Funded PhD at UC Riverside or unfunded masters at Brown University

In summary: PhD from the University of Phoenix (!).In summary, the speaker has been accepted to UC Riverside's PhD program in physics and Brown University's ScM program in physics for Fall 2014. UCR is funded, while Brown offers no financial support with a tuition of ~$46,000. The speaker has the option to apply for the PhD program at Brown during their first year, with the possibility of being covered in their second year. However, the speaker is not sure about their career goals after obtaining a PhD and is considering the potential benefits of attending Brown over UCR for future opportunities in other fields or industries. The mentors have been asked to move this conversation to the academic guidance section for more appropriate advice. Some
  • #1
fysix
3
0
Hi All,

I've been accepted to UC Riverside's PhD program in physics and Brown University's ScM program in physics for Fall 2014. UCR is funded and Brown offers no financial support with a tuition of ~$46,000. So its a risk of possibly paying ~140,000 with tuition/living expenses/etc…, but I will be supported by my parents though. I have the option to apply for the PhD program at Brown during my first year, and if accepted my second year will be covered, but this is not guaranteed. I want to get a PhD but I'm not 100% sure what I want to do after I get it. I think Brown would look nice on an application compared to UCR, if I go into something other than physics. Also, for industry, which holds more weight, masters from Brown or PhD from UCR. Any advice/information would be appreciated. Thanks in advance!
 
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  • #2
I have asked the mentors to move this to academic guidance section
where it is much better suited

cheers
Dave
 
  • #3
If you want to buy prestige with your parents' money, why not Brown.
 
  • #4
What are your career goals?

If you're looking for a life path with a lot of options, having low debt gives you a heck of a lot more degrees of freedom.

My $0.02: the UC system is highly regarded. Maybe I'm biased because I'm on the west coast, but no one I know would discount any degree from UC.
 
  • #5
If your parents can afford to pay that I imagine your parents and your own social network is strong in the type of people who would take prestige to heart. It will also very likely put you in a better position if/when you apply to a PhD program.

Being able to make this choice are part of the self perpetuating advantages of coming from a higher income bracket family. There is no point in putting yourself at a disadvantage.
 
  • #6
DO NOT go to a graduate program that will not pay you. You will be the bottom of the barrel there, with little chance of getting a good thesis adviser. Your future career depends more on your thesis adviser than on the school.
 
  • #7
fysix said:
Hi All,

I've been accepted to UC Riverside's PhD program in physics and Brown University's ScM program in physics for Fall 2014. UCR is funded and Brown offers no financial support with a tuition of ~$46,000. So its a risk of possibly paying ~140,000 with tuition/living expenses/etc…, but I will be supported by my parents though. I have the option to apply for the PhD program at Brown during my first year, and if accepted my second year will be covered, but this is not guaranteed. I want to get a PhD but I'm not 100% sure what I want to do after I get it. I think Brown would look nice on an application compared to UCR, if I go into something other than physics. Also, for industry, which holds more weight, masters from Brown or PhD from UCR. Any advice/information would be appreciated. Thanks in advance!

To me this is a "no-brainer". If you look up the US News and World Report rankings of these schools, Brown is #29, and UCR is #54. This might seem like a big difference, but they are both "in the middle", and they really aren't that far apart. Definitely I would take the program that offered you the guaranteed support. As LisaB said, the UC system is highly regarded, and Brown is really not held in high esteem in Physics. In fact, when I lived in California, I had never even heard of Brown. If it were Harvard, Caltech, MIT, etc., then you might have some thinking to do, but Brown just isn't enough better than UCR to warrant turning down the money. My $0.02.
 
  • #8
Meir Achuz said:
DO NOT go to a graduate program that will not pay you. You will be the bottom of the barrel there, with little chance of getting a good thesis adviser. Your future career depends more on your thesis adviser than on the school.

In my experience grad advisors were never allocated in any order based on grad admissions but rather the result of relationships you build with your potential advisor.
 
