ajak568 Posted April 4, 2015 Posted April 4, 2015 Regtech5, when you mention 'PC', do you mean Peace Corps? I'm a little confused about your application timeline (you're currently finishing up AmeriCorps but considering going into the Peace Corps?), but either way, I think assuming focused SoPs and good recommendations, your application could be super solid if you could just get up the GRE scores a little bit. You may still get into some good schools, who knows?! At the same time, you'd stand a really good chance at getting some funding if (along with the solid SoPs/recommendations I mentioned) if you got your GRE scores up to at least high 150s/low 160s for verbal and quant. Of course, there are no hard and fast rules with respect to GRE scores and you may well get funding with your current scores, but at this point, if there's any one thing I would be doing to make my application competitive, it'd be studying to retake the GRE since you have time! Pickering and Rangel are great opportunities to fund your education at get you a great job after graduating. At the same time, they don't always cover 100% of the cost to go to grad school, so it's definitely worth putting the effort into your grad school applications to try and get funding from the schools themselves (and a lot of schools DO have funding to give out to applicants who are committed to public service)! Best of luck with your app process, and let me know if there's anything I can do to help.
Museum2301 Posted April 4, 2015 Posted April 4, 2015 Thanks ajak568! Yes, I meant Peace Corps for PC. I will finish AmeriCorps sometime between May-June 2016 and I will apply to grad schools for Fall 2016 admission unless I can't raise my GRE scores high enough that I think I can be competitive for Rangel, Pickering, and admission. If I can't raise the scores high enough, I will serve in the Peace Corps for 1 term of service and apply to grad schools for Fall 2018 admission. Congrats on Rangel, and good luck at WWS. I will let you know if I have any more questions on Rangel, Pickering, or grad apps.
ZebraFinch Posted April 4, 2015 Posted April 4, 2015 (edited) Thanks ajak568! Yes, I meant Peace Corps for PC. I will finish AmeriCorps sometime between May-June 2016 and I will apply to grad schools for Fall 2016 admission unless I can't raise my GRE scores high enough that I think I can be competitive for Rangel, Pickering, and admission. If I can't raise the scores high enough, I will serve in the Peace Corps for 1 term of service and apply to grad schools for Fall 2018 admission. Congrats on Rangel, and good luck at WWS. I will let you know if I have any more questions on Rangel, Pickering, or grad apps. Hey, I did similarly on the GRE and have been selected as a finalist for Pickering. I think given your experiences, you're still a competitive candidate for the fellowships! Edited April 4, 2015 by ZebraFinch
Museum2301 Posted April 5, 2015 Posted April 5, 2015 Thanks for the input ZebraFinch. I'll strongly consider applying next year then for schools and the FSO fellowships!
ZebraFinch Posted April 5, 2015 Posted April 5, 2015 Thanks for the input ZebraFinch. I'll strongly consider applying next year then for schools and the FSO fellowships! You still have time to re-take it, so I'd re-take at least for the peace of mind aspect, but if the scores don't improve by a lot, I wouldn't lose all hope
ZebraFinch Posted April 5, 2015 Posted April 5, 2015 (edited) EDIT: double post Edited April 5, 2015 by ZebraFinch
crisisdiplomacy Posted April 5, 2015 Posted April 5, 2015 Hi Everyone, 1st time poster here. Schools Applying To: Columbia SIPA (MPA), Penn Fels, Cornell [CIPA], Michigan Ford, Texas LBJ (MPAff), Pitt GSPIA (MPA) Considering Also Applying To: Chicago Harris, CMU Heinz, NYU Wagner UG Institution: University of Southern California Years Out of UG: 3 or 5 UG GPA: 3.5 Undergraduate Focuses: International Business (major), East Asian Area Studies (minor) Quantitative coursework: Calc 1: A- Calc 2: A- Intro Stat 1: B Intro Stat 2: A Stat and Prob (Math dept): A Intermed Stat for Business: A Intro Macroecon (Honors): A Intro Microecon (Honors): A Intermed Macroecon: A- Intermed Microecon: A Study Abroad: semester in Singapore, semester in South Korea, semester in Hong Kong Relevant Student Activities: A. Host for exchange students (2 semesters) B. Host for international students in USC business case competition (1 semester) C. Event staff at Asia/Pacific Business Outlook Conference (1 semester) D. Member of 2 Asian cultural organizations (1 semester) GRE (scores will expire and I will retake): Q: 149 V: 151 AW: 4.0 Post-Grad Work Experience: A. Post-grad marketing internship for fruit distribution company in Jakarta (2 months) B. Clerical/customer service position in small healthcare services company (13 months) C. AmeriCorps VISTA position in higher ed - youth development or community economic development (12 months - currently applying) D. [Possible] Peace Corps (1 term: 27 months - will not have if I can get a Rangel or Pickering Fellowship if applying after 1 year in