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Posted

I need advice so this is a good place to start I guess.

 

Desired Program:: Neuroscience/Neurobiology PhD, Fall 2015

Goal: A job where I'm paid to act like I'm the smartest person in a room (professor)

Undergrad: Private Liberal arts college, B.A. class of 2011 

Major: Biology

Minor: Mathematics (no real computer science minor)

GPA: 2.3 (Major GPA ~3.3). Bad freshman-sophmore year grades and very low grade inflation. 

GRE: 160 Math, 161 verbal, 5 AW

Quant-related coursework: Statistics, computational macroeconomics, data-structures and algorithums

Work Experience: 3 Years at MIT as a research technican in a neuroscience labratory, 2 publications as a middle author,  and some summer programming experience in bioinformatics with 1 middle author publication.

Schools I'm looking into:

Reach Tier: Columbia, Stanford, John Hopkins, MIT, Harvard (the latter two is the result of explaining to idiot relatives that just because i work for and know the professors there doesnt mean I'll be easier to get in. nevertheless they expect me to apply)

Likely Tier: UCSD, U of Washington, UT Huston, UT Southwestern Medical, Boston U, U of Arizona

SOP: A detailed research plan of what kind of project I want to do. I've been planning it it since I was an undergrad so there will be opportunity for narration on how I came up with it. I'll also have to explain my bad grades; I have been trying to get off SSRI medication at the time, with disasterous consequences.

Letters of Recommendation: 2-3 letters from my workplace, the PI's name holds some weight in the field but she urges me to get my undergrad professors to write one as well. The problem is, the best letter from my undergrad college is from a professor whom recently passed away and im not sure who else to go to.

 

I'm looking for other good programs in neuroscience. Also, thinking of taking the GRE again. And finally, can anyone vouch for application "tutor" services for help with writing the SOP?

Posted

Hi Yuanyang--GPA can be a deal breaker, but raising your GRE scores (quant esp.) and doing an MS could help show you have what it takes for a PhD. Solid research experience and good recs are definitely a plus, but you should probably ask in another forum for advice on those--this is government affairs.  ;)

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I'll be applying for MPA/MPP/MAIS concurrent programs for Fall of 2015. My geographic area is constrained by my desire to build a west coast network and my husband's choice of MBA program (he's narrowed down to Berkeley, Stanford, or UW). I am most concerned about my lack of math prowess, and I won't be able to take a math class between now and my application cycle. 

 

For career goals, I'd love to end up in the Foreign Service in 5 or so years but realize the chances are miniscule. I'd be happy working in an environment where I spent a lot of time in the field, developed my language skills, and was able to travel. I'm looking at large non-profits with a strong presence overseas. 

 

I would love the community's opinion on how to address my math deficiencies, what other programs come to mind when you see my profile, and any red flags you see. Thank you so much!

 

 

School requirements:
I'm applying to UW's concurrent MPA/MAIS program, so a combo of the Evans School and the Jackson School, and Berkeley's Goldman MPP. I'm a west coast girl who wants a west coast network. 

GPA:
3.63, with a 3.85 in-major (English) which I don't think they'll care about. 

GRE score:
152Q/165V/4.5 AWA

Work experience:
One year of alumni program administration at a large research university. Two years of running a pilot government education program in Seoul, South Korea. Internships in Germany (youth development) and stateside (non-profit homeownership foundation). 

Language skills:
Spanish: I could argue fluency, but I've tapered off my study in the last few years. 

German: Elementary

Korean: High comprehension, reading, and writing, but my speaking is kindergarten-level.

Quantitative requirements:
NONE and this is what I'd like advice on - I have two math classes on my transcript. One is the only C I've ever received, and the other is the only class I've withdrawn from. My GRE Quant score isn't bad, but I am terrible at math and my transcript shows it. How should I address this? I work with budgets and other numbers in my job (and my previous jobs) with no problem, but in a math classroom I'm a sad idiot. 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching):
Yes, I've travelled extensively in Europe and Asia, worked in Korea for 2 years, and interned in Germany for 4 months.

Statement of Purpose:
I love writing and feel confident about this section. 

Posted (edited)

srry. didn't realize this was a government affairs section.. ignore 

Edited by Ricardo_Peterson
Posted

I'll be applying for MPA/MPP/MAIS concurrent programs for Fall of 2015. My geographic area is constrained by my desire to build a west coast network and my husband's choice of MBA program (he's narrowed down to Berkeley, Stanford, or UW). I am most concerned about my lack of math prowess, and I won't be able to take a math class between now and my application cycle. 

 

For career goals, I'd love to end up in the Foreign Service in 5 or so years but realize the chances are miniscule. I'd be happy working in an environment where I spent a lot of time in the field, developed my language skills, and was able to travel. I'm looking at large non-profits with a strong presence overseas. 

