book2readme Posted December 9, 2016 Posted December 9, 2016 I'm applying to Johns Hopkins, Northwestern University, Mt Sinai, Baylor College of Medicine and UC Davis. I currently have a horrible GRE score. I did not have a chance to study for it (collectively a week), but I had to apply this cycle given the fact that I'm in a research program that requires that I apply. I wanted to apply for MSTP programs next year, but my program advisor told me that I had to apply this year in order to receive funding until July of next year, so I took the GRE just in time for them to be received at the schools I'm applying to: V 150 Q 144 A 3.0 Do I have a chance? Any advice or support is appreciated. Thanks EDUCATION 08/2006 - 05/2008 Tuskegee University (Tuskegee, Alabama ) GPA: 3.89 Major: Biology and Nutritional Science 08/2008 - 12/2012 Auburn University (Auburn, Alabama) BS in Biomedical Sciences, BA in Spanish GPA: 3.43 Honors Thesis (2012): Immobilized transition metal complexes as macromolecular catalysts. ACHIEVEMENTS 2013 - 2014 U.S. Fulbright Scholar Program, Chemistry (Barcelona, Spain) 2015 - Present Hopkins PREP Scholar, NIH-funded Post-baccalaureate Research Education Program, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. AWARDS 2008 Bill Ellard Memorial Endowed Scholarship, Auburn University 2008 Thomas G. Jones Scholarship, Auburn University 2010 American Chemical Society’s Regional Conference Travel Grant 2010 Dean’s Research Award for Undergraduates, Auburn University 2011-2012 COSAM Undergraduate Research Fellowship, Auburn University PUBLICATIONS 2010 Gichinga MG, Striegler S*, Dunaway NA and Barnett JD, Miniemulsion polymers as solid support for transition metal catalysts, Polymer 2010, 51, 606-615. Striegler S,* Dunaway NA, Gichinga MG, Barnett JD and Nelson AG, Evaluating binuclear copper(II) complexes for glycoside hydrolysis, Inorg. Chem. 2010, 49, 2639- 2648. 2012 Dunaway NA, Barnett JD and Striegler S*, Glycoside hydrolysis with sugar-templated microgel catalysts, ACS Catalysis 2012, 2, 50-55. Barnett JD, and Striegler S*, Tuning templated microgel catalysts for selective glycoside hydrolysis, Topics in Catalysis 2012, 55(7) , 460-465. 2014 Fan QH, Striegler S*, Langston RG and Barnett JD, Evaluating N-benzylgalactonoamidines as putative transition state analogs for β-galactoside hydrolysis, Org. Biomol. Chem. 2014, 12(17) 2792-2800 2016 Korangath P, Barnett JD, et al., Nanoparticles and their targeting: a study in preclinical models of HER+ breast cancer, (manuscript in preparation) RESEARCH EXPERIENCE: 05/2008 - 07/2008 Undergraduate Molecular Biology & Immunology Researcher (UNT Health Science Center) Research Topic: Abundant expression of novel gene C17orf37 in prostate cancer 2009 - 2012 Undergraduate Inorganic Chemistry Researcher (Auburn University) Topic: Analysis of transition metal complexes as macromolecular catalysts 02/2013 - 08/2013 Chemistry Research Associate (University of Arkansas: Fayetteville) Topic: Preparation and evaluation of polymer matrices for asymmetric catalysis 09/2013 - 08/2014 Fulbright Scholar (University of Barcelona) Topic: Synthesis and characterization of photoactivatable DNA-cleaving copper complexes 07/2015 - Present PREP Scholar (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) Topic: Effects of magnetic nanoparticle-mediated hyperthermia on DNA damage repair pathways in colorectal cancer cells POSTERS & PRESENTATIONS 7/24/2008 Barnett JD. Novel gene C17orf37 is abundantly expressed in prostate cancer: a prospective biomarker. Poster; Univ. North Texas Health Science Center (Fort Worth, TX) 02/19/2010 Dunaway NA, Barnett JD and Striegler S. Carbohydrate recognition by binuclear platinum complexes. Poster; Auburn University (Dept. Chemistry and Biochemistry) 12/3/2010 Barnett JD, Alonso NA, and Striegler S. Sugar discrimination by binuclear copper(II) complexes. Poster. 66th Southwest and 62nd Southeastern Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society. (New Orleans, LA) 03/30/2012 Barnett JD and Striegler S. Transition metal complexes as macromolecular catalysts. Poster. 26th National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) (Ogden,UT) 10/22/2015 Barnett JD. Effects of nanoparticles and nanoparticle-Induced hyperthermia on DNA Signaling Pathways in human colorectal cancer cells. Poster. Dept. Molecular Radiation Sciences, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (Baltimore MD). 04/13/2016 Barnett JD, Sharma A, Bunz F and Ivkov R. Effects of magnetic nanoparticle-induced hyperthermia on DNA damage signaling. Oral presentation. 2016 Int’l Congress of Hyperthermic Oncology (New Orleans, LA)