AmeriCorps) Foreign language skills: Korean - elementary proficiency SoP: About my desire to become a FSO-Public Diplomacy (Cultural or Public Affairs Officer) and how I would also consider working for UNESCO afterward for its culture or information programs. I am applying for Rangel and Pickering fellowships (I am a 1st generation college grad from a low-income background) LoR: Will be from a combination of professors from USC/study abroad programs and professionals from AmeriCorps/Peace Corps work (getting enough letters will not be an issue when applying but I cannot assess strength for all recommenders) If I decide to apply after 1 year of AmeriCorps, what programs do you think I could be competitive for? I do not know what my new GRE scores will be, but I always score terribly on standardized tests, regardless of preparation or tutoring. I plan to retaking the GRE after 6 months preparation and again after 6 months - 1 year more preparation if I don't have the scores to apply to a good program before I would plan to start PC. I want to start a Foreign Service career ASAP, so I would rather start grad school in the fall in 1 year than in 3 after PC, and my goal is to get into as good of a brand name school with as little debt as possible, in case I have the chance to work for UNESCO in the future and decide to leave the FS for IGO work. I will not be going to grad school without a Rangel or Pickering Fellowship to guarantee me a FSO job after graduation because I can't justify a master's degree and the cost otherwise, for me personally. Also, if I end up applying after PC, what programs do you think I could be competitive for with the 2 years added relevant work experience? Any input on possible funding possibilities from individual schools would useful as well. I would appreciate any input. Thanks! Your profile looks really strong and competitive. Yeah could retake the GRE once more but I honestly think you'd be fine applying with the scores you have and not doing PC! You have a strong quant background and international experience. Good luck!
loveglove Posted April 6, 2015 Posted April 6, 2015 (edited) Hello - planning to apply this fall. Feedback appreciated. Program: MPP/MPA with IR/Dev focus/IR Masters with Dev focus Schools being considered: SFS, SAIS, SIPA, HKS, WWS, Fletcher (...I know) Major: Government GPA: over 3.4, higher in major, upward trend, graduated with honorable mention GRE: 160/160/5.0, don't want to retake UG school: Top 5 LAC Years since UG: 4 Work experience: 1 year consulting (not the fancy type), 2 years (non-English) teaching at a university in China through a fellowship, 18+ months worth of relevant internships (think tanks and NGOs mostly, some big names, some lesser-known ones), have published over 10 articles directly and indirectly related to my field. Lots of experience across continents and in various countries. Coursework: minor in economics so I have all the bases covered, calculus and algebra, all around the B range Language: fluent in 3 UN languages, advanced Mandarin. I play with duolingo and rosetta stone to learn the "less useful" languages for fun. SoP: non-existent as of now, should be able to figure something out. LoR: not 100% decided yet, but should be 2 recent supervisors who can speak to my research interests and commitment to public service, 1 college prof in my field. Should be strong Other: I'm a minority? Edited April 6, 2015 by meowthtsetung
ajak568 Posted April 7, 2015 Posted April 7, 2015 Meowthtsetung, if you can pull out a rock solid Statement of Purpose and articulate what you're looking for in a graduate program, how the programs to which you're applying fit into your personal and professional goals and why you would be a good candidate for the position--I think your applications will be competitive at all of those schools. You never know until decisions come back (seriously, it's a little bit of a crapshoot), but I think you've got a shot! Definitely work on those SoPs to give yourself the best shot. loveglove 1
loveglove Posted April 8, 2015 Posted April 8, 2015 Thanks, ajak! As a long time lurker, I like that this forum is slowly moving away from the GPA/GRE score purists. loveglove and it's an IR world 2
quietman Posted April 8, 2015 Posted April 8, 2015 (edited) Program: MPP/MPA Schools being considered: Harvard, Princeton, Berkeley, NYU, etc. Major: Poli Sci GPA: 4.0. Awards for being the top student in a course and within my area of study. GRE score: None yet (see first question below) Years since undergrad: 2.5 when the program would startWork experience: Founder of a succesful but small and local non-profit; policy analyst for a local political party; legal researcher for a law firm; cross-cultural advisor at a university; creater of a succesful website which gives writing advice; English teacher to ESL students; manager of marketing at a company in which I helped develop a program later used by a major sports team. Coursework: Mainly Poli Sci and Psych. No Economics or Math courses. Language skills: I can read basic French and Dutch but speak them quite