Schools Undergraduate college Name Recognition - Graduate School Admissions

AI Thread Summary
Graduate schools consider multiple factors during the admissions process, including GPA, GRE scores, letters of recommendation, research experience, and extracurricular activities. While some believe that the reputation of the undergraduate institution matters less, many admissions committees do prioritize applicants from prestigious schools. A GPA of 3.0 to 3.3 is generally viewed as insufficient for competitive graduate programs in the sciences, with a recommendation to aim for at least a 3.5. Although students from less recognized schools like Arizona State University can gain admission to top programs, they must demonstrate exceptional qualifications to stand out. Recommendations from well-known professors can significantly enhance an applicant's profile, and the perceived quality of undergraduate programs can vary by specific fields within physics and astronomy. Overall, while academic performance is crucial, the reputation of the undergraduate institution can influence admissions decisions.
Hueytwo50
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
If I go to Arizona State University to major in Physics w/ an Astronomy minor, get good grades (GPA ~3.0 to 3.3), do some research, and get good letters of recommendations, do graduate schools look at what school you went to for the admissions process?

In other words, do astronomy graduate programs factor in if you went to a good astronomy school (Caltech, Harvard, UC Berkeley, etc.) or an ok astronomy school (ASU, etc.) for admitting a student? (Assume that the grades are similar.) I'm curious because it seems that a Physics major at different schools are so similar in difficulty and quality, that maybe name-recognition will eventually win out.

Thanks!
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
As I understand it, (and I could be wrong, I'm still an undergrad myself), graduate schools don't care about where you obtained your degree. They're mainly concerned with your GRE scores, GPA (~3.0-3.3 isn't really a good GPA), letters of recommendation, research, and related extracurriculars (robotics team, math competitions, etc.)

Most undergraduate programs are equal between U.S. universities.
 
Yes, actually, grad schools DO care where you went to college. It's one of the factors they take into consideration. A friend of mine was on the admissions committee at a top school the year I was applying, and said they basically threw our every applicant not from another top school in the field. Which did not include my (very good) liberal arts college, even though I had paid the application fee, had a high GPA, and tons of research experience (and publications).

You can still get into a top school from ASU or any other not-top school, but you'll have to do a bit more to stand out. 3.0 - 3.3 GPA really isn't good when applying to grad schools in the sciences. Aim for at least a 3.5, if not much higher. 3.0 is nearly failing in grad school, and graduate classes are a harder than undergrad. Top schools really do expect more from their students than lower-ranked schools can, and it shows in their ability when they get to grad school.
 
eri said:
It's one of the factors they take into consideration. A friend of mine was on the admissions committee at a top school the year I was applying, and said they basically threw our every applicant not from another top school in the field.

It really does depend on the committee since the people I know that do admissions don't care much about brand recognition.

Top schools really do expect more from their students than lower-ranked schools can, and it shows in their ability when they get to grad school.

One other thing the "top schools" may not be where you think they are.
 
Hueytwo50 said:
If I go to Arizona State University to major in Physics w/ an Astronomy minor, get good grades (GPA ~3.0 to 3.3), do some research, and get good letters of recommendations, do graduate schools look