  • #9
jesse73 said:
In my experience grad advisors were never allocated in any order based on grad admissions but rather the result of relationships you build with your potential advisor.

In my experience advisors fought over the students with their own funding (external fellowships), engaged with funded students (1st year departmental fellowships or TA-ships) and didn't give the time of day to students without funding. This was because a) they would have to cough up the tuition & fees if they offer an RA to an unfunded student and b) an unfunded student is much more likely to bail which would waste the professor's investment in the student.
 
  • #10
You should be basing your decision on what specialty you want to go into, and what work is being done on the specialty at the particular university. If you are only thinking about which one is more famous, then you aren't ready to make your decision. (then again, go with the money!)

Of course a Ph.D. is more prestigious than a masters, regardless of university (unless you bought the Ph.D. from some online diploma mill), but then, it's a lot more work and comes with an opportunity cost.
 
  • #11
Khashishi said:
You should be basing your decision on what specialty you want to go into, and what work is being done on the specialty at the particular university. If you are only thinking about which one is more famous, then you aren't ready to make your decision. (then again, go with the money!)

Of course a Ph.D. is more prestigious than a masters, regardless of university (unless you bought the Ph.D. from some online diploma mill), but then, it's a lot more work and comes with an opportunity cost.

Not necessarily. I would expect more from a candidate with an MS from Stanford than a Ph.D. from the University of Phoenix.
 
  • #12
This is indeed a no-brainer to me. Brown is not even that prestigious for physics, certainly not $140,000 (!) more so than UCR. Being offered an UNFUNDED masters rather than a funded PhD track spot means that you were not very competitive among others admitted in your cohort. I think this will put you at a significant disadvantage in finding an adviser.
 
  • #13
analogdesign said:
In my experience advisors fought over the students with their own funding (external fellowships), engaged with funded students (1st year departmental fellowships or TA-ships) and didn't give the time of day to students without funding. This was because a) they would have to cough up the tuition & fees if they offer an RA to an unfunded student and b) an unfunded student is much more likely to bail which would waste the professor's investment in the student.

It would require the department to have some organized advisor/advisee matching syste. Most of the time you have to initiate contact with the professor and develop a relationship from there rather than a professor spamming for students where the professor doesn't tell you to leave his office until he looks over your finance situation. They should have an idea of how much money they have on their grant which tells them how many openings they have. Successful professors have more grant money and therefore more students.

If a professor is so worried about the finances then he probably doesn't have grant money which means he is having trouble financing himself ie justifying his work to the community at large.
 
  • #14
Congratulations for getting into such a selective university!

I used to know a person who used to (I think still does) Brown university. What he was saying is that it was an amazing university and the quality met it's reputation. However, I think you can go wrong either way. If you have the money, maybe you will benefit from attending Brown University (I have heard many employers pay attention to university prestige, at least minimally, but I am not sure). However, I do not think it will harm you at all if you go to UC Riverside.
 
  • #15
ZombieFeynman said:
This is indeed a no-brainer to me. Brown is not even that prestigious for physics, certainly not $140,000 (!) more so than UCR. Being offered an UNFUNDED masters rather than a funded PhD track spot means that you were not very competitive among others admitted in your cohort. I think this will put you at a significant disadvantage in finding an adviser.

I agree very highly with this.
 
  • #16
Yellowflash said:
(I have heard many employers pay attention to university prestige, at least minimally, but I am not sure). However, I do not think it will harm you at all if you go to UC Riverside.

*cough* McKinsey.
 
  • #17
jesse73 said:
*cough* McKinsey.

Hi, I did not say that as a completely general statement, but isn't it obvious that for the most part if there are two employers with similar skills and if one went to Harvard and the other to Penn State, they will generally choose the Harvard person?
 
  • #18
Yellowflash said:
Hi, I did not say that as a completely general statement, but isn't it obvious that for the most part if there are two employers with similar skills and if one went to Harvard and the other to Penn State, they will generally choose the Harvard person?

