In summary, the rising senior has many impressive credentials for a physics major, but lacks research experience and is applying to doctoral programs in a field with few established programs. He is interested in specializing in AMO and would like to know what schools are a good fit for him. He has looked at a few universities with AMO programs and selected ones he believes would be a good fit for his research and career goals. He is open to other suggestions.
  • #1
EJC
42
4
I am a rising senior at a small liberal arts college, with an incredibly small (and therefore unrecognized) physics program. I am seeking advice regarding which Ph.D programs are within my reach. I plan on applying to AMO (Atomic, Molecular, and Optics) Ph.D programs with the intention of focusing on quantum information, quantum computing, and/or quantum optics for the Fall 2016 semester. I am not sure what to expect in terms of where I would be accepted/rejected. My application has some good points, but definitely will be lacking in other areas, and I am well aware of this.

The Good:
-BS Physics
-Minors: Mathematics, Philosophy
-Overall GPA 3.90
-Physics GPA 3.99
-Physics Tutor 2+ years
-Physics Laboratory Tech 2+ years
-Physics Club President 1 year
-Internship at government research lab, but pertaining to radio frequency experiments, nothing to do with quantum information or AMO at all for that matter
-I will be starting a year long research project regarding the Uncertainty Principle and Decoherence which is directly tied to my prospective field. Advisor believes I can get a publication out of it.
-A few various awards, scholarships, and honor societies throughout undergrad experience

The Bad:
-Undergrad is at a small liberal arts school with no substantial physics reputation. With that being said, I believe the education I've received there has been comparable to respected universities.
-No substantial university research. Yes I will be conducting research this coming year, but I will be applying to grad schools only ~3 months after beginning, so will not be very much to go on.
-Only one summer internship (government research lab).
-Haven't yet taken the GRE/PGRE. I am registered to take both before October so I will meet deadlines with them, but I have little time to study for them. I am expecting to land somewhere around above average on GRE and slightly below average on PGRE, but I cannot count on that.

Target Schools:
I have mostly restricted my search to the Northeastern US, but that is not necessarily a requirement. I have looked at various universities with AMO programs, and the ones that seemed to fit my career/research goals the best are:
-University of Rochester
-Cornell University
-University of Maryland, College Park
-University of Wisconsin, Madison
-Stony Brook University
-Dartmouth College
I am definitely open to any other suggestions to various AMO programs, or other programs where I could work in the aforementioned physics realms.

My main questions and concerns for the physics community are:
1. Assuming average GRE and PGRE scores, what chance do I have of getting into the schools that I listed? I understand that I should apply either way because "you never know," but I'd like to have realistic expectations. Note that I've already written off most of the extremely elite schools such as MIT and Harvard because I don't think my application will be robust enough. Basically, I am trying to figure out where I stand. Are these schools out of my range, or should I hope/expect to get accepted to at least a few.

2. When you are looking for graduate programs, it is hard to find lower ranked ones. Obviously the best of the best pop up first. I am primarily interested in quantum computation, quantum optics, atom trapping and cooling, and quantum information processing. If anyone has any insight to any programs pertaining to these it would be much appreciated, especially ones I may not have come across in your regular web searches.

3. I know it's rather late, but is there anything I could do at this point to boost my application up a bit? I have considered taking a year off after undergrad to try to get some more experience on my resume, and perhaps have that publication under my belt by then, but I would like to apply to schools first and only do that should I not get accepted.

As always, any advice, guidance, tips, and knowledge is welcome and appreciated. Thanks!
 
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  • #2
I am a rising senior. I have a 3.90 GPA and a 3.99 Physics GPA. I'll have my BS in Physics and minors in math and philosophy. I have had one internship where I worked at a research lab. By the time I apply to grad schools I will also be halfway through a year long research project where I may get a publication, but that won't be until after I apply. I also tutored physics and worked as a physics lab tech for 2+ years. Dean's list every semester.

I'll be applying for Ph.D programs looking to specialize in AMO (Atomic, Molecular, Optics) at the end of this coming semester, and would like to get an idea of what schools I should consider.

I doubt I should be looking at top schools like MIT, but should I even be looking at mid range schools?
Any tips for the application process?


*Note: I haven't taken the GRE or PGRE yet but assume middle of the pack scores (50th percentile) just to be safe.
 
  • #3
Roughly twice as many people take the GRE as enroll in graduate school, so you really want to be above the 50th percentile.
 
