Schools Does self-study matter when applying to graduate schools?

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A junior math major is considering applying to graduate schools and is concerned about the lack of formal analysis courses on their transcript, despite having completed a year of real analysis through self-study. They are focusing on a specialization in statistics and have two years of relevant coursework in statistics and experimental design. The discussion highlights the importance of demonstrating knowledge gained from self-study and explores the possibility of taking analysis courses as independent study for credit, which may require consent from an instructor. This approach could help strengthen the applicant's profile for graduate school admissions.
killian
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I'm a junior math major in college, and I'd like to apply to some graduate schools when I'm done. If I haven't taken any analysis courses (beyond a basic "advanced calculus" sequence), but I've covered a full year of real analysis on my own, will that make a difference?

I'm thinking of specializing in statistics, and I'll have two years of stats/experimental design courses, but most of my experience with analysis is and will likely be through self-study. Will this hurt my chances of getting into a school?
 
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How are you planning to convince them that you've actually learned something from your self-study?
 
Some universities, have a special section when you can take a course with credit as an independen study? Is this the case with your university as well? If yes, then can you take those two courses in analysis as independent study, since you are saying that you already know the matter, then that wouldn't be too much of aa load adding to the courses you are already taking,would it?

You will only need the consent of an instructor/professor for that. THis is basically, what i am going to have to do, for a couple of courses, since my university does not give them through the regular curriculum.
 
After a year of thought, I decided to adjust my ratio for applying the US/EU(+UK) schools. I mostly focused on the US schools before, but things are getting complex and I found out that Europe is also a good place to study. I found some institutes that have professors with similar interests. But gaining the information is much harder than US schools (like you have to contact professors in advance etc). For your information, I have B.S. in engineering (low GPA: 3.2/4.0) in Asia - one SCI...
Hello, I’m an undergraduate student pursuing degrees in both computer science and physics. I was wondering if anyone here has graduated with these degrees and applied to a physics graduate program. I’m curious about how graduate programs evaluated your applications. In addition, if I’m interested in doing research in quantum fields related to materials or computational physics, what kinds of undergraduate research experiences would be most valuable?

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