Can I Overcome a Bad Undergrad GPA and Get into a US PhD Program in Physics?

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SUMMARY

Anurag, a software engineer with a poor undergraduate GPA in Mathematics from India, successfully transitioned into a Master’s program in Physics at San Jose State University (SJSU) after completing graduate Mathematics courses with a 3.2 GPA. He has maintained a 3.7 GPA in core graduate Physics courses, including Classical Mechanics and Quantum Mechanics. The discussion centers on whether US PhD programs in Physics will overlook his past academic performance, especially given his recent academic success and plans to engage in research projects at SJSU.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of graduate-level Physics concepts, including Classical Mechanics and Quantum Mechanics.
  • Familiarity with the admissions process for US PhD programs.
  • Knowledge of the significance of GPA and coursework relevance in graduate admissions.
  • Experience with research methodologies in Physics.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the admissions criteria for PhD programs in Physics at various US universities.
  • Explore opportunities for undergraduate research projects at SJSU and other institutions.
  • Investigate the impact of professional experience on graduate school applications.
  • Learn about networking strategies with faculty and potential advisors in Physics.
USEFUL FOR

Prospective PhD candidates in Physics, current graduate students seeking to improve their academic profiles, and individuals transitioning from unrelated fields into Physics academia.

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Hi All,

I had really bad GPA when I did my undergraduate degree in Mathematics India, except for one Physics course that I did and did very well at. I won't bore anyone with the details, but it was basically because I just felt unmotivated.

Now I am older by 10 years, somewhat wiser and work full time as a software engineer but want to go back to studying Physics.

I did some graduate Mathematics courses (Differential Topology, Complex Analsyis and some more that are related to Physics) at the CSU through their open university system. All in all around 28 credits in graduate Mathematics courses with a 3.2 GPA. Then I enrolled in the MS Physics program at SJSU(they wouldn't admit me earlier because of my low grades and had asked me to do some related courses at either CSU before I applied), and have now maintained
a GPA of 3.7 in the core graduate Physics courses( Classical Mech, Quantum Mech, Jackson) and the electives while working full time as a Software Engineer.

Would any graduate school overlook my undergrad grades that are extremely poor and consider me for the PhD program?

Thanks,
Anurag
 
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I don't know about India but in the UK I wouldn't care too much about bad degree performance 10years ago if you have recent 'relevant' experience.
Individual institutions/supervisors/funding bodies might have their own rules and perhaps require a recent Masters.
Is your 10years of software relevant to the research areas you are considering?
 
Thanks for the quick reply.

I live in the US now. Sorry didn't specify that. So my question is about US universities.

My software engineering experience is completely unrelated. But I am doing the MS right now and will be done in an year or so. I am thinking of taking up research projects with the Profs here at SJSU(San Jose State University) too. I don't have an undergrad degree or coursework in Physics though. That was another reason that SJSU asked me to do first two courses through their open university system too. I did the graduate level courses they have instead of the undergraduate courses they advised me to do though and my GPA is based on those courses.(They will let 2 open university courses count towards your MS).
 

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