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Applying to Graduate School t ** Some of this information pertains primarily to applying to a master's program, but can also be relevant in applying to a Ph.D. program. RESEARCHING PROGRAMS | WRITING THE APPLICATION | GETTING ACCEPTED Researching Programs |TOP| 1. How many applications for graduate work do you receive and how many do you accept? 2. What is the profile of a student who is accepted? Accepted and given a teaching assistantship? Accepted and given a non-working fellowship? 3. What are the requirements for finishing the degree, in detail. 4. How many courses that are listed in the catalog are actually taught on a regular basis? How often is "regular"? (Ask to see the last two or three year's worth of time schedules and compare for yourself.) 5. Ask to meet with the professors who will teach in your major area. Then ask them if they plan on being on campus while you are studying there or if they anticipate taking leave time. If so, when? 6. How many of this department's graduates students were placed in tenure-track jobs and at which colleges? What did these students specialize in? (The person you talk with will probably hate this last question, but you need to know. The job placement rate nationwide is abysmal and getting worse. You are likely to discover that less than twenty percent of a typical university's Ph.D grads were placed in tenure-track jobs their first year out. Remember this sad bit of reality: universities must admit far more graduate students than they can actually place in jobs because they need these students to teach basic writing and introduction to literature courses. Many students who begin graduate work, especially at the Ph.D level, will never have tenure-track jobs.) Read Successful Applications Meet with Current Graduate Students Find out what's good about this university and what's not so good. Try to attend some classes, if you are allowed. Spend as much time as possible talking with current grad students since they will tell you what the professors and administrators don't want you to know. Ask about teaching loads, comprehensive exams, dissertation practices, everything you can think of, including: "What should I know about doing graduate work here?" Keep a Calendar of Deadlines If the universities to which you are applying do not include a self-addressed, stamped postcard to notify you that your application has been received, make one and include it. Writing the Application |TOP| Your writing sample should be targeted to the degree you seek. For example, a Ph.D is a research degree; it is not a creative degree such as an MFA. Therefore, a Ph.D admissions committee will look at your writing sample to judge your aptitude for scholarly research, not your reactions to a text, or your poetry, or your ability to write a creative non-fiction prose essay. An MFA program will want to see your creative writing, not necessarily your critical analysis paper on Emily Dickinson. Length is less important than quality. Once again, proofread extremely carefully. Your personal statement may be creative. Imagine that your application essay describing why you want to do a graduate degree is going to be read by a tired, bored, impatient committee member at 2:00 a.m. You won't be far wrong. Write accordingly. The primary requirement is that you capture your reader's attention and keep it while you describe why you want to do graduate work. A strong, interesting opening helps. You do not need to outline a program of study, but it does help your application if you have a plan of what subjects you'd like to study and why. Be aware that for the Ph.D, for example, single-author studies are no longer generally looked upon with favor because students writing dissertations on single authors may not be as successful on the job market. Cultural studies, genre studies, studies in the history of an idea or a subject, and cross-departmental studies will attract much more interest. When in doubt, read the last few year's worth of essays in the scholarly journals in your subject to see what's being published. If possible, submit your application essay or creative piece to a journal prior to applying for a graduate program. Attend and Present at Conventions You'll be doing conference presentations for the rest of your life, so you might as well get a head start. You'll also get reactions to your work, and you'll meet graduate students from other universities. If you don't tell the conference organizers you're not a graduate student, they probably won't ask. If they do ask, don't lie. If your work is good enough, you'll probably be accepted anyway. Getting Accepted |TOP| Follow this link to read an essay by an admissions committee director to get a closer look at how they make decisions on candidates. Read a sample application to a Ph.D. in literature program. This link provides guidelines written by Dr. Rachel Anderson regarding applying to a Ph.D. program.
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| Last Modified Date: October 19, 2009 | |
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