 

I would love the community's opinion on how to address my math deficiencies, what other programs come to mind when you see my profile, and any red flags you see. Thank you so much!

 

 

School requirements:

I'm applying to UW's concurrent MPA/MAIS program, so a combo of the Evans School and the Jackson School, and Berkeley's Goldman MPP. I'm a west coast girl who wants a west coast network. 

GPA:

3.63, with a 3.85 in-major (English) which I don't think they'll care about. 

GRE score:

152Q/165V/4.5 AWA

Work experience:

One year of alumni program administration at a large research university. Two years of running a pilot government education program in Seoul, South Korea. Internships in Germany (youth development) and stateside (non-profit homeownership foundation). 

Language skills:

Spanish: I could argue fluency, but I've tapered off my study in the last few years. 

German: Elementary

Korean: High comprehension, reading, and writing, but my speaking is kindergarten-level.

Quantitative requirements:

NONE and this is what I'd like advice on - I have two math classes on my transcript. One is the only C I've ever received, and the other is the only class I've withdrawn from. My GRE Quant score isn't bad, but I am terrible at math and my transcript shows it. How should I address this? I work with budgets and other numbers in my job (and my previous jobs) with no problem, but in a math classroom I'm a sad idiot. 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching):

Yes, I've travelled extensively in Europe and Asia, worked in Korea for 2 years, and interned in Germany for 4 months.

Statement of Purpose:

I love writing and feel confident about this section. 

 

To state the obvious, it would be helpful if you could take some kind of math course between now and next January.  You should take another look at community college, extension courses, adult education courses, or accredited online courses (not Coursera) in your area.  Keep in mind that you don't have to have completed the course by the time you apply, you can list yourself as enrolled even if you don't have your final grade yet.  Most schools will allow you to submit your grades after the application deadline (since many fall courses don't wrap up until late December), and even those that won't let you turn in a grade after the deadline will at least be able to see that you're applying yourself to filling in obvious skills gaps.  

 

A bigger issue than having no math might be having no economics (you don't say if you've taken econ courses). Intro economics courses in both Micro and Macro are pretty light on math, and I say this as a fellow math allergic person.  So if you only have a chance to do one course, I'd look at either econ or statistics.  

 

My other tip (this worked for me) is just to address your math shortcomings head on in your statement of purpose.  You can be honest about not having a strong quant background, it's one of the skillsets that you can really expand when you're in grad school. After all, it's not about coming in as the perfect student, but coming in with some strengths, some weaknesses, and building on it.  But having at least one additional course under your belt might help convince the committee that you're capable of doing the work they need you to do, even if you don't have a really strong background in it. 

Posted

Hey, thanks. This is all great info. I'm looking into taking an econ course online - I live in Korea and my Korean is not exactly ready to be deployed in a university classroom - and getting one of my teacher friends to proctor for me. 

 

I did the full IB program in high school, so I took macro, micro, calculus, etc., and did well, but that's going on 8 years ago now.

 

One thing I hadn't taken into account is the applied math courses I've excelled in, and that I took out-of-major because I was truly interested in the content. There's no math or econ, specifically, but what do you think about these: 

 

ENGR 350H (Sustainable Engineering Honors): A

PS 399H (Principles of Population Honors): A-

MB 230H (Intro to MicroBio Honors): A

 

Thanks again for your help. I will definitely be addressing the issue head-on. 

 

 

To state the obvious, it would be helpful if you could take some kind of math course between now and next January.  You should take another look at community college, extension courses, adult education courses, or accredited online courses (not Coursera) in your area.  Keep in mind that you don't have to have completed the course by the time you apply, you can list yourself as enrolled even if you don't have your final grade yet.  Most schools will allow you to submit your grades after the application deadline (since many fall courses don't wrap up until late December), and even those that won't let you turn in a grade after the deadline will at least be able to see that you're applying yourself to filling in obvious skills gaps.  

 

A bigger issue than having no math might be having no economics (you don't say if you've taken econ courses). Intro economics courses in both Micro and Macro are pretty light on math, and I say this as a fellow math allergic person.  So if you only have a chance to do one course, I'd look at either econ or statistics.  

 

My other tip (this worked for me) is just to address your math shortcomings head on in your statement of purpose.  You can be honest about not having a strong quant background, it's one of the skillsets that you can really expand when you're in grad school. After all, it's not about coming in as the perfect student, but coming in with some strengths, some weaknesses, and building on it.  But having at least one additional course under your belt might help convince the committee that you're capable of doing the work they need you to do, even if you don't have a really strong background in it. 