hkcool Posted December 11, 2016 Posted December 11, 2016 Your research experience on paper is pretty incredible, and getting the Fulbright is no joke either. Your GRE scores are obviously not representative of your ability as a whole, especially given the circumstances you mentioned. Is it possible one of your rec letter writers is in academia and can attest to the fact that your GRE score is not representative of your academic ability? They could mention the circumstances that led to the low score too (last minute test-taking, etc.), if they're willing. I know you can use your essays to mention outstanding circumstances, but I'm not sure that's the appropriate place to bring this up...perhaps someone else has a better answer.
DBear Posted December 13, 2016 Posted December 13, 2016 If you apply to programs that use GRE as an initial filter, sad to say that you may not make the cutline. If you get past that initial screen, though, you have a great list of credentials so a good SOP and letters of recommendation could offset the GRE scores.Hopefully the schools you listed don't filter you out... MathToEconomics and book2readme 2
haughtysauce007 Posted December 16, 2016 Posted December 16, 2016 Interesting mix of schools - how did you decide which to apply for? I have GRE scores similar to yours but got a perfect on the analytical writing portion. I've applied to about 15 programs so far and counting. Two days ago I got invited to an interview for a PhD program at Johns Hopkins in science. I would encourage you to apply to a broad range of schools, think about the fact that if you do the PhD then MD it will probably be the same amount of time. I am doing the PhD (4 years) then MD (choosing a 3 year from PhD to MD program). Most MSTP programs only accept like 10 people and on top of that take 8-9 years anyway with Harvard being like 10 years. My advice is to apply to 10-20 schools (including top programs), get letters of recommendation commenting on research. Talk about your research in SOP and have a clear focus on what you want to focus on (for me it was cancer). I did Fulbright and was a finalist for the Rhodes scholarship. Ultimately I think what helped me was choosing 4 different departments to consider me on the JH application, clearly highlighting my awards, emailing a few professors for info, and just submitting everything on time. I also applied for broad range, so I'd recommend also doing multiple programs at one school (for example you could apply to Biomed and Immun at Harvard vs. just Biomed sciences). Basically you can still get into a top school, but you need to broaden your range so you don't end up in piles that reject just based on score alone (this may even differ from department to department at the same school!).
haughtysauce007 Posted December 16, 2016 Posted December 16, 2016 Also, contact each school to request a fee waiver - they are easy to get.
jeanetics17 Posted December 16, 2016 Posted December 16, 2016 Yeah, theyre not great (maybe try it again), but the GRE is not the end all be all nowadays. You can still be admitted to top programs with low GRE scores. Being admitted to grad school is all about how you package and sell yourself; so highlight your strengths to the point that your weaknesses don't matter. I'm familiar with the PREP program and that experience alone is very significant. Focus on that and your research experience because that is what all schools undoubtedly value. Graduate programs put a large weight on the quality of your research experience.