Probably. But is that worth 140 000 dollars?
 
  • #19
micromass said:
Probably. But is that worth 140 000 dollars?

Oh yeah, that's probably a major drawaback. But the thing is, nowadays people (especially parents) care a lot about prestige. Maybe he should do some research on the academics (for example which textbooks they use) and get a sense of which atmosphere he would be more suited in.
 
  • #20
Yellowflash said:
Hi, I did not say that as a completely general statement, but isn't it obvious that for the most part if there are two employers with similar skills and if one went to Harvard and the other to Penn State, they will generally choose the Harvard person?

We're not talking Harvard and Penn State, we're talking Brown and UC Riverside. They just aren't that far apart in Physics. I bet most people in the western part of the US hold the UC system in higher esteem than Brown.
 
  • #21
From OP, "for industry, which holds more weight, masters from Brown or PhD from UCR", it probably varies a lot depending on the person, based on people I know (ignoring MS/PhD difference) a PhD from either school would hold about the same amount of weight. Things may be different on the East Coast.

In terms of physics I agree with those that don't think there's much difference, certainly not $140,000 worth. I wouldn't even consider Brown in the scenario you described. As phyzguy said, I would think about it if it were Harvard, Caltech or MIT.

For what it's worth that's my take on it.
 
  • #22
Yellowflash said:
Hi, I did not say that as a completely general statement, but isn't it obvious that for the most part if there are two employers with similar skills and if one went to Harvard and the other to Penn State, they will generally choose the Harvard person?

I was referring to how McKinsey is notorious for hiring Ivy League grads.
 
  • #23
jesse73 said:
I was referring to how McKinsey is notorious for hiring Ivy League grads.

From what I understand, that's only true for those with an undergraduate degree alone or those with MBAs. McKinsey has actively recruited people with physics PhDs (and others with masters or PhDs in other quantitative programs, like math, statistics or engineering) from schools other than Ivy League schools.

More to the point, to the OP, if it's a choice between a funded and an unfunded program, I would suggest you definitely go with the funded program, without a moment's hesitation.
 

1. What is the difference between a funded PhD program at UC Riverside and an unfunded masters program at Brown University?

A funded PhD program at UC Riverside typically provides financial support, such as a stipend or tuition waiver, for the duration of the program. An unfunded masters program at Brown University may require students to pay for their own tuition and living expenses.

2. How do I apply for a funded PhD program at UC Riverside or an unfunded masters program at Brown University?

Both UC Riverside and Brown University have specific application processes for their graduate programs. For a funded PhD program at UC Riverside, you will need to apply through the graduate admissions office and indicate your interest in funding on your application. For an unfunded masters program at Brown University, you will need to apply to the specific department or program you are interested in and inquire about potential funding opportunities.

3. Are there any advantages to pursuing a funded PhD at UC Riverside instead of an unfunded masters at Brown University?

One advantage of a funded PhD program at UC Riverside is that you will receive financial support for your studies. Additionally, PhD programs typically have more opportunities for research and professional development. However, an unfunded masters program at Brown University may be a shorter and more focused program, allowing you to enter the workforce sooner.

4. What are the requirements for admission to a funded PhD program at UC Riverside or an unfunded masters program at Brown University?

The specific requirements for admission will vary depending on the program and department. Generally, both UC Riverside and Brown University will require applicants to have a bachelor's degree and submit transcripts, letters of recommendation, a personal statement, and standardized test scores (such as the GRE). Some programs may have additional requirements, such as a writing sample or specific coursework.

5. What career opportunities are available after completing a funded PhD at UC Riverside or an unfunded masters at Brown University?

Both a funded PhD program at UC Riverside and an unfunded masters program at Brown University can lead to various career opportunities, depending on the field of study. A PhD may lead to careers in academia, research, or industry, while a masters degree may lead to more specialized or technical roles in a particular field. It is important to research the career outcomes and opportunities for each program you are considering to determine which may be the best fit for your goals.

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