Posted (edited)

Schools: Georgetown SSP, Hopkins Security Studies, AU (Spring 15) Possibly Princeton WWS, Korbel, Chicago CIR, LBJ, GW

 

Career goals: Ideally foreign service or something with nat'l security

 

Institution: public state university in Florida

 

Major: Political Science

 

Minor: Double in history and international studies

GPA:
3.65, overall from school. Overall (including study abroad, two econ courses) 3.71. Major GPA 3.85

GRE score:
Taking next month, but generally a strong test taker.

Work experience:

Policy intern at a scientific research institute, researched federal and state policy for scientific research (including some bio security issues)

Economic development intern at City West Palm Beach

Economic affairs intern State Department, U.S Embassy Moscow

Language skills:
Moderate Russian, Belarusian (Was born/lived in Belarus)

Quantitative work:
Statistics, macro, micro. A in both econ courses, B in stats

 

Publications:

Op-Ed about national security and Bahrain

 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching):
Studied abroad in Saint Petersburg, Russia

Statement of Purpose:
Feel pretty confident about my SOP.

 

Letters of Recommendation:

I have a really, really strong LOR from my supervisor at the research centre and another strong LOR from a former Ambassador and Georgetown alum who was my professor. Moderate LOR from another professor.

 

 

I'd really, really love to get into Hopkins or Georgetown. I know the SAIS and MFS programs are really difficult to get into, and I'm not even sure how the security studies programs are as far as competitiveness. But, I just graduated from my undergrad this week, so I figured I might as well see how I stack up. Thanks guys!

Edited by DashaKJ
Posted

I'll post and see if anyone can appraise me:

Schools: GW Elliott, AU SIS

Undergrad institution: Southern University, major in Political Science and Middle Eastern Studies

GPA: 2.7, yo

GRE: retaking once I return to the US. Am currently in Asia. Gunning for a 170 in Q and V.

Work/International Exp: 1 year on staff for the President's 2012 reëlection bid, 1 year as an English teacher in rural South Korea, and was just offered a Congressional internship. I also spent 2 months in Egypt back in 2010 as a study-abroad student.

Language Skills: Spanish (fluent), Arabic (4 years of Uni study), French (high school study, remember some), Elementary Korean.

Quant Work: classes it's an undergrad. I don't even remember.

SOP/LoR: not an issue.

I'm gunning hard for GW Elliott. I have obvious deficiencies, but, with my background and a high GRE score, what am I looking like? I'm also looking for full-time work relevant to my field of interest.

Posted

I'll post and see if anyone can appraise me:

Schools: GW Elliott, AU SIS

Undergrad institution: Southern University, major in Political Science and Middle Eastern Studies

GPA: 2.7, yo

GRE: retaking once I return to the US. Am currently in Asia. Gunning for a 170 in Q and V.

Work/International Exp: 1 year on staff for the President's 2012 reëlection bid, 1 year as an English teacher in rural South Korea, and was just offered a Congressional internship. I also spent 2 months in Egypt back in 2010 as a study-abroad student.

Language Skills: Spanish (fluent), Arabic (4 years of Uni study), French (high school study, remember some), Elementary Korean.

Quant Work: classes it's an undergrad. I don't even remember.

SOP/LoR: not an issue.

I'm gunning hard for GW Elliott. I have obvious deficiencies, but, with my background and a high GRE score, what am I looking like? I'm also looking for full-time work relevant to my field of interest.

 

You and me both are on a similar boat. I won't apply for another two years to build up work experience, but in the mean time I think I will take some macro and micro economics courses. From what I have seen on acceptance and funding on this forum, micro and macro classes play a fairly weighted role.

Posted

You and me both are on a similar boat. I won't apply for another two years to build up work experience, but in the mean time I think I will take some macro and micro economics courses. From what I have seen on acceptance and funding on this forum, micro and macro classes play a fairly weighted role.

I think I'll be taking Statistics or another economics course this fall to help offset my GPA deficiency. Do you have work experience, too?

Posted

I think I'll be taking Statistics or another economics course this fall to help offset my GPA deficiency. Do you have work experience, too?

I am currently seeking it and have come close. Still staying persistent. My target right now is local government or a company that works internationally. I live in a Midwest state and unfortunately cannot move out to DC until graduate school comes around.

Posted

Hi guys, I am an international student from China. I'm applying for 2015 Fall and I'd like to know if anybody can kindly offer me some suggestions.

 

School requirements:
I would try my best for HKS MPP, Georgetown MPP, Chicago Harris MPP, Duke Sanford Mpp, Cornell CIPA MPA, and Johns Hopkins MIA.