haughtysauce007 Posted December 16, 2016 Posted December 16, 2016 So I got a 2nd invite from Johns Hopkins today - so I think test scores aren't end all be all for that school...with that said I did have a masters and undergrad from top 5 so maybe they overlooked the very low quant... You can check my signature to see how I end up doing later with similar GRE scores... i did have a recc from distinguished professors and department heads of physics and public health (2) and 2 others were PIs on research Anyways, I will say for MCATs you do need a high score and I would recommend setting aside a at the very least 6 months of study (3 months full time study) if you plan on doing PhD/MD programs because they are not forgiving with low MCAT scores, from what I understand, but check around. But for PhDs i think it's about focusing on your research and getting strong letters of recommendation - don't stress over things you cant change...from recommendations, try to have at least 1 or 2 with high up titles... a department head saying you're prepared in the sciences says a lot and I'm sure will trump a low score on gre...
book2readme Posted December 16, 2016 Author Posted December 16, 2016 I got an interview at Mt. Sinai. Yay! Dibenzofulvene, haughtysauce007 and jeanetics17 3
book2readme Posted December 16, 2016 Author Posted December 16, 2016 3 hours ago, kindsoul101 said: So I got a 2nd invite from Johns Hopkins today - so I think test scores aren't end all be all for that school...with that said I did have a masters and undergrad from top 5 so maybe they overlooked the very low quant... You can check my signature to see how I end up doing later with similar GRE scores... i did have a recc from distinguished professors and department heads of physics and public health (2) and 2 others were PIs on research Anyways, I will say for MCATs you do need a high score and I would recommend setting aside a at the very least 6 months of study (3 months full time study) if you plan on doing PhD/MD programs because they are not forgiving with low MCAT scores, from what I understand, but check around. But for PhDs i think it's about focusing on your research and getting strong letters of recommendation - don't stress over things you cant change...from recommendations, try to have at least 1 or 2 with high up titles... a department head saying you're prepared in the sciences says a lot and I'm sure will trump a low score on gre... Yeah, definitely. The MCAT score would have to be fairly high. That's why I wanted to study for a few months before taking the exam. haughtysauce007 1
book2readme Posted December 16, 2016 Author Posted December 16, 2016 17 hours ago, kindsoul101 said: Also, contact each school to request a fee waiver - they are easy to get. Yes, I have gotten fee waivers for all the schools I applied to. Dibenzofulvene and haughtysauce007 2
book2readme Posted December 18, 2016 Author Posted December 18, 2016 Ok, I got a phone call from UC Davis today. I have an interview on Feb 28 I should have applied to more places. This was totally last-minute. Dibenzofulvene 1
book2readme Posted December 22, 2016 Author Posted December 22, 2016 I also have an interview at Hopkins. Feb 23
johnallen Posted December 23, 2016 Posted December 23, 2016 (edited) My stats are 3.95 GPA, McNair and University Honors scholar. Undergraduate Honors thesis with GRE scores of 156 V, 136 Q and AW 3. I applied to a mix of 9 PhD programs. Got two interviews on same day (Dec 22). Point is... Apply!, your stats are amazing. I think you should Apply. Edited December 23, 2016 by johnallen book2readme 1
book2readme Posted January 11, 2017 Author Posted January 11, 2017 On 12/23/2016 at 5:31 PM, johnallen said: My stats are 3.95 GPA, McNair and University Honors scholar. Undergraduate Honors thesis with GRE scores of 156 V, 136 Q and AW 3. I applied to a mix of 9 PhD programs. Got two interviews on same day (Dec 22). Point is... Apply!, your stats are amazing. I think you should Apply. Wow, what programs did you apply to?
johnallen Posted January 13, 2017 Posted January 13, 2017 Interview U of Nebraska Lincoln - Global Family Health and Wellbeing Jan 27th U of Minnesota Family Social Science Feb5th Applied but no response Virginia Commonwealth and Kent State-both Health psychology Ohio state, and U of Missouri and Iowa Social psychology Northwestern human dev and social policy Penn state human dev and family studies
book2readme Posted January 23, 2017 Author Posted January 23, 2017 I didn't hear back from Northwestern I submitted my app to IBIS... DID YOU?
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