  • #4
How can you have a 3.99 GPA? You scored perfect on each test, except for one where you made a tiny mistake? Pretty hard to be in the 99.9th percentile for every test.
 
  • #5
I have a 3.99 Major GPA. I have gotten an A in every physics class throughout my undergrad except I got an A- in one lab course that was only worth 1 credit, so it brought my Physics GPA down to a 3.99. That doesn't mean I got perfect scores on every test. GPA is reflective of your overall course grades, not individual test grades.
 
  • #6
I think at most US colleges and universities (certainly at the one where I work), professors officially report only a letter grade for the entire course (A, A-, B+, etc.). They usually base this grade on a numerical average of scores on the final exam, midterm tests, homework assignments, etc., e.g. 93-100 on a scale of 100 might correspond to an A. They are usually free to use whatever numerical scheme they want, for performing this calculation, provided that they announce it in the course syllabus. They do not normally report the actual numerical average, nor the individual grades that make it up, although students can ask their professors for the details for their own grades.
 
Last edited:
  • #7
Right, so what is the general opinion on the strength of my application? Does it look strong enough to get into mediocre, good, or great schools? I obviously know that there's no way to tell for sure, but it's tough to gauge what range I am in.
 
  • #8
I'm only an undergrad (same position as you, applying for grad school this fall) so I don't know much about admissions chances, but seriously study for the pGRE. It's not for another 3 months, but you may want to take it twice. Study that material until your eyeballs burn.
 
  • #9
The GRE and pGRE are factors that are too big to "just assume middle of the pack". Try taking a practice exam, and then we'll maybe be able to help you a little bit more.
 
  • #10
With a GPA that high you should be shooting for better than 50th percentile on the GRE, probably at least 75th. I had a similar GPA as you, but I went to a no-name state school where it wasn't that difficult to get A's in physics classes. I scored somewhere in the 60's on the PGRE, and I think that raised some flags because a near perfect GPA is not consistent with 60th percentile. The most useful resource for gauging your chances are the profiles posted on the physicsgre forums. People post their GPAs, test scores, and research experience and then report where they got in. There are still other important factors though, like connections your letter writers may have and things like that which don't really get reported, so the information there is not totally reliable, but it's a good place to start. You should also talk to your letter writers about where you should be aiming for, they're probably aware of what they might say about you in a letter and how far it might get you.

If you scored in the 50th percentile, you would probably be looking mostly at schools outside the top ~25. You really need above 80th and most likely better than that to be considering top 10 schools, and even then it will still be difficult. These are just rough estimates though, I have seen some pretty surprising results in the past.

Remember, it's important to apply to a range of schools. Pick one or two long shots, several reasonable choices, and a couple safeties.
 
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  • #11
If a student with a 3.9 GPA can't get into MIT, then who can?

It seems like you either have a confidence problem or a false modesty problem. Or is it that your school has a poor reputation?

You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
 
  • #12
Stengah said:
With a GPA that high you should be shooting for better than 50th percentile on the GRE, probably at least 75th. I had a similar GPA as you, but I went to a no-name state school where it wasn't that difficult to get A's in physics classes. I scored somewhere in the 60's on the PGRE, and I think that raised some flags because a near perfect GPA is not consistent with 60th percentile. The most useful resource for gauging your chances are the profiles posted on the physicsgre forums. People post their GPAs, test scores, and research experience and then report where they got in. There are still other important factors though, like connections your letter writers may have and things like that which don't really get reported, so the information there is not totally reliable, but it's a good place to start. You should also talk to your letter writers about where you should be aiming for, they're probably aware of what they might say about you in a letter and how far it might get you.

If you scored in the 50th percentile, you would probably be looking mostly at schools outside the top ~25. You really need above 80th and most likely better than that to be considering top 10 schools, and even then it will still be difficult. These are just rough estimates though, I have seen some pretty surprising results in the past.

Remember, it's important to apply to a range of schools. Pick one or two long shots, several reasonable choices, and a couple safeties.

Thanks, that is all very helpful information. I will definitely check out the physicsgre forums.

As far as "long shots, reasonable, and safeties," what sort of ranking ranges would you consider? Long shots being anything in the top 25?

Also, I am planning on applying to University of Rochester. I believe they're ranked 44 or somewhere around there, but they are ranked 6 in AMO. Since I apply to the graduate program in physics and not specifically in AMO, does anyone have any insight whether they would be as hard to get into as a 6th ranked school, or a 44th ranked school. This type of scenario applies to more than just U of R, but it makes a good example.
 