GPA:
3.91/4.0, major in English Language and Literature and minor in International relations (concentrating on energy&climate change)

 

I'm applying straight from undergrad, and my institution is among the top in my country (with several alumni previously admitted to HKS MPP, most of them were straight from undergrad).


GRE score:
166Q/162V/4.5 AWA

Work experience:
I've taken a gap year between my junior and senior years, during which I 

-worked as a full-time interpreter for a national government body on climate change and clean energy (2 months)

-interned at a United Nations agency on water-energy nexus in Bangkok, Thailand (5 months)

-have been full-time campaigning for Greenpeace East Asia in my home country (I signed a one-year freelance contract so it would last until I graduate in June 2015)

 

Other experiences included 

-research assistant positions at two influential media (one blowed the whistle on Edward Snowden and the other was the oldest broadcast medium in China) on environment and technology news (each lasted around 3 months and got my bylines)

-internship at a big European consulting firm (Chinese branch) helping a leading energy company transform its market strategy toward's China's emerging new energy vehicle market (2 months)

Language skills:

Chinese(mandarin): Native

English: Fluent, scored 118 in Toefl iBT

French: Upper intermediate, scored B2 in TCF test

Latin: reading literacy (I guess they wouldn't care about this,ha)

 


Quantitative requirements:

Course work in Micro/Macro Econ, Statistics, Probability and Statistics, Liner Algebra, Calculus (grades averaged to around 90/100, which is roughly A- in the U.S. standard, I suppose)

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching):
Yes, 5 months in Thailand, and two short-term exchange programs to Japan and Philippines

Statement of Purpose:
Still doing research on the official websites and brainstorming. But I'm confident on this section with feedback and revisions.

 

Letters of Recommendation:

Confirmed with my supervisors and professors who know me very well.  I would communicate with them frequently to make sure they understand the references would fit in well with the whole package of materials. 

 

My concerns:

 

1) working experience. 

I understand it's usually a disadvantage to apply without working for a couple of years, but I think I know what industry and positions I would aim for in future. Plus, at least for several employers I worked for, advanced degrees abroad indeed give candidates an advantage on entry-level positions, even if a domestic student has one or two more years of working experience. I guess this is probably why so many Chinese students are rushing abroad to graduate schools even without any work experience. 

 

So, if possible, I just want to know to what extent this lack of work experience would hamstring my application. 

 

2) GRE scores.

I suppose this score is just "Okay" for top schools. I'm currently studying for another shot in September and based on mock test results, I'm pretty confident to see  at least a 5-score increase in total and keep my AWA scores between 4.5 and 5.0. 

 

Any ideas and suggestions would be useful, thanks so much:)

Posted

You and me both are on a similar boat. I won't apply for another two years to build up work experience, but in the mean time I think I will take some macro and micro economics courses. From what I have seen on acceptance and funding on this forum, micro and macro classes play a fairly weighted role.

 

Could you elaborate on this? I recently finished my micro and macro classes and did well in them but didn't really know how much they would help me in terms of applying. I know schools look at the whole package, but what have you seen regarding the importance of these classes?

Posted

Could you elaborate on this? I recently finished my micro and macro classes and did well in them but didn't really know how much they would help me in terms of applying. I know schools look at the whole package, but what have you seen regarding the importance of these classes?

Okay, allow me to elaborate. Doing well in these classes by no means gives you a automatic bid for funding. However, as you said, many programs holistically look at the whole package that is the student. GWU, Georgetown, Tufts, SAIS and others all have previous econ classes as a preferred prerequisite for applying. Most people I see getting accepted and funding usually meet the criteria.

 

I am rather saying don't overlook the importance of having it. If you do, good, shoot for GRE scores, work experience and other ways to enhance your application. My original point is that some applicants, especially in those seeking for security programs, often overlook the importance of having econ classes on the transcripts. You can still get into these schools and maybe get funding, but net meeting the prerequisite criteria reduces your chances.

Posted (edited)

I'm not sure if I'll be applying for Fall 2016 or 2017 admission. I want at least 2 years of work experience so if I apply for 2016 I'll end up with 2 years worth once it's actually time for me to move and enroll. I know this is may be early for me, but I'd appreciate any feedback and advice in the meantime!

Programs: MPP/MPA with a concentration in Social Policy. My list: UMichigan, UChicago, Columbia, UCal-Berkeley, UCLA, UTexas-Austin, UMinnesota and USC for their joint/dual degree options with a MSW. Also considering MPP programs at Brandeis and Duke.

Undergraduate Institution: University of Florida. Studied abroad for one semester at a top-ranked liberal arts university in the Netherlands.

Undergraduate Degree: BA Economics, BA Sociology. Minor in Family, Youth, Community Sciences; Certificate in Public Affairs

Undergraduate GPA: 3.61/4.00. Graduated summa cum laude.

