1 / 40

Should You Go To Grad School?

Should You Go To Grad School?. Only go to grad school if:. You know what you want to do and that you need a graduate degree to do it You have a plan to pay for it AND You feel ready If not, wait! Try other things! Apply again!. Grad school is a professional degree.

jaden
Télécharger la présentation

Should You Go To Grad School?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Should You Go To Grad School?

  2. Only go to grad school if: • You know what you want to do and that you need a graduate degree to do it • You have a plan to pay for it AND • You feel ready • If not, wait! Try other things! Apply again!

  3. Grad school is a professional degree • It is training and a degree for a specific job • It is often a requirement for a specific professional license • It does not transfer easily to other fields

  4. Do not go to grad school if: • You are good at school and think you should keep doing it • You do not know what profession you want to be in • To learn more about a topic • To try out a new career • A program looks cool

  5. Instead • Decide what you want to do before grad school • Do an internship or volunteer • Interview people in that field about their jobs • Ask to shadow them • Try to get entry-level work in those fields • Take more undergraduate classes, online classes, or workshops in those fields

  6. Good reasons to get an MA, MSW, JD, MD, etc • It is a licensing requirement or a de facto requirement for a career you have already trained in, worked in, studied for, and still want • You have funding or are guaranteed a job that will let you pay back your loans

  7. Good reasons to get a PhD • You love independent research and big projects • You want to be a professor • Six years of classes and research sound really interesting even if you don’t get a job afterward • You know that the academic job market sucks and you’re ok with that

  8. Money • Look into financing before you decide to apply • Do not go to a program you can’t pay for • Avoid predatory or cash cow graduate programs

  9. Ways to finance grad school • Stipends and tuition waivers: • available to students who teach or do research with faculty • much more common for PhDs • Stipends amount to minimal cost of living • Best common way to pay for school

  10. Ways to finance grad school • Grants and fellowships • Available to students doing specific types of research or service, or from underrepresented groups • From the school, foundations, or governments • Usually have to apply 6 months to a year in advance • Can pay tuition and/or stipend, amounts vary • Best way to finance grad school, but hard to get

  11. Ways to finance grad school • Loans • Easiest way to quickly get money • Public and private sources, public usually better • Public: lots of options for paying back that tie to income, multiple loan forgiveness programs, but you can’t discharge in bankruptcy • Private: fewer limits, faster, you’re screwed if you fall behind on payments • Only take out loans if you are sure that the job you get afterward enables you to pay them back

  12. Money • Students almost always have to pay for masters and professional degrees; most take out loans • PhDs pay students stipends and tuition waivers; do not do a PhD without funding • The exceptions are shorter professional PhD programs in fields like audiology where graduates go into high income jobs immediately

  13. Money • Look into financing before you decide to apply • Finding money: Ask the schools • Meet with financial aid officers • Ask for teaching and research assistant appointments • Ask for scholarships and fellowships • Get a list of recommended external grants to apply to • Do this as you apply because many things take a year to apply to, review, notify, and start

  14. The Application Process

  15. The Application Process • It takes about a year • It costs money • It takes a lot of time • It is a good idea to take your time and apply multiple times • Try until you get the program you want and the funding you need

  16. Application timeline • A year and a half before you want to start: decide what you want to do and find programs • A year and a few months before starting: study for the GRE and start drafting your materials and asking for letters • 8-12 months before you start: apply • 3-8 months before you start: schools notify you, you may do fly-outs or interviews

  17. How to find programs • Go to U.S. News and look at the rankings in your field: https://www.usnews.com/education • Look at the top 50 programs, preferably top 20 • Then find a list of 6-12 that specialize in what you want to do • Go to their websites, look at the faculty, look at the program info

  18. How to find programs • Ask your professors • Ask professionals in your field • You will probably need to specialize (definitely if you are getting a PhD). • Look into specializations before grad school • Tell your professors what you want to do and ask their advice on specialization • Use this info to help choose a program

  19. How to apply • Most programs take applications for the following year in December-February, and start fall semester • Different schools have different applications; look at their websites. You can also call. • Apply to at least 6, no more than 12 programs (for most fields) • Most applications have a fee; this can be waived

  20. How to apply • Most programs require test scores: GREs, LSATs, MCATs • Study for AT LEAST a month before taking these • Study guides are very helpful, you do not need expensive tutoring • Cost money to take; several hundred dollars • Try to take it multiple times

  21. How to apply • Personal statement • Very important, often most important • Draft, draft, draft • Start early and show it to multiple people in your field • Demonstrate that you are a unique and interesting person who will contribute to the program • Demonstrate that your are good at and know about what you want to do (research, law, medicine, etc)

  22. How to apply • Letters of recommendation • Should be from people in your field; outside doesn’t count • Should be well-known in your field • Ask early, sit down with your recommenders, and send them all of your materials • Ask them if they will write you a strong letter

  23. Getting rejected • Acceptance at any one program is a somewhat random process; apply to many • If you don’t get into a program you want to be in, wait and apply again • Ask for feedback • Your application will be better next time • It’s better to wait and try again than to spend years of your life in a subpar program

  24. How to decide what school to go to • Hopefully you get multiple acceptances: visit and then decide • Make a decision with this criteria: Go where you’ll have • the least debt • the best job prospects • the best training • the best mentorship • where you want to live

  25. How to decide what school to go to • Negotiating • You can and should ask schools for more money • Use your other offers to try to get money from them • Ask them once, nicely, in an email or phone call

  26. What to expect • Grad school is hard: expect to work at it like a 60 hour a week job. • Grad school can be isolating: make new friends • Everyone around you will be really smart; learn from them

  27. What to expect • Get good at time management • Do not try to work another job and go to grad school • Get used to rejection and criticism • Ask for feedback and help

  28. If you hate it • It’s ok to realize that grad school isn’t for you • It’s ok to leave: 50% of people that start PhDs don’t finish • Figure it out sooner rather than later and go do something else • Good company: https://thoughtcatalog.com/cat-aleman/2014/06/after-3-years-i-left-grad-school-and-it-was-the-best-decision-i-ever-made/

  29. Extra Resources • Everything in The Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed • Lifehacker: https://lifehacker.com/seven-things-i-wish-i-knew-before-going-to-graduate-sch-1609488711 • More things to know about PhDs: http://danielmccormack.net/blog/some-lesser-known-lessons-from-academia/

  30. Extra Resources • Harassment and abuse in academia: • https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/gradhacker/dealing-abuse-grad-school • https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/10/when-will-the-harvey-effect-reach-academia/544388/ • https://tenureshewrote.wordpress.com/2013/08/12/toxic-academic-mentors/

  31. Extra Resources • People of color in academia: https://medium.com/@cmilanjones/grad-school-is-trash-for-students-of-color-and-we-should-talk-about-that-af672814b3ee

  32. Extra Resources • Mental health in grad school: • https://www.chronicle.com/article/Grad-School-Is-Hard-on-Mental/240626 • https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/gradhacker/mental-health-issues-among-graduate-students

  33. Comic Relief • http://phdcomics.com • http://whatshouldwecallgradschool.tumblr.com • (and whatshouldwecalllawschool, whatshouldwecallmedschool) • https://legogradstudent.tumblr.com

More Related