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Phdoobiedoobiedoo

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  • Gender
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  • Location
    Boston
  • Application Season
    2013 Fall
  • Program
    American Studies/American History/ARH

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  1. I got my MA at GWU in Art History. I wrote my thesis on American Art. It was suggested to me before I went that the faculty there are somewhat disinterested in the students and I would agree with this statement. The Americanist when I was there, Bjelajac, is a nice man, but his focus within the field is on Freemasonry and you will hear about that ad nauseum in his classes. To the point that you will get frustrated and want to throw his hugely overpriced (he assigns his own books and structures class in such a way that you have to buy them) books at him because you are so sick of hearing about it. He gave one of my classmates crap for not using his book as a reference in a paper on an unrelated topic. Several other professors there have done the same. The woman who taught 19th century Europe, Robinson, also nice, lectured from notes that were so old they were yellow. She may have retired since then/be planning on it soon, but don't expect recent theory or publications to be included. They advertised themselves as closely connected to the museums in the area, but I only knew a couple of people who worked there, one of whom was in museum studies not art history. Their MA is structured so that you have to take one seminar in each area. Jacks, the Renaissance professor, is notoriously difficult, pissy, etc. If you are an older student who isn't bothered by teachers who sometimes deliberately try to make you feel/look stupid, then you'd be fine. He didn't bother me much, I thought he was pretty childish, but the majority of the students there do not like him and with good reason. Everyone loves Barbara von Barghahn, she teaches Baroque Art, and she is lovely. I don't know who is teaching in the area that you want to work on, as there have been some retirements/new hires since I went there. If you are interested in teaching, I would recommend a PhD program. If I had a do-over I would have gone straight to a PhD program from undergrad and saved some money. The area is fantastic though, I absolutely loved it, and all the museums are free which is awesome. I don't know much about Iowa, other than they used to kick ass for African Art. I don't even know if that is still true. But Dorothy Johnson is there, and she is amazing. I would go there (or just about anywhere) just to work with her. If I were given a choice between the two, I would choose Iowa no question. I'm not a fan of small towns, and I would still go with Iowa for quality of faculty, resources, etc. (Does GW cover insurance? Because when I was there they didn't and it was hugely expensive.)
  2. I am cheeky too, on a massive scale, and I would go. I don't think it gives you an unfair advantage, to me it says that you are so interested in the field that you came to a local conference to hear the latest research done there, in addition to showing how interested you are in the program itself. If I were on the committee, I might be impressed by that. And later on, when you are looking for a job, believe me if someone has an 'in' (which might equate to you as an unfair advantage) you bet your Aunt Schmoozy they're gonna use it. They'd be a fool not to. If you don't go, you don't, but I don't think it would hurt at all unless you showed up drunk or disrupted the proceedings by volunteering as tribute while someone is presenting, etc. If they haven't decided on you yet, it might work in your favor, you never know. Good luck to you either way!
  3. I wouldn't assume that an older professor isn't planning on retiring just because they tell you they aren't planning on it. I specifically asked my POI, who was an older professor, if they had plans to retire because I wanted to work with someone actively teaching and someone who would be there for the entirety of my time at XXX University. This person assured me that they would in fact be there and weren't retiring and that I was smart to check first. I sent my app, won a University Fellowship, and went to this school. TWO WEEKS after classes started she retired. Said she'd still teach and didn't, said she'd still be available and wasn't. I couldn't afford to reapply that first semester to other schools, so was kind of stuck. So I had no classes in my area within the field and was just kind of reading and teaching myself, exactly what I didn't want. I could have stayed home and done that with a library card. The following year at a meeting with her (about my upcoming candidacy exams and diss topic) in mid-November she told me that she was joining the Peace Corps and was leaving the country for an Eastern European backwater for 27 months. It would have been very helpful to have had this information a bit earlier, like when the Peace Corps apps were due in Aug/Sept. Again, the middle of November was too late to apply elsewhere (couldn't come up with the money for the apps/retaking expired GRE that late in the year). I realize this is an unusual situation, but I would advise avoiding older professors like the plague, as in if the thought that they might be retirement age occurs to you, move on, or at least make sure there are others who teach the same period/topic in case the older POI bows out. There were other professors at my school who taught the same geographic field, but in a completely different century and weren't interested in/qualified to work on my area. My field is one that usually only has one specialist at any given school. So in order to get the degree I want I have to leave and go to another school and essentially start all over again. I don't think there is anything wrong with working with a new Assoc Prof. There are several in my dept who are fantastic teachers. actively publishing quality stuff on a regular basis, and have described as "so and so is going to be huge in the field". Also, I find that a younger professor is often more on top of the most recent scholarship. Again, my situation is pretty much a one-off, but you are right to do your homework, and that includes inquiring about a POI's plans for the future. Good luck!
  4. I called UMass Amherst today because, disgusted. Spoke with the grad office and was told that they are still making decisions, getting replies to offers and making additional decisions accordingly. The woman with whom I spoke was very nice and said what boiled down to: don't assume a rejection, that other people have been calling too, and that she will be pestering them to make up their minds already and finalize decisions/offers. She seemed like she wasn't bullshitting. Make of that what you will.