GRE: 158V, 158 Q, 4.5 AW

Years out of Undergrad: Currently, 3 months!

Years of Work Experience: At least 2 years full-time at time of enrollment.

-Currently a research assistant at a non-profit social policy research organization in Washington, D.C.

-Since I recently relocated I would like to get involved in local volunteer work in either early education or social services.

-Other relevant experience: PPIA Fellowship at UMich in 2013. Hurray for fee waivers!

Languages: English. Always talk about refreshing my Spanish skills to conversational levels.

Quantitative: Multiple upper-level statistics and economics courses. Experience with data collection and analysis using Excel, SPSS and Stata. I plan to take a series of calculus courses at a community college since I haven't seen calc since high school.

SOP: Haven't worked on it yet, figured I'd wait to settle into my job and have more to discuss.

LORs: Two undergrad lecturers--one in the poli-sci department, one in sociology (who was my thesis faculty advisor). Third letter will be from my supervisor, a senior policy analyst.

Questions:

1. Should I bother retaking the GRE? I took it in my senior year and felt satisfied with my scores after looking up the schools' averages. I've seen much better scores reported in this thread and now I'm not too sure about my chances, or if it'll even make a drastic difference with the rest of my application.

2. Would Calculus I and II be enough for these programs, or should I also include a course in multivariate calc? This may end up deciding the 2016/2017 question for me!

Edited by RCtheSS
Posted (edited)

Hey all, 

 

hoping to apply to Harvard's JD/MPP. Already accepted in the JD program and entering this fall (we can apply for the dual degree at the end of our first year. So wondering about my competitiveness for HKS' MPP. 

 

GPA:

UG GPA 3.90 at top 5 public university (with well-known merit scholarship).

GRE score:

No GRE to date. Can apply with LSAT score (166, 93rd percentile) but I know that my LSAT score was very on the low side for HLS, so I'm wondering if it's worth taking the GRE this summer. 

 

Work experience:

1 year out of undergrad. Spent that year working with human rights rights in Latin America (my region of interest). Solid WE in undergrad -- different internship every summer abroad in my area of interest (human rights, generally speaking); internships during the year in that area, pretty significant leadership in campus organizations. Several publications, but not peer-review. Undergrad thesis in area/region of interest. Currently a summer research assistant in area of interest. 

Language skills:

English (native); Spanish (professional fluency); French (~B2 on common European scale); Arabic (low-intermediate MSA); Portuguese (beginner). 

 

Quantitative requirements:

Applying for the MPP, which has no specific quantitative requirements that I know of. My qualitative courses in UG were pretty limited (1 course in ECON -- covers micro and macro but at a more superficial level -- and one course in STAT). Will this hurt me? 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching):

Multi-national, 1 year working abroad post-grad, 3 internships abroad in UG, 1 semester study abroad, 2 month-long study abroad fellowships post-grad; extensive travel experience. 

Any thoughts re: taking the GRE? 

Also, is funding ever a possibility for someone with as limited post-grad experience as me? (i.e. only one year when most people have more than that).

 

Are you a URM? Congrats. I am in a somewhat similar position as you even though with much longer work ex. My LSAT is 165 and i was aiming for HLS but thought that it was too low.

As far as I know from other forums specifically targeted for Law/JD, something above LSAT 25%/median (170/173) is needed for good chances at HLS.

 

Can you say if anything other than your work-ex was the reason for HLS acceptance? I didn't apply because I thought my LSAT was too low for HLS. I also feel i may not be able to significantly improve my LSAT. I posted here during last year's admission cycle with my profile but did not apply due to my score.

Edited by gradjm
Posted (edited)

Hi there. I would really appreciate it if you helped me with your opinion on my application. Thank you so much,

 

Programs: MPA SIPA, MPP HKS, MPP Chicago Harris, MPP Berkeley, MPA LSE, IPS Stanford, MIB Tufts, MPA NYU

Undergraduate Institution: Top 3 university in my country (in South America)
Undergraduate Degree: Industrial Engineering, concentration in Information Technologies

Undergraduate GPA: 3.6 

GRE: 158V, 165Q, 4 AW

Toefl: 112

 

Years out of Undergrad: I graduated on december 2012, so 1 year and 8 months

Years of Work Experience: 1,5 years full-time, + 1 year part time while I finished my undergrad

Relevant Work Experience: 

1 year internship while I was finishing my undergrad, I worked at a technology multinational company as a sales consultant. Two of the projects I worked on where with the government of my country.

