hlin818
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To elaborate on said situation - I went to a top 50 US public university for a few years majoring in math and during this period of time I had no significant interest or motivation in school, much less any graduate school aspirations. I didn't do *horrible*, but my gpa was about a 3.1. I took some time off from college to uh, soul search and I proceeded to move to another state and was fortunate enough to transfer into a top 30 university with a fairly strong physics program as a physics major. It was there that I discovered my passion for physics which gave me a lot more motivation in academics all around.
Over the next four years I racked up a ~3.88 GPA with a double major in physics and mathematics at my new university, retaking all of the old math classes I didn't do so well in and showing that I could understand the material. I did 3 summer REUs and an honors thesis that led to a publication. I have the typical awards people get for a strong GPA, some tutoring experience, and what I believe to be strong recommendations from professors who supervised my work and I got a 890 (86 percentile) on the PGRE.
I'm really hoping to get into a top ten program but I am very worried that my less than ideal performance at my old institution will kill my chances. Will it? Please be brutally honest. I'm interested in exp. rather than theory.
Over the next four years I racked up a ~3.88 GPA with a double major in physics and mathematics at my new university, retaking all of the old math classes I didn't do so well in and showing that I could understand the material. I did 3 summer REUs and an honors thesis that led to a publication. I have the typical awards people get for a strong GPA, some tutoring experience, and what I believe to be strong recommendations from professors who supervised my work and I got a 890 (86 percentile) on the PGRE.
I'm really hoping to get into a top ten program but I am very worried that my less than ideal performance at my old institution will kill my chances. Will it? Please be brutally honest. I'm interested in exp. rather than theory.
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