  5. Have you by any chance heard anything from UMass yet?
  6. I'm not sure if you are speaking about what I said, but I suspect you might be in part, so: I do not suggest that anyone should care about what faculty think about your life outside of school. However, one should be aware that they may be less than accommodating if they are informed that you can't participate in something or are unable to do something they would like you to do. That's not negative or pretentious, that's reality. Unlike a 9-5, there are some things that go on in a dept that go well past that hour, and it can be hard to juggle expectations.The easiest part of graduate school is the work, it's dealing with the people that is difficult. If I didn't think people who have kids can kick ass in grad school, then I wouldn't be attending. Of course I think a parent can be successful in a doctoral program, I am. And there are several people in my department who have families and are the better students in their class. And if you don't have kids, I wouldn't be so quick to criticize when people who do offer suggestions or their impressions of the experience.
  7. The University of New Mexico doesn't require the GRE. Don't know what your field is, but if it is Latin American or Native American, it's one of the best programs. They don't have a ton of money to throw around, but it's not a failing program by any stretch of the imagination. Their students have been awarded national fellowships for diss research, and their graduates have secured faculty/museum positions. I have a young child, and it's true that people are not particularly amused that you have other commitments, even if your presence at certain events has no impact whatsoever on your studies. I have taken Women's Studies classes where the professors were just, meh, bring your kid to the guest lecture, no big deal. Art History people not so much. I have met 2 Art History professors at my current PhD program (not UNM) who are very understanding/tolerant/actually want to see my kid, the rest are impatient and sometimes hostile if I can't t.a. a class at night or some such. (Granted these same people are kind of assholes in general...) I don't expect anyone to be interested in me being a mom or in being anywhere near my kid, this is a separate existence, but I can't go to as many conferences, can't attend certain events past a particular time of the evening, etc. and that's something that has to be factored in. And if my faculty don't like it, well that's too bad. I'm not the first parent to be there, I won't be the last. Grad school with kids is a whole different ball game, and I would suggest that you might benefit from speaking with people who have some. If you find a program that you are particularly interested in, I would contact the grad coordinator or dept secretary/admin and ask if there are any grad students there who are parents with whom you can correspond. Feel free to pm me if you have any questions that maybe I could answer.
  8. If you do go to OSU's WGSS, I would recommend taking classes with Guisela Latorre if you can (if she isn't already your POI). She is incredibly awesome, I can't recommend her enough.
  9. I was accepted at UCSB previously for a PhD (already had a Master's) with full funding and received a letter of several pages in the mail that went into extensive detail about the funding package. I accepted as this school was my first choice, and told my other offers 'no'. Shortly after, I called UCSB to ask a question, had a conversation with the department assistant who at the end of our talk, said 'by the way, you know you're not getting funding right?" I said, uh what? I have a letter here right in front of me that says I did. She said, I knew we shouldn't have let that professor write the letters, and I knew when you accepted the offer so quickly that you probably thought you were funded." Yeah lady, I thought I was funded because you told me I was. I tried to do the whole, well guess what, it's your mistake so now you need to go find me some money. They came back with some miniscule amount, and how welcome would I be in a department when things started off that way? The offer was too low for me to afford attending anyway. So I had no recourse of any kind, they didn't apologize, and I had to wait a year to reapply elsewhere.
  10. This is the agreement made with the Council of Graduate Students, and the schools that signed it, as pertaining to a funded offer: http://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/CGS_Resolution.pdf
  11. Move. Immediately. You think you're stressed now, wait til there's a crack baby living there. You owe them nothing. Clearly they don't give a rat's ass about your comfort on any level. Tell them you can't be in the middle of this drama, that you wanted one roommate, not two. If you can afford it live alone, even if in a studio, it's better than having to deal with roommates.
  12. Given the chance I would NOT have opted for a terminal Master's program and thought, meh, I'll apply somewhere else for my PhD when I am done at this awesome place. In my opinion, if your ultimate goal is a PhD, then you want to apply to PhD programs and not bother with MA programs at all (no matter how attractive they may be). It will save you a lot of time, money, and aggravation. Plus, a lot of places are far more likely to fund doctoral students as opposed to someone pursuing a Master's. I wouldn't be too distracted by rankings either (although some would dispute this, sinply my opinion). A program should be right for you individually, rankings are great but they don't take into account the specificity of what YOU want to work on and/or what is most important to you in a program. My Master's program was at a private, expensive school, my undergrad was at a public, state school and was a much better experience, I learned a lot more, had far more individual attention, unparalleled support from faculty with whom I still keep in touch and who were very invested in me as their student. This might not work for everyone, but if I had a do-over, that's what I would do. I know people who are on the job market now who attended Ivies, and their chief complaint is that no one prepared them for anything outside of the classroom as far as gaining employment. This might not be true of all of them, but with several I know it is a concern. One colleague didn't get the tenure track position that someone who attended a non-Ivy secured. Something to consider.
  13. Wow, Art History is classist and egregious. (What's the dynamite for?)
  14. Depending on what your plans are for the future, George Washington University has a terminal masters, as well as a Masters in Museum Studies, and some of the faculty have the in with the DC museums. GW also offers an advanced degree in American Studies, so the departments are linked. However, be aware that the Americanist at GW, Bjelajac, has a specialty in Freemasonry in Amer Art, so if you have an aversion to hearing about that over and over again...but he's really nice, laid back, and will let you work on whatever you want.
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