1,5 years working on the core business of a major airline as a commercial analyst, private sector again :(

5 years (and counting) volunteering on a nursing home in my country + 1 month volunteering for a nursing home in India

Languages: English (advanced), Spanish (native), portuguese (basic for business)
Quantitative: Advanced calculus and algebra, basic economy. 

SOP: 

Focus on how volunteering made me take the decision of leave the private business and turn to public sector.

Contrast my current job (which is very rewarding) with what I want to do after my MPP (program evaluation/policy design on my country's government)

Special mention of the work I did with my country's government while I was on my internship

Special mention to a scholarship I had during undergrad that is very service-oriented.

LORs: Letters from two of my bosses in my current job, one letter from my scholarship advisor during my college undergrad.

Questions: 

1. I am worried that my work experience is not "public" enough, that the fact that I only have professional experience in private sector will make my application poor

2. I'm worried I have very little work experience, just 1,5 years (to date) of full-time professional experience

3. I am worried I'm aiming to high on my school preferences

4. I don't have a LOR from a professor because I didn't get to know deeply any one during my undergrad (100+ students per class), I really regret that

Edited by Magnolia2
Posted

I’m from Denmark and I want to apply for a MPP/MPA at SIPA, HKS, WWS, CIPA, Wagner, Goldman, LSE, Oxford next year. I have some questions to you guys regarding the application (listed below)

 

My profile

Undergraduate institution: A Danish univsersity

Undergraduate GPA: Top 10 % (top 5 % in Micro- and Macroeconomics)

Undergraduate Major: Political Science and Government (broad program, cover courses like: International Relations, Micro- and Macroeconomics, Law, Statistics etc.)

Study Abroad: The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Summer School, Undergraduate), LSE (Summer School, Undergraduate), Sciences Po (Exchange Program one semester, ERASMUS, Graduate – GPA: 14,5/20 – equivalent to an A-)

Work Experience: 1) Translator for a Law Firm abroad (1/2 year, fulltime) 2) Junior Consultant/Student Assistant for a big Scandinavian Consultancy (1 ½ year, part time beside my undergraduate studies) 3) Voluntary Student Assistant for a large Danish NGO (1 year, – 5 hours per week beside my undergraduate studies), 4) Founder & President of a student-driven NGO (30+ voluntary students, endorsements and support from Danish CEOs, Ministers etc.) (1 year part time, besides my undergraduate studies), 5) Intern at Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the Danish Embassy in Beijing, China) (1/2 year, fulltime) 6) Elected board member for the Academic Council at my University (1 year)

GRE: to be taken

Languages:  Danish (native), English (fluent), German (very competent/fluent – I have lived and worked in Germany for a year ), French (beginner - language classes for ½ year), Chinese (beginner – language classes for 2 months)

Publications: I have a few articles published on online magazines.

 

My questions:

  1. This summer I finish my current internship and I want to spend a year working and gain more work experience. I’m thinking about applying for Student Positions at The Ministry of Finance (Denmark), The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Denmark), TA position at my university (teaching Public Policy/Administration) or Internships in IOs like EU/UN. What would be the best with my profile and my goals in a US/UK perspective?
  2. I don’t have a lot of fulltime work experience, simply because you can’t get a fulltime position in Denmark unless you have a Master-degree. Instead I have gained work experience beside my studies (which is common here in Denmark) and I’ll gain further work experience the next year. Do I still have a chance? I would appreciate if you would comment on my profile and chances.
  3. Should I mention in my SOP that my lack of fulltime work experience is due to the Danish “system” or should I ask one of my professors to mention this in his Letter of Recommendation?
  4. GRE scores: what should I aim for? Is it accepted that non-native applicants get a lower verbal/AWA-score?

 

I would really appreciate if anyone would comment on my questions. 

Hi, this might be a little late, but I'm also considering applying to the Erasmus Mundus School of Economics this year for entry in Fall 2015, and wanted to ask you about your experiences with this application.

 

Did you get admitted to this programme?

Are you currently studying it - what has been your experience?

Posted

Hello everyone,

I'm considering applying for graduate school either for spring or fall of 2015. I've taken a look at a few IR programs, but I'm really not sure what my chances are for any of them. I'm currently leaning towards an MA in International Affairs/Politics. I graduated in 2009 with a double major in political science and French. As far as relevant work experience goes I think could only truly count on my time as a visa officer at the French Consulate in Boston back in the summer of 2010, so my main concern is that I may not have enough work experience. Given my profile, what types of programs would I be competitive for and what would I need to do to improve my chances at more highly regarded institutions?