poorly. Statement of Purpose: Focusing on interest in policy analysis, how that relates to what I've done, and what I'd like to do in the future (i.e. policy analysis/development/implementation for the government) Letters of Recommendation: Two professors whose courses I excelled in and one employer. Concerns: Minimal quantitative/econ-related coursework, no time abroad, and lacking in extensive research aside from what is typically done in undergrad. I have a few questions: 1. What type of GRE scores would give me a realistic chance at HKS (my first choice) and other top schools? I haven't taken the GRE but I scored in the 99th percentile on the LSAT (was admitted to HLS, Columbia, NYU, and a few others for law but decided it wasn't for me) and based on my GRE studying I feel I'll be able to obtain farily good scores (though probably not 99th percentile and I suspect not higher than mid 90s on quant). 2. How badly will my lack of quantative experience and time abroad hurt my chances? 3. What stand out to you as the biggest drawbacks with my application? Thank you! Edited April 8, 2015 by quietman
loveglove Posted April 8, 2015 Posted April 8, 2015 1. quietman, unless you bomb the GRE I think you should have a pretty decent chance. With a 99% in the LSAT you should be able to do well in the reading comprehension and writing, and quant is actually pretty low for public policy degrees (GRE scores in general are a bit low compared to other programs since the focus is more on experience.) Usually the "average" scores for these programs are around 162-166 for verbal, and 157-162 for math. 2. If you're applying to MPPs and not IR degrees, then time abroad isn't as valuable unless your goal is to work in an area that would require international expertise, so it shouldn't destroy your chances. As for quantitative experience, I would make up for it as much as you can by taking online courses, especially micro/macro. Studying for the GRE should help you refresh the math basics. 3. There is no way to say what your biggest drawback is without knowing why you want to get an MPP in addition to your JD and what you want to focus on more specifically. How you articulate what you want to do specifically, how your past experience supports what you want to do, and how the program will help you do it will either make or break your application. quietman and loveglove 2
quietman Posted April 10, 2015 Posted April 10, 2015 This is the 'Government' section of the forum, so you should probably try posting that elsewhere stuk. loveglove and stukageschwader 2
CakeTea Posted April 11, 2015 Posted April 11, 2015 (edited) Hi, Thanks for offering your kind advice to potential applicants. I am an international student and would appreciate your view on my application as I know little about US schools and admissions. Program: MPP/MPA Schools being considered: SAIS, Goldman, Ford, Sanford, CMU Heinz, Price Major: BA Economics with minor in Modern Languages from a public uni in Europe GPA: 3.4 GRE score: V:162, Q:164, AWA: 4.5 Years since undergrad: 3.5 when the program would commenceWork experience: 3 year employment as Analyst with municipality, 1 year in sustainability planning and two years in local economic development. Two summer internships in Germany and Asia during my studies. Coursework: Macro, micro, international econ, stats, calculus and language courses. I got mostly Bs. Language skills: Fluent German, intermediate French and Chinese International experience: Study Year Abroad in Germany, two summer internships abroad Statement of Purpose: My interests are: Economic Development, Innovation Policy, Labor, Network Economics and Spatial Planning. I wish to improve my analytical skills (Stata, R), experience collaborative learning environment and apply my skills on a consulting project. The US format of government affairs schools would offer a transformational professional and educational experience compared to lecture/dissertation based format in Europe. I wish to build on my prior work and transition to policy analysis with government’s Commerce Department or Economic Development Agency. I have personal reasons as I come from an underdeveloped region with job and population loss as a result of structural problems. Letters of Recommendation: Two professors and a supervisor Other: Party member & volunteer in regional and national election campaigns (canvassing, organising events at local communities and working phone bank). Volunteer for food bank. Concerns: Mundane profile (lack of top US education, awards or big name employment such as the UN), average grades, basic research skills, iffy funding, will adcom consider my non US qualifications as adequate? 1. Am I competitive for my target schools and any other schools that would also fit well with my focus? 2. Will my precarious funding raise red flags as I cannot pay full tuition? I have modest savings from employment after paying my student loan, but my country does not offer FAFSA and bank’s loan is capped. 3. How does Adcom decide on merit based scholarship? Edited April 11, 2015 by CakeTea
