorado's program. What backgrounds do those people have if you don't mind me asking? (if you know). What kind of research did they do in school? Or did they go into industry first? Are they on this forum? Sorry for all the questions lol. PM'd to avoid doxxing.
2020bioE Posted July 9, 2020 Posted July 9, 2020 On 7/4/2020 at 6:51 AM, Uma4783 said: Thank you 2020bioE that makes me feel a lot better lol, if you don't mind me asking what kind of research experience did you have in school? Congrats on getting into such a good program. My profile was posted here last year when I applied: https://forum.thegradcafe.com/topic/120576-bioengineeringbiomedical-engineering-applications-for-2020-admission/?tab=comments#comment-1058709412 But I'm open to any questions and other stuff about the process if you have them! FWIW I didn't apply to ChemE programs but all in all I think they're fairly similar since there is a lot of overlap with bioe.
heistotron Posted December 18, 2020 Posted December 18, 2020 Iowa State, Michigan, and UC Santa Barbara results are out I believe.
sunshinewater Posted December 21, 2020 Posted December 21, 2020 On 12/19/2020 at 4:04 AM, heistotron said: Iowa State, Michigan, and UC Santa Barbara results are out I believe. Someone said they got a phone call from UCSB. Is this the normal timeline? The deadline was hardly 10 days ago! Did anyone else hear from UCSB? Any International students?
sleepy_fugacity Posted December 21, 2020 Posted December 21, 2020 On 12/18/2020 at 4:34 PM, heistotron said: Iowa State, Michigan, and UC Santa Barbara results are out I believe. I don't see more than 1 result for Michigan posted yet. Did they release several results last week?
heistotron Posted December 22, 2020 Posted December 22, 2020 17 hours ago, sunshinewater said: Someone said they got a phone call from UCSB. Is this the normal timeline? The deadline was hardly 10 days ago! Did anyone else hear from UCSB? Any International students? You're right I'm not sure if this is their regular timeline, and I did resort to Gradcafe for that one post. That being said I have heard of people receiving interviews/admits even within ~5 days of the final application deadline and some programs do this to varying degrees e.g. UC Berkeley.
heistotron Posted December 22, 2020 Posted December 22, 2020 (edited) 4 hours ago, sleepy_fugacity said: I don't see more than 1 result for Michigan posted yet. Did they release several results last week? Based on Gradcafe history, looks like UMichigan ChemE has a habit of admitting a few people every week from mid-Dec until mid-late March. Edited December 22, 2020 by heistotron
2021app Posted December 23, 2020 Posted December 23, 2020 Got called by POI from UC Berkeley ChemE about being admitted. They mentioned formal details would be sent through and that there would be a virtual visit scheduled later in 2021. Good luck all!
catastrophe Posted January 5, 2021 Posted January 5, 2021 Has anyone heard from MIT / know if they’ve completed sending invites? nuclearkimchi 1
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