Undergraduate institution: Large public school
Undergraduate GPA: 3.49
Undergraduate Majors: Political Science, French
Study Abroad: semester in France


GRE Quantitative Score: 152 (49%)
GRE Verbal Score: 165 (96%)
GRE AW Score: 4.0 (54%)

Took it about a month ago (for the second time since 2009)

Age: 27
Years Out of Undergrad (if applicable): 5
Years of Work Experience:

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching): Studied in a French university for 5 months in 2007 and taught English in a French high school from October 2013-April 2014

Describe Relevant Work Experience:

I'm just going to list everything since graduating since I'm not sure how relevant certain jobs I've had would be:

-Sales Associate at Lowe's from January 2009 to May 2010

-Poli Sci tutor at my university during the summer of 2009

-Visa Officer at French Consulate in Boston during the summer of 2010

-Volunteered for US Senate campaign during the fall of 2012

-Academic intern at local non-profit for about six months in 2013

-Languague assistant in French high school from October 2013 to April 2014

-Sales consultant at currency exchange business from March 2011 to September 2013, then from June 2014 to present

Languages: Spanish [native], French [advanced/almost native level], German [beginner, started learning earlier this year]

 

Poli Sci Coursework:  micro, macro, IR, American politics, comparative politics, politics of the EU, political theory, US foreign policy, Cold War politics, politics and the media, and obviously many French courses

Quant: Precalculus in UG, micro and macroeconomics. Took AP Stats way back in high school (so I'm familiar with it) but don't have college credit since I didn't take the exam.

Strength of SOP: It seems that my lack of relevant work experience may make things difficult for me here.

Strength of LOR: Pretty much any of my French professors would be very good; I'd have a tougher time with my poli sci professors since it's been a few years and I haven't really kept in touch. I could likely also get a good LOR from one of the teachers I worked with while in France.


That's everything for me. I'm not too sure about my competitiveness despite having a recent MA grad friend urging me to consider getting my master's. He recommended I try applying somewhere in DC due to the networking possibilities there but I'm certainly open to other places (Boston, NYC, etc.).
So what are my chances? Should I try applying as I am?

Thanks in advance.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Programs Considering: HKS, WWS, Georgetown, Columbia, Ford, Chicago, LBJ

 

Undergraduate Institution: Midwest private school. A top Catholic institution

 

Undergraduate Major:  History, Education. Minor in Political Science

 

Undergraduate GPA: 3.7

 

Study Abroad: 2 months in South Africa

 

GRE: Verbal: 162 Quant: 162

 

Work Experience:  

Currently finishing up my Fulbright scholar in Southeast Asia

 

Languages: Thai (conversational)

 

LORs: Should be really strong. One from a political science professor and the other from a history professor of mine

 

Coursework:  Micro and Macro economics. Received A's in both classes. 

Posted

Note: I'm not sure how to edit my previous post, and I wanted to add some more information.

 

Programs Considering: HKS, WWS, Georgetown, Columbia, GW, Chicago, LBJ

 

Undergraduate Institution: Midwest private school. A top Catholic institution

 

Undergraduate Major:  History, Education. Minor in Political Science

 

Undergraduate GPA: 3.7

 

Study Abroad: 2 months in South Africa

 

GRE: Verbal: 162 Quant: 162

 

Work Experience:  

Currently finishing up a Fulbright grant in Southeast Asia (1 year grant)

Worked for Burmese Refugee Project for 6 months

Languages: Thai (conversational)

 

LORs: Should be really strong. One from a political science professor and the other from a history professor of mine

 

Coursework:  Micro and Macro economics. Received A's in both classes. Comparative politics, International Politics, and Statistics.

 

I want to focus on IR and policy development. I'd love to potentially work a FSO or even for the World Bank.

 

Concerns: My main concern is my work experience. I graduated in 2013 and have been working internationally since I graduated, but I'm not sure if it is enough to be competitive at the top schools or not. 

Posted

Schools: University of Toronto (MPP), Simon Fraser U (MPP), LSE (MPA), Sciences Po (MPA), Hertie School of Governance (MPP)

 

Career goals: Public service/TBC

 

Institution: Decent Canadian university

 

Major: Political Science

GPA: Converted to 4.0 scale, about a 3.6

GRE score: N/A - not planning to apply to any American schools or schools that require it

Work experience: Almost two years in various roles within the Canadian federal government, work with a Member of Parliament

 

Language skills: Decent French

 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching): Worked abroad for several months in Turkey

Statement of Purpose: WIP - not too worried

 

Letters of Recommendation: Still to confirm, but two from profs and one or two (depending on requirement from school) from former supervisors

 

Concern: My grades and and that my academic letter of recommendations won't be anything special

 

Thanks

 

Posted (edited)

Schools: UW Evans (MPA), USC Price (MPP), UTexas LBJ (MPA or MGPS), UChicago Harris (MPP), CMU Heinz (MSPPM), Cornell CIPA(MPA), Hertie School of Governance (MPP), IHEID (Development Studies)