quietman Posted April 11, 2015 Posted April 11, 2015 Oh, and a belated thanks to meowthtsetung for the response! I wish I could help out the others but I don't know enough about admissions yet. loveglove 1
Guest SIPA_MPA18 Posted April 12, 2015 Posted April 12, 2015 (edited) Hi everyone...I've enjoyed reading about everyone's backgrounds and opinions of different schools over the past admissions cycle. I'm taking your advice and starting the process early so I'd like to get your thoughts about my profile and chances to get into the schools below. Thanks in advance! Schools being considered: Duke Sanford, Columbia SIPA, Georgetown McCourt, GW Trachtenberg Undergrad Institution: Top 20 public university in the US Major: Political Science GPA: Overall GPA: 3.45; Major GPA 3.1 Graduate Work: Professional online program in Business and Organizational Security (haven't completed final thesis course), 3.8 GPA thus far. GRE: 156V, 154Q, 4.5 AW Years since undergrad: 8 (at time of admission) Work experience since graduation: I've been on Active Duty in the Army since I graduated but will be getting out before school starts. I'm an officer, with a combat deployment to Iraq and humanitarian deployments to Indonesia and a South Pacific developing nation. Deployments focused on stability operations, more specifically relationship building between US, host-nation military/govt and civilians as a deterrent to hostile influence; analysis of basic services provided by host-nation government in relation to overall stability; disaster response relationships between host-nation governments, NGOs/IGOs and civilians. Coursework: Intro to Macroeconomics; Statistics Language skills: Basic proficiency in Mandarin, Spanish; Took 3 semesters of Italian in college. SOP: Insert cliche "It's going to be strong" statement here. But really, I want to focus on how my military and leadership experience has impacted my analytical abilities and subsequent views of policy development. I don't have a lot of formal quantitative analytical training but instead take a pragmatic, effects-based approach to the world. But that's exactly why I'd like to have some quant training versus attending a MPA/Management/Leadership program of study. I'm going to look at specific programs at each school and tailor it to them as best as I can. Programs that focus on the Practicum/Capstone projects for real-world clients are a huge plus for me. LORs: Will likely get 2 from past supervisors and maybe a third from an old professor that I'm FB friends with (not in the Policy field)...I didn't maintain many relationships with instructors during Undergrad. Anyone have tips on reaching out to old professors who don't remember who you are? Could also get one from a former co-worker/subordinate who is much older and experienced than me, hopefully to highlight leadership and competency. Concerns: Mediocre GRE scores and undergrad GPA; I'm hoping my work experience will make up for that. As far as policy goes, I'm fairly undecided in a specialization at the moment, but I've got a few months to decide. I've always been more of a generalist and enjoy jumping around between different areas, though I feel that might come back to haunt me if I don't find a specific path to take. I do like to explore the more uncommon links between different policy areas and security policy. Like many, I put a lot of pressure on myself and probably undervalue my experience. My significant work experience in the Army has touched everything from operations and intelligence to human resources and logistics. I have a lot of opinions on things but would like to improve my analytical skills to argue those opinions. Edited April 12, 2015 by SIPA_MPA18
bailey24 Posted April 12, 2015 Posted April 12, 2015 Hi Everyone, I will be applying to MPP/ JD joint degree programs for 2016-2017. (T14, Vanderbilt, and the ivies) I am currently a Teach for America corps member, and I am trying to decide between two fellowship opportunities for next year. I am curious about the fellowships impact on admissions decisions and any information you have on how well they prepare candidates for success in graduate school. The options I am looking at include the CBYX (Congress Bundestag Youth Exchange for Young Professionals) and the Fulbright ETA in Germany. With the CBYX program I would have a semester of public policy classes and an internship with a leading researcher on educational initiatives to combat racism and right-wing extremism at the Center for Applied politics. (A think tank affiliated with the University of Munich) I am interested in the intersection of education, law and policy, and each of these programs would provide me with hands-on experience with both sectors, in addition to exposure to how the two work together. Also, I can't defer either program, and I have hit the age cap for CBYX after this year. I know the Fulbright name carries a lot of weight, but that the English Teaching Assistantship is not exactly viewed like a research grant. I could also reapply for the research later. I'd love to hear your thoughts! Thanks in advance!
