- #1
mgorby
- 11
- 0
Hello,
I'm freaking out about whether I'm being realistic in my choices of graduate schools.
Here are my qualifications:
CGPA: 3.82
Major GPA: 3.78
I started at Portland Community College, transferred to UMass Amherst, and then to Portland State University for my last two years.
My three letters of recommendation are all from professors I have worked with closely. I go running regularly with one of them, have house-sat and worked in the lab of another, and the third has had me in two upper level classes in which I did very well.
I have a year experience with a physics education research group, worked for a Summer in an atmospheric physics lab, and have done computational work (programming) for one of the theorists in our department.
I'm taking the GRE (Gen. and Subject) this November and can't imagine getting lower than a 650 on the subject. I know myself pretty well and from the practice exams I've been using can confidently say I'll end up in the 700-750 range.
My ultimate goal is to become a professor at a NON research college/university. I'm interested in teaching and will, I'm assuming, end up at a liberal arts college.
I'm definitely after a theoretical program. I'm not sure which area yet.
I won't be doing a senior thesis and have not been on any papers. I will graduate with my B.S. in Physics with a minor in Mathematics.
So, there is all that. Here are the schools I'm planning on applying to:
Columbia
NYU
McGill
U of Chicago
Boston University
College of William and Mary
UC Santa Cruz
UC Santa Barbara
U of Oregon (my safe school)
Am I being realistic? How would you access my chances?
Thank you all in advance!
-Matt
I'm freaking out about whether I'm being realistic in my choices of graduate schools.
Here are my qualifications:
CGPA: 3.82
Major GPA: 3.78
I started at Portland Community College, transferred to UMass Amherst, and then to Portland State University for my last two years.
My three letters of recommendation are all from professors I have worked with closely. I go running regularly with one of them, have house-sat and worked in the lab of another, and the third has had me in two upper level classes in which I did very well.
I have a year experience with a physics education research group, worked for a Summer in an atmospheric physics lab, and have done computational work (programming) for one of the theorists in our department.
I'm taking the GRE (Gen. and Subject) this November and can't imagine getting lower than a 650 on the subject. I know myself pretty well and from the practice exams I've been using can confidently say I'll end up in the 700-750 range.
My ultimate goal is to become a professor at a NON research college/university. I'm interested in teaching and will, I'm assuming, end up at a liberal arts college.
I'm definitely after a theoretical program. I'm not sure which area yet.
I won't be doing a senior thesis and have not been on any papers. I will graduate with my B.S. in Physics with a minor in Mathematics.
So, there is all that. Here are the schools I'm planning on applying to:
Columbia
NYU
McGill
U of Chicago
Boston University
College of William and Mary
UC Santa Cruz
UC Santa Barbara
U of Oregon (my safe school)
Am I being realistic? How would you access my chances?
Thank you all in advance!
-Matt