Schools Grad School Advice: Applying to Physics Programs

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on evaluating the competitiveness of a graduate school application in physics. The applicant has a strong academic background with a GPA of 3.76 in undergraduate studies and 3.85 in graduate physics courses, alongside impressive GRE scores, particularly an 800 in Physics. They have research experience from a reputable REU program and have served as a teaching assistant for five semesters. Concerns are raised about the impact of their law degree from a top 10 law school, which is perceived as less relevant to their physics application. The importance of strong letters of recommendation is emphasized, particularly from their REU advisor and undergraduate professors, although the applicant feels less connected to current faculty. The consensus suggests that the applicant is competitive for programs ranked in the second quartile but aspires to gain admission to top 20 schools. The discussion highlights the significance of GRE percentiles and the applicant's potential standing among peers, indicating that with solid recommendations, they could be well-positioned for competitive programs.
Alschum
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
Hey everyone,

So, here I am, going over my grad apps and making sure that I've got everything together. Want to make sure I'm not shooting too high or anything.

About me:

Undergrad: State School with unrecognized physics dept.
GPA: 3.76
PHYS: 3.86

GRE
VERBAL: 570
QUANT: 790
WRITING: 5.0
PHYSICS: 800 (retake)

Research: REU at Top 20 Physics Dept. (if rankings actually mean anything)

Other random info:
I'll have a law degree from a top 10 law school. I've been slacking, so my gpa is about a 3.0. In the meantime, I've taken a few grad physics classes here (really strong physics department) and have a Grad physics gpa of a 3.85.

Without getting into the details of my research interests, etc. (which are unrelated to my REU experience), if you were to judge how competitive my application will be, what would you say? What sorts of schools do you think I should be applying to?

Much appreciated!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Oh, the law degree, why? I don't know, it seemed like what I wanted to do at the time.
 
The missing key factor is your letters, particularly from your REU and graduate faculty. If you are at a Top 10 school now, and you are compared favorably to the grad students there, you could be looking at Top 10.

I don't think the law degree will matter one way or another.

The raw Physics GRE score is hard to judge by - the percentile is more useful. About 1/2-1/3 of the people who take the GRE are accepted, so that should let you know where you stand: e.g. the 85% percentile means that you are somewhere in the 55-70 percentile range among people admitted to grad schools, so you would be (based on that score alone) competitive for schools in the second quartile. There are just under 200 schools offering PhD's, so you'd be looking at rankings between 50 and 100.
 
I see, an 800 this year corresponded to the 74th. I should have a strong letter from my REU advisor and professors that knew me very well in undergrad, however I haven't had the opportunity to really get to know any of the faculty here. I wouldn't feel comfortable asking any of them for a letter of rec.

Oh, if it helps anyone, I also was a TA for 5 semesters and have pretty much guaranteed admission to a couple of programs in the 2nd quartile. However, My main concern is those programs in the 1st.
 
Sorry, read incorrectly. Barring anything unforeseen, I pretty much have solid offers from schools in the top 40 or so... I would just like to break into that top 20 range.
 
TL;DR Summary: What topics to cover to safely say I know arithmetic ? I am learning arithmetic from Indian NCERT textbook. Currently I have finished addition ,substraction of 2 digit numbers and divisions, multiplication of 1 digit numbers. I am moving pretty slowly. Can someone tell me what topics to cover first to build a framework and then go on in detail. I want to learn fast. It has taken me a year now learning arithmetic. I want to speed up. Thanks for the help in advance. (I also...
Hi community My aim is to get into research about atoms, specifically, I want to do experimental research that explores questions like: 1. Why do Gallium/Mercury have low melting points 2. Why are there so many exceptions and inconsistencies when it comes to explaining molecular structures / reaction mechanisms in inorganic and organic chemistry 3. Experimental research about fundamental Quantum Mechanics, such as the one being followed by Hiroshima university that proved that observing...
guys i am currently studying in computer science engineering [1st yr]. i was intrested in physics when i was in high school. due to some circumstances i chose computer science engineering degree. so i want to incoporate computer science engineering with physics and i came across computational physics. i am intrested studying it but i dont know where to start. can you guys reccomend me some yt channels or some free courses or some other way to learn the computational physics.

Similar threads

Replies
12
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
9
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
26
Views
5K
Back
Top