Fizzy_wizzy Posted April 13, 2015 Posted April 13, 2015 Hello everyone! This is my first post, would really appreciate feedback as I am at a lost of what to do. I had just decided to not go for an MBA and pursue what I really like- International Relations! I am planning to apply this year. Program: MIA Schools considered: SAIS (nanjing and also the regular program), Fletcher, UCSD, SFS, SIPA, and still looking at others as well Major: Journalism and Mass Comm with focus in PR. GPA: 3.90 - Outstanding undergrad of the year, top 10% GRE: 150v/147q/4.0w, I took the GRE twice my first score was 152/145/3.5. I just can't seem to get a good score and I am getting depressed over my scores. I don't think I will take it again. Thoughts? Undergrad school: Arizona state, J-Program is top 10 in nation Years since UG: 1.5 years Work experience: 1.5 years in Tech blog site doing community outreach/ PR, created marketing campaign for city government arts commission in Arizona ( 5mth duration), 9 months intern at Film studio PR firm with big clients like Disney/Universal, have published articles- mostly tech related Coursework: minor in special event management, cert in international business -did all required econs. Only took up to college algebra. Language: fluent Mandarin, Taiwanese. Can read Japanese, understand most Korean. SoP: Dreading it. LoR: My supervisor from tech blog site who is pretty big in the tech community, probably PR campaigns professor, not sure who else is good Other: I'm international, but stayed in US for most of my life. Minority as well Really appreciate feedback! Thanks in advance!
crisisdiplomacy Posted April 13, 2015 Posted April 13, 2015 Hello everyone! This is my first post, would really appreciate feedback as I am at a lost of what to do. I had just decided to not go for an MBA and pursue what I really like- International Relations! I am planning to apply this year. Program: MIA Schools considered: SAIS (nanjing and also the regular program), Fletcher, UCSD, SFS, SIPA, and still looking at others as well Major: Journalism and Mass Comm with focus in PR. GPA: 3.90 - Outstanding undergrad of the year, top 10% GRE: 150v/147q/4.0w, I took the GRE twice my first score was 152/145/3.5. I just can't seem to get a good score and I am getting depressed over my scores. I don't think I will take it again. Thoughts? Undergrad school: Arizona state, J-Program is top 10 in nation Years since UG: 1.5 years Work experience: 1.5 years in Tech blog site doing community outreach/ PR, created marketing campaign for city government arts commission in Arizona ( 5mth duration), 9 months intern at Film studio PR firm with big clients like Disney/Universal, have published articles- mostly tech related Coursework: minor in special event management, cert in international business -did all required econs. Only took up to college algebra. Language: fluent Mandarin, Taiwanese. Can read Japanese, understand most Korean. SoP: Dreading it. LoR: My supervisor from tech blog site who is pretty big in the tech community, probably PR campaigns professor, not sure who else is good Other: I'm international, but stayed in US for most of my life. Minority as well Really appreciate feedback! Thanks in advance! Do you have any international experiences, even as an international student in the U.S.? Also, don't freak out so much about your GRE scores. It's really a holistic approach. This forum makes it seem like you need a perfect scores on the GRE to get into any top program, but it's not true. You should try to get your scores up but don't kill yourself over it. It's good that you've dabbled in a lot of strategic languages and that you have the business certificate, which means you'll be able to handle the quant coursework. What are your goals after completing the MIA degree? ZebraFinch 1