  • #13
EM_Guy said:
If a student with a 3.9 GPA can't get into MIT, then who can?

It seems like you either have a confidence problem or a false modesty problem. Or is it that your school has a poor reputation?

You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.

From my understanding, the top school's like MIT are very interested in research experience. They like to see a lot of it, and it is beneficial to have it be in your area of study. I know my application is weak in this area as I have little research/internship experience.

My school does not have a poor reputation by any means. The problem lies specifically in that the physics program is rather new (15+ years perhaps), incredibly small, and therefore unknown. Most students graduating from here in physics tend to go to a neighboring university to study engineering as there is a program set up to do that. Because of that, many physics graduate schools don't see or hear from us.
 
  • #14
If you can get a good PGRE you will at least be competitive for top schools. I'm sure your letters will be good, but the lack of research experience may hurt you. The people I know in my class and in my friends classes all had a very significant amount of research experience, some even having first author publications.

The three best schools for AMO are MIT, Harvard, and Boulder. Going to Harvard or MIT however will give you an incredible advantage in MIT since there is a ton of collaboration between the two schools. Additionally, Harvard and MIT students can work with professors at the other school (I have one friend who is a Harvard student working at MIT and another who is an MIT student working at Harvard. I think Michigan would also be a good school to consider. Other than that I am not really sure about AMO.
 
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  • #15
I went from LSU undergrad with numbers like those to MIT grad school. I got into Stanford and Princeton also. My GRE Physics score was 80th percentile. But I did have research with an AMO professor and good letters of recommendation.

The MIT AMO profs always have a look at strong applications from smaller schools and invite students out for a visit. They like to have a mix of talent and backgrounds in their grad students. If you score above the 75th percentile on the Physics GRE, I would shoot for the stars.

There are plenty of places like NC State, GA Tech, and schools ranked in the top 30 that are fine backup plans.
 
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  • #16
Awesome, thanks!

Any other first hand experience would be greatly appreciated too.
 
  • #17
So what I would do is just study for the PGRE a lot this summer, take the first one in the fall (maybe sign up twice since you won't know your score before you can sign up for the next) and put a lot of time into research. As for schools to apply to, I would definitely do Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Michigan, Maryland (they have the joint quantum institute), Berkeley, Cornell and Chicago. Chicago will be an up and coming AMO school in the next few years since they are putting a ton of money into the program (and the physics department in general).
 
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  • #18
radium said:
So what I would do is just study for the PGRE a lot this summer, take the first one in the fall (maybe sign up twice since you won't know your score before you can sign up for the next) and put a lot of time into research. As for schools to apply to, I would definitely do Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Michigan, Maryland (they have the joint quantum institute), Berkeley, Cornell and Chicago. Chicago will be an up and coming AMO school in the next few years since they are putting a ton of money into the program (and the physics department in general).

Thanks for the advice! I'm gathering on here that the PGRE is quite a bit more important than I had expected/hoped. It is what it is I guess. To be honest I'm not keen on the idea of standardized testing in general because it doesn't show long term performance, but I guess it is one more thing to be able to create some separation in the thousands of applications these schools see.

For now, it looks like I'll be studying as much as possible for the PGRE. So now I have more questions regarding the exam. Anyone have advice from first hand experience with it? Would about an hour of studying a day over the next couple months, and obviously more at crunch time, be enough to expect reasonable scores? I have a very good review book for it, and a set of flash cards. My plan is to get through as much material in the review book by the end of the summer and take a practice test to see where I'm at and where I need to study more, then keep studying and take another practice exam relatively close to the test date.
 
  • #19
If 4.00 is max, and A+ is also max, shouldn't A be like 3.75?

Pretty hard though to turn in the theoretically perfect lab report. Or do they just give an A+ to the best lab report turned in?Considering I find all these grades so doubtful, it just goes to show how important a standardized test like GRE is.
 
  • #20
Almeisan said:
If 4.00 is max, and A+ is also max, shouldn't A be like 3.75?

Pretty hard though to turn in the theoretically perfect lab report. Or do they just give an A+ to the best lab report turned in?Considering I find all these grades so doubtful, it just goes to show how important a standardized test like GRE is.