 

Career goals: National or global NGOs focusing on energy/environment

 

Institution: Okay state school

 

Major: Political Science

GPA: 3.3 cumulative (poor grades highschool dual enrollement program). 3.41 at undergrad institution and 3.58 in last 60 hours

GRE score: Working on that now. Assuming somethinig like 160v/153q

Work experience: ~1 year as legislative aide in State House of Representatives of a large state. 3.5+ years in State Energy Office managing energy grants at first, doing policy analysis and program admin. for last 2 years. Also, currently a Natural Resource Leadership Institute fellow (program run by respected university)

 

Coursework:  Took Micro and Macro economics this summer and received A's in both. I have a B in college stastics from years and years ago (I don't know if AdComs would still count it). Also have several IR classes from undergrad (that was my minor).

 

Language skills: Basically just English (took French in highschool and 1 class in undergrad)

 

Overseas experience (work, study and teaching): n/a

Statement of Purpose: WIP - not too worried

 

Letters of Recommendation: One from prof. and two from current office (both executive director and direct supervisor, both will be above average)

 

Concerns: I know my GPA isn't stellar and I don't know how good the letter of recommendation my professor wrote will be because I haven't talked to him in 4+ years. I'm hoping my experience will carry me; just want to get into a decent program :(

Edited by MJA87
Posted

Programs Considering:  Indiana SPEA (MSES and MPP), Ford (MPP), UT LBJ (MPaff), UC Berkeley (MPP)

 

Career Goals: Work for the Gov or a NGO. My dream job, working on the Farm Bill, Ag and Environmental Policy, or working to green a city.

 

Undergraduate Institution: Texas Public Uni

 

Undergraduate Major:  Animal Science, Minor: Education

 

Undergraduate GPA: 3.8

 

Study Abroad: Peace Corps Zambia (2 Years)

 

GRE: No Official Test. But Practice puts me at Q;155 and V:160, I'm focusing on the Quant

 

Work Experience:  

Peace Corps

Currently teaching High School Ag

 

Languages: Chewa - Very useful in Zambia, not so useful in America = ) But I am working on my Spanish.

 

LORs: Work in Progress. My profs love me and we are still in touch, I've got a good LOR from Peace Corps that I need them to tailor a tiny bit for school

 

Coursework:  6 Hours Agriculture Economics, American Government, American Public Policy, College Statistics

 

Concerns: The GRE. I can understand the mathematical concepts, but I will invert the numbers (67 becomes 76) or 3x3 but I calculate 3+3. So I have to be extra careful on the test and triple check my work. Also, finding a safety school. Any suggestions?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Hey all, I am applying to grad school next year for Fall 2016 admission. In the meantime, though, I would love to hear any constructive feedback you all might have to strengthen my application. Thanks in advance! 

 

I am passionate about cities as innovation hubs, healthy food access in communities of color, youth civic engagement, and public-private partnerships to foster economic development in low-income neighborhoods.

 

Applying For: MPA/MPP, concentration in domestic policy/urban planning.

Schools Applying To: WWS, NYU Wagner, HKS, Penn Fels and SIPA (maybe). I will also be visiting all campuses in October/November 2014 at on-campus open houses and admissions sessions. 

 

Undergraduate Institution: Tufts University/Spelman College

Undergraduate Major: History

Undergraduate GPA: 3.56

 

GRE score: None thus far - I do pretty well on exams and have already started studying

 

Years out of undergrad: 4

Work Experience: (4 years) US Senate/presidential campaigns, presidential inaugural committee, non-profit and tech PR work. Begin my AmeriCorps VISTA service next week as a Food Policy/Wellness Advocate in three South Central LA public schools

Undergraduate Internships: Historical research program at Columbia University GSAS, US Congressional Office (Capitol Hill//Home District), JPMorgan Technology for Social Good

Significant Volunteer Experience: Watts Healthy Farmers' Market (overseeing their Market Match program, an incentivized program for low-income shoppers spending federal nutritional benefits, that matches benefits dollar-for-dollar to increase affordability of and access to fresh produce) and The Posse Foundation-Los Angeles. Past volunteer experiences include: Everybody Wins DC, Maynard Jackson Youth Foundation, Leonard Carmichael Society Tutoring Program.

 

Quantitative requirements: Heavy liberal arts undergraduate curriculum, but I do plan on taking at least two quant courses (micro/macro at the very least) at a local community college come January

Language skills: French (proficient), Spanish (elementary)

Recommendations: Very strong pool of recommenders from which to choose, not worried about that

 
Any and all constructive feedback is welcome, thank you!

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