| Thread Closed |
GRE and scholarship |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Apr18-09, 05:38 AM | #1 |
|
|
GRE and scholarship
hello all
i have a Q i got a 90% in the GRE physics would i be eligible for a scholarship for master degree PS : i got C in university |
| Apr18-09, 06:03 AM | #2 |
|
Mentor
|
Eligible? Certainly. Likely? That's more difficult to say. Two things work against you - scholarships and assistantships for terminal masters degrees are rare, and your grades are quite poor: poor enough that it may prove hard to be accepted at all.
|
| Apr18-09, 06:13 AM | #3 |
|
|
but i have a GRE 90% do you know how much it is hard to have a 90% in GRE physics so why it is so hard to have a scholarship
normal people have a 50% in best case 75% i got 90% |
| Apr18-09, 07:35 AM | #4 |
|
|
GRE and scholarship
sure. you will get scholarship. but it its depend on your GPA ,GRE general score and other qualification.
you know that, my scores are like below GRE general-verbal 310 quantitative 740 GRE physics 41% TOEFL- 85 ibt GPA-3.79 in 4.00 scale. with those score i got 5 financial offers from uni of tennessee-koxvil uni of south carolina ohio university uni of connecticut and uni of arkansas. however I accepted the offer of ohio university. |
| Apr18-09, 08:05 AM | #5 |
|
Mentor
|
A C is failing in graduate school. A C average is equivalent to an F average. You need to recognize how low this is in comparison to other people who want assistanceships - and admission. A question that you will need to be prepared to answer is "were you unable to get better grades? Or did you just choose to?" I stand by my original statement: Two things work against you - scholarships and assistantships for terminal masters degrees are rare, and your grades are quite poor: poor enough that it may prove hard to be accepted at all. |
| Apr18-09, 08:39 AM | #6 |
|
|
Also -- generally, in the sciences and engineering, students must find their own funding for Master's degrees... either through their workplace, or through some means such as military funding (with commitment to the military for some duration of time -- tho' this could, at my time, be done as a civilian, not necessarily as an enlisted soldier, through a program known at the time as the "Palace Knight" program). One field where I've seen in exception is if a physics student decides to pursue an M.Ed. -- or a master's in teaching, becoming certified to teach middle or high school science in the process. This is because of national incentives to increase the number of qualified science teachers in the high school. Graduate funding is otherwise usually reserved for the students that intend to complete Ph.D. programs... that way the school gets the most "bang for their buck" by investing in a student who will be there for a longer period of time (and later be funded through research grants). The one exception, perhaps, is to get some form of funding from a school that does not offer Ph.D.'s... and perhaps offers financial incentive through some form of TA. While you may disagree with the situation as presented to you, it is the dominate situation in the field. It's doubtful that you'll receive much special treatment for one test score, albeit above average. |
| Apr18-09, 08:46 AM | #7 |
|
|
thanx i understand now thank you a lot for your help
and for the "were you unable to get better grades? Or did you just choose to?" i was working as a teacher of physics in a school in a remote area in the same time of my study so it was so hard on me to finish the courses some time i have to conclude some of the theoretical information my self at the exam but thanx for your answer it was a great help |
| Apr18-09, 08:51 AM | #8 |
|
|
in the same time i was thinking that the way to enter a PhD is to Go through Ms degree |
| Apr18-09, 10:04 PM | #9 |
|
|
What was your university ?
I have found you insult yourself right in your post for the reason I don't know as to why you should make a question like that. even when you don't go through master to phd, you still need to spend 5 years to get the degree, as far as i know. |
| Apr18-09, 10:29 PM | #10 |
|
|
Are you an international student? It sounds like it,If so probably not because 90% is almost dime a dozen for foreigners. If youre domestic than it probably is very possible to get funding for a PhD program that is not in the top 70 because if you matriculate you would boost the programs published average PGRE which alot of programs do publish unlike GPA which creates a sort of incentive for programs to put a fair amount of weight on PGRE.
|
| Apr19-09, 01:14 AM | #11 |
|
|
|
| Thread Closed |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: GRE and scholarship
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Japanese scholarship | Academic Guidance | 2 | ||
| the scholarship ?????????? | Academic Guidance | 6 | ||
| I got a scholarship:) | General Discussion | 8 | ||
| scholarship | Academic Guidance | 18 | ||