A is as high as most colleges give out. There is generally no such thing as an A+, at least at any college I've ever seen.

And that doesn't mean you got 100% on every assignment. Usually an A is above a 94 average for the class, or something similar.
 
  • #21
Almeisan said:
If 4.00 is max, and A+ is also max, shouldn't A be like 3.75?
EJC said:
A is as high as most colleges give out. There is generally no such thing as an A+, at least at any college I've ever seen.

That's right. The college where I work doesn't give out A+ grades, either. I've corrected my list of letter grades further back in this thread.

I might as well add that the final GPA is calculated by converting those letter grades back to numbers on a 0-4 scale, and averaging them, weighting them according to the number of credits for each course. Here, A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, etc.
 
  • #22
The PGRE overall is not as important as grades, letters, and research. I would argue that letters and research are by far the most important. It is actually a pretty stupid test which relies more on knowing how to take a standardized test that your actual knowledge at some level. The reason schools use it is because grading is not uniform at different institutions. For example, if you go to a school that is not well known, a good PGRE suggests to the committee that the coursework has prepared you for grad school. So it could be very relevant for your situation. However if you get great research and maybe one course letter that can overcome a bad score. I didn't do as well as I should have as a theorist (which surprised the professor who ran the review course since I was an active participant in it and knew my stuff) and still got into 5 top ten schools since I apparently had really strong letters and I also had very strong research experience.

What I would suggest for the PGRE is you do all of the old practice tests several times, save the most recent one or two to be timed, and most importantly be well rested and fed on test day. My downfall came because I didn't eat enough on the day. About half way through the test I could feel my mind slowing down from hunger. I remember one question where I clearly knew how to do but was having trouble doing the algebra because I was so hungry. This is really important!

The PGRE has become less important in recent years for a variety of reasons. First, schools realize it is not a good indication of your potential as a researcher (the reason you go to grad school). At UChicago for example, they told us that they plotted the PGRE scores versus the rankings professors gave applicants and saw no correlation. I would assume this happens above 700, because if you know the stuff you can usually get above a certain minimum score just based on knowledge. Second, one of the most important reasons for having the PGREs is to predict how you will study and perform on quals. This is now irrelevant at many schools because quals are being phased out. Stanford mentioned this in their 2014 acceptance letter and even UChicago, which had one of the hardest quals, has phased it out in favor of a placement test. Even MIT, which had the most rigorous of all (they had three parts, two written one oral and 50% pass rate for the written parts) only has one required section as of this year! They got rid of part one and you can replaced quantum and stat mech with courses (unfortunately for one of my close friends, he passed part one in the fall, which is no longer relevant). In my program, we never had a written qual, instead we have 4 required courses and 4 electives which you can place out of if you prove you had a rigorous grad course previously.

The definition of an A at different schools varies. At my school there usually was no fixed cutoff, the professor would look at test scores and decide how to assign grades based on that. For example, one my professors said if you got at least 2/3s of the points on each exam you would get at least a B+ in the course but the rest of the scale was unfixed so you could be in the low to mid 80s and get an A. The exams were not designed so an A was above 93% because more difficult exams make it easier to separate students by their abilities.
 
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  • #23
Thanks for the advice radium! I believe my letters of recommendation will be strong, and hopefully even if I do poorly on the PGRE (although many of you have convinced me to put quite a bit of effort into studying for it), the other aspects of my application will be enough to carry me through.

I recently talked with someone working as a researcher at my internship about this, and mentioned to them that I will possibly be able to get a publication through my research, but it wouldn't be until next spring, which is after the application process. He strongly recommended that I note that I have a "publication in progress" or "expected publication" on both my CV and anywhere else in the application process that seems relevant. Thoughts on this? I honestly assumed that unless I had finished the publication process that it would relevant, but he definitely said that it was.
 
  • #24
radium said:
Second, one of the most important reasons for having the PGREs is to predict how you will study and perform on quals. This is now irrelevant at many schools because quals are being phased out.

That's interesting! When I started grad school at Michigan 40 years ago this fall, they didn't have a written qualifying exam. A year or two later they instituted one. I was in the last or next-to-last cohort of grad students that did not undergo a qualifying exam.

In order to gain Ph.D. candidacy status, I had to complete a certain amount of coursework, get a research advisor, and then round up six faculty members for an unofficial dissertation committee. They gave me an oral exam, and when I passed it, I became a Ph.D. candidate and they became my official dissertation committee. Some years later I defended my dissertation in front of them.