Fizzy_wizzy Posted April 14, 2015 Posted April 14, 2015 Do you have any international experiences, even as an international student in the U.S.? Also, don't freak out so much about your GRE scores. It's really a holistic approach. This forum makes it seem like you need a perfect scores on the GRE to get into any top program, but it's not true. You should try to get your scores up but don't kill yourself over it. It's good that you've dabbled in a lot of strategic languages and that you have the business certificate, which means you'll be able to handle the quant coursework. What are your goals after completing the MIA degree? Sadly I don't have any international experiences, but I am now in Singapore planning to take on a job that hopefully can help me. Do you have any suggestions for me while I prepare for my applications this year? Will volunteering help? I would like to work for an NGO, UN or as a FSO. I just love working with people with different cultures and sadly because I am international I cannot join the Peace Corps or Teach for America
KenBesonders Posted April 14, 2015 Posted April 14, 2015 Program: MIA Schools considered: SAIS, Maxwell, SIPA, Georgetown, American SIS, GWU Elliott, CEU SPP and Pitt GSPIA Major: International Studies/Political Science GPA: 3.00 (3.4 in major) GRE: NA, figuring what score I could need to help offset GPA. Undergrad school: Large Midwest School Years since UG: 2.5 years by the time I apply Work experience: 0.5 years doing a disarmament internship for UN NGO at UN HQ, 0.5 years marketing, 0.5 years writing in advocacy NGO, two summer research projects with professors, currently working remotely doing military analysis for a NGO Coursework: Statistics, want to re-enroll next year to take econ. Language: Intermediate German and Spanish SoP: I know everyone says their's are "great" but I plan on spending this summer writing them out and tailoring my focuses in each program. LoR: One from my undergrad IS director, one from a professor I know well and one from my former supervisor at my UN internship Other: I did well in a student public policy competition I entered (Went up against students from Ivy League Schools), so that should be a good boost. Heavily involved with Model UN at my University while an undergrad. Currently a volunteer with a few different disarmament organizations that I help remotely. I staff around three Model UN conferences as well and hold senior rolls in each. My main question is, what type of GRE scores do you think I should aim for? I believe I have a strong work, volunteer and research background so I want to try to really develop good SOP so I can be considered for funding. I know my GPA is a set-back so what GRE scores could maybe help offset that?
interdisciplinaryangst Posted April 25, 2015 Posted April 25, 2015 Your stats are quite similar to mine. Did you apply for this cycle or are you applying next cycle? I can only speak of LSE but from what I have seen they don't put too much emphasis on work experience so as long as you have good grades (which you do) in a relevant field you should be good. I think Oxford might be a bit more rigid and want GPAs above 3.8 but you are very close so with the right letters of rec and personal statement, you can definitely get in!! If you did apply this cycle, did you hear back from any schools? Best of luck to you! I got into Columbia's Human Rights Studies program and actually decided to pull my Oxford app (thinking a policy degree may be best for after an MA). Still deciding whether to accept. Best of luck to you too! Where did you apply?
