cherchezlaghost Posted May 23, 2016 Posted May 23, 2016 Hello, I will be applying for a sociology program in the fall of 2017; however, I've been really concerned about my gpa. My undergraduate gpa is very low 2.8 and my masters gpa is a 3.6 but will increase to 3.8 by graduation. I am interested in the following schools: UC Santa Barbara UC Davis UC Irvine Columbia CUNY Rutgers George Mason University/American University (last option) I have several publications and conference presentations. I've been listed in a top journal and have outstanding letters of recommendation. Do you think the gpa will be a huge impediment to my getting it in?
krispykreme Posted May 25, 2016 Posted May 25, 2016 not usually but probably at 2.8... were you studying the hard sciences? cherchezlaghost 1
COGSCI Posted May 25, 2016 Posted May 25, 2016 Your grad GPA is strong so the deciding factor would be your GRE score and research fit. You probably won't get into your top 3, but I think you will get some offers for sure because you have publications. Good luck! cherchezlaghost 1
cherchezlaghost Posted June 2, 2016 Author Posted June 2, 2016 thanks!! @cogsci and @krispykreme It was not a hard science.
mockingjay634 Posted June 10, 2016 Posted June 10, 2016 I had a similar situation as you and managed to get full funding from the schools I applied to.
Haphazardsoc Posted July 11, 2016 Posted July 11, 2016 You should address this issue directly in your statement. You might also ask your letter writers to address your MA GPA. It's not obvious that a 3.6 is "high" in a graduate program, since a B+ is the lowest grade some departments give.
historicallinguist Posted July 22, 2016 Posted July 22, 2016 On July 11, 2016 at 6:42 PM, Haphazardsoc said: You should address this issue directly in your statement. You might also ask your letter writers to address your MA GPA. It's not obvious that a 3.6 is "high" in a graduate program, since a B+ is the lowest grade some departments give. I am second to this. 3.6 is around the threshold for being able to be considered for admission, and it is by no means a high GPA.
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