I heard through the grapevine that the failure rate on the first written qualifying exam was very high, so I was glad that I had gotten in under the wire. Fortunately one could re-take it later (once or twice, I don't remember).
 
  • #25
Almeisan said:
If 4.00 is max, and A+ is also max, shouldn't A be like 3.75?

Pretty hard though to turn in the theoretically perfect lab report. Or do they just give an A+ to the best lab report turned in?Considering I find all these grades so doubtful, it just goes to show how important a standardized test like GRE is.

You only find them doubtful because you don't understand how grading works in the US. The graduate admissions committees do understand, thankfully. I could see how other countries might be confused, but everything being claimed here in the thread is normal and accurate for the US.
 
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  • #26
EJC said:
Thanks, that is all very helpful information. I will definitely check out the physicsgre forums.

As far as "long shots, reasonable, and safeties," what sort of ranking ranges would you consider? Long shots being anything in the top 25?

Also, I am planning on applying to University of Rochester. I believe they're ranked 44 or somewhere around there, but they are ranked 6 in AMO. Since I apply to the graduate program in physics and not specifically in AMO, does anyone have any insight whether they would be as hard to get into as a 6th ranked school, or a 44th ranked school. This type of scenario applies to more than just U of R, but it makes a good example.

It still depends on how you do on the PGRE. Nearly everyone admits that the PGRE is not a good indicator of graduate school success, but they still need it for admissions to help normalize GPAs obtained from different schools. I've talked to several admissions professors about this and I get the feeling they look for a certain cutoff score, and after that they care much more about research experience, letters, and grades. This way they will not accept people who did nothing except study for the PGRE, and still accept someone who did decently but not great, but has good research experience and promising letters. In other words, the PGRE probably will not be a deciding factor in their decision about you. If a committee was deciding between someone in the 70th percentile and someone in the 80th, they would probably make the decision based on something else and not just pick the person with the better score. In fact, my grad school cohort had scores ranging from the 30's all the way up to near perfect.

Here is another point you may not have considered yet. You're research experience does sound a little weak, especially since you won't be very far along in your senior project. You could potentially benefit greatly by taking a gap year, and you could finish your project and get a paper and study more for the PGRE before applying. That's not to say you shouldn't try this time around, but it's something to keep in mind.

As for a school like Rochester, it is certainly easier to get into compared to a school ranked 6th overall that is also strong in AMO. But it's also probably harder to get into compared to a similarly ranked school that isn't in the top rankings for some sub-field. This is a good thing for you, since really the most important thing for your success is who you're advisor will be, not the name of your school. But even though you apply to the graduate program, they do consider what you say your intended sub-field will be. More people applying to Rochester probably say they want to do AMO compared to astrophysics, so it's probably harder to get into for someone with a stated interest in AMO compared to astrophysics.
 
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  • #27
Stengah said:
Here is another point you may not have considered yet. You're research experience does sound a little weak, especially since you won't be very far along in your senior project. You could potentially benefit greatly by taking a gap year, and you could finish your project and get a paper and study more for the PGRE before applying. That's not to say you shouldn't try this time around, but it's something to keep in mind.

I'm definitely considering the option of a gap year to do exactly that. I'll have more on my application at that point, and would get another go at the PGRE and have much more time to study on that. I plan on applying this year, and if I don't get into any schools for whatever reason, then that is likely my plan.
 
  • #28
Why is there no mention of Arizona? Is it an AMO misfit?
 
  • #29
Arizona and Rochester might be good as less competitive schools to apply to, but if you got a good PGRE score and has more research experience you should aim much higher. I do agree your research experience is a bit weak. Most students at top schools (besides some internationals since they don't focus as much on it as in the US) have spent every summer doing research time, some doing two REUs or other programs and also spend around 15 hours per week during the semester.
 
  • #30
radium said:
Arizona and Rochester might be good as less competitive schools to apply to, but if you got a good PGRE score and has more research experience you should aim much higher. I do agree your research experience is a bit weak. Most students at top schools (besides some internationals since they don't focus as much on it as in the US) have spent every summer doing research time, some doing two REUs or other programs and also spend around 15 hours per week during the semester.

This is the very reason why I even suggested Arizona; better have a list that is bottom-heavy rather than top-heavy at the PhD level, when research experience is a little weak. I do not think Arizona is low enough to suffer from Tufts Syndrome in an AMO context.