DehJayster Posted May 12, 2015 Posted May 12, 2015 (edited) Hi everyone! I'm planning on applying to several China studies/security studies programs in the Washington DC area. I'm a rising senior in college and have yet to take the GRE, but I was wondering if you think my academic experiences/work experiences are on track. Thanks so much! Schools: Georgetown SSP (concentration in military operations), SAIS (Dual Concentration in China Studies and Security Studies), Elliot, SIS. Are there more schools that you would recommend looking at for China Studies and Strategic Studies? Undergraduate institution: Top 40 Undergraduate Major: Government, Hispanic Studies minor Undergraduate GPA: 3.77 overall, 3.89 in Government GRE: Took a practice test. 160 V, 160 Q Years Out of Undergrad: 0 years Years of Work Experience: 2 years Describe Relevant Work Experience: Internship - US Overseas Private Investment Corporation: 3 months (extensive economic analysis and quantitative work) Teaching English in Taiwan: 5 months State Department Virtual Internship: 10 months Internship - US government agency A: 3 months Internship - US government agency B: 5 months Research Volunteer - Air Combat Command/IA: 5 months (brainstormed ideas on how to improve USAF RAS/PAS officer training programs, presented my findings orally to more than 10 USAF senior officials and drafted a policy brief regarding my recommendations) College Student Assembly: 2.5 years (promote town town relations, speak in front of the city council to advocate for student rights and housing reforms, event planning and management) Internship - State Legislature: 2 months Internship - US Senate: 3 months Languages: English: Native Mandarin Chinese: Functionally Native (can read simplified and traditional) Spanish: Full Professional Proficiency French: Intermediate Taiwanese Hokkien: Limited Quant: Took several AP courses in high school, received As and high Bs on all of them. 5s on AP exams in Statistics, Calculus, and Macroecon. College coursework: Economics and National Security (A) Introduction to Microecon (B+) Intermediate Macroecon ( B ) Awards: NSEP Boren Scholarship Member, US National Language Service Corps Other: Born in China First generation immigrant and naturalized US citizen SOP: Focused on how my parents' activism at Tiananmen Square inspired me to pursue a career in US China relations and how I became interested in military analysis during my internships with the US government and study abroad experiences in Taiwan. My research interests mostly have to do with Chinese military strategies and the People's Liberation Army. LOR: 1 from a senior Foreign Service Officer who has served in China, 1 from a prominent, retired intelligence officer who is also a professor at my school, 1 from an international relations professor at my school who knows me really well. Questions: - Do you think I have a shot at Georgetown's security studies program right out of undergrad? - Are there any other great China studies programs that you would recommend applying to? Edited May 12, 2015 by DehJayster ReinventOneself 1
chocolatecheesecake Posted May 15, 2015 Posted May 15, 2015 Hi everyone! I'm planning on applying to several China studies/security studies programs in the Washington DC area. I'm a rising senior in college and have yet to take the GRE, but I was wondering if you think my academic experiences/work experiences are on track. Thanks so much! Questions: - Do you think I have a shot at Georgetown's security studies program right out of undergrad? - Are there any other great China studies programs that you would recommend applying to? Your academic and internship experiences seem very focused and on track. You obviously have a strong focus and know exactly what you want to study, which is great. To me, I think the question now is what you will get out of attending graduate school versus going into full-time work after undergrad. I think at this stage, there's not much you can get out of graduate school that you can't get before you graduate. In other words, since you have another year of school left, you can take some electives in policy, perhaps statistics, and defense/military studies and East Asian studies. You can get a taste of work experience from doing many internships, as you have, but it's not a substitute for full-time work. Even though you have a specific idea of what you want to study, I would still suggest you get a few years of work experience, figure out what exact sort of field you want to work in, and understand what it's like to do that work with a long time horizon, so you can know whether you want to commit to it for 10 or 15 years as a career. For example, you could end up going into advocacy or lobbying with your interests, or go the research and think tank route, or become an academic, or go into consulting, or go Foreign Service, etc. etc., but work experience can best tell you which route to go (or not go). manutdftw 1
rsmcdevitt Posted May 27, 2015 Posted May 27, 2015 My first question is regarding GRE scores. I took it twice and scored pretty similarly. I was wondering if anyone had insight as to if one score looks better than the other or if the difference does not amount to much. Thanks. First Test: 162Q, 156V, 4 AW Second Test: 159Q, 161V, 4.5 AW Still very early on in my process but figured I would post my "am I competitive" since I am on here. Program: MPA Schools considered: Princeton WWS, HKS, Georgetown, others TBD Major: Human Resource Management (I know, very random) from Rutgers GPA: 3.8 (Good GPA, very easy major) GRE: Please see questions above First Test: 162Q, 156V, 4AW Second test: 159Q, 161V, 4.5AW Undergrad school: Rutgers Years since UG: 2 as of today Work experience: 2 years working for a Congressman. Worked in district managing his community affairs. Deputy campaign manager on his reelection campaign. Moved to DC to work for him last month Coursework: My biggest concern. I took Stats 101, Micro, and standard calc, but it wasn't required for my major so I did not take many classes Language: Very basic Spanish, trying to learn more (just bought Rosetta Stone) SoP: TBD LoR: My boss, a US Congressman. I am all set with other ones but academic one may be a challenge Other: I am on my local planning board and a mentor in Big Brothers Big Sisters rsmcdevitt 1
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