If the OP is more the kind of person who would use AMO as a research tool to do something else, Northwestern perhaps...
 
  • #31
Completely disagree. If the OPs professors think they stand a good chance of getting into top schools if not several of them.They should apply to a lot of them while having maybe two or three safeties. If you are a great applicant, most often you will get into a top program of you apply to enough. You run into the same general group of AMO people at all of the top 10 open houses. That's because they were the top applicants that year so everyone wanted them.

Tufts syndrome is for the most part not a thing at PhD programs. If they really want you to come they will offer you a special fellowship and no teaching duties. There was a program I got into which I would never attended (they most likely knew that) so they tried to lure me in by giving me extra money and no teaching duties for the first year.
 
  • #32
The weak research experience may be something that can be overcome if they get very strong letters, or possibly take a gap year to do research, which is definitely not a bad idea. However, the level of schools they apply to should be based on professors advice. If the professors think they have a good chance of getting into a top school they need to apply to a lot.

If you feel less secure about your application in this case, just apply to more schools, have realistic places but still apply to a lot of the top places
 
  • #33
radium said:
Completely disagree. If the OPs professors think they stand a good chance of getting into top schools if not several of them.They should apply to a lot of them while having maybe two or three safeties. If you are a great applicant, most often you will get into a top program of you apply to enough. You run into the same general group of AMO people at all of the top 10 open houses. That's because they were the top applicants that year so everyone wanted them.

Tufts syndrome is for the most part not a thing at PhD programs. If they really want you to come they will offer you a special fellowship and no teaching duties. There was a program I got into which I would never attended (they most likely knew that) so they tried to lure me in by giving me extra money and no teaching duties for the first year.

In my experience, only low-tier (think 60+ and down) departments will suffer from Tufts Syndrome...
 
  • #34
Well I wouldn't call it Tufts syndrome, I would say it's getting a sense that you are not interested in their program and would be unlikely to come if admitted. At least at the undergrad level there is really no hard evidence of so called Tufts syndrome since if you looks at the data for the schools people claim to practice it, you will see that at the level peoe think it applies there are also a lot of students who are in fact admitted. This means that the failure for the other high scoring/well qualified students to be accepted has more to do with holistic admissions than it does with denying people who are overqualified.

At the PhD level, I would believe if you show knowledge and genuine interest in the program that they would admit you regardless if you are technically one of the most qualified applicants. These schools also tend to be smaller so they need to make sure they don't admit too many people. Overestimating yield is not a great thing, it has happened at several schools I know in the past few years and it means that professors need to take on more students than usual.

Anyway, if your professors think very highly of you and tell you from experience that you should apply to top programs, you should maybe stick to the top 40. These schools have more money and resources as well as higher quality students. If you take a gap year and perform very well in research, I think you should most definitely aim very high. Also, if you get an outstanding research from your time at the government research lab that will really be great for your application.

It is definitely possible to be admitted to top programs from a less well known LAC if you really stand out, especially in research.
 

1. What are the factors that determine my chances of getting into a Ph.D program?

The factors that determine your chances of getting into a Ph.D program include your undergraduate GPA, letters of recommendation, research experience, GRE scores, and personal statement. These factors vary in importance depending on the program and field of study.

2. Is it necessary to have research experience to get into a Ph.D program?

While research experience is not always a requirement for admission into a Ph.D program, it can significantly improve your chances. It shows that you have a strong interest and aptitude for research, which is a crucial aspect of graduate studies.

3. How important are GRE scores in the admissions process?

GRE scores are one of the factors that are considered in the admissions process, but they are not the only determining factor. A high GRE score can strengthen your application, but a lower score does not necessarily disqualify you. Many programs also consider other aspects of your application, such as research experience and letters of recommendation.

4. Can I improve my chances of getting into a Ph.D program after being rejected?

Yes, you can improve your chances of getting into a Ph.D program after being rejected. You can retake the GRE, gain more research experience, or improve your application materials. It is also helpful to reach out to the program and ask for feedback on your application to understand where you can make improvements.

5. How can I stand out in the highly competitive admissions process for Ph.D programs?

To stand out in the highly competitive admissions process for Ph.D programs, you can focus on building a strong research background, obtaining excellent letters of recommendation, and crafting a compelling personal statement. Additionally, networking with professors and attending conferences in your field can also help you stand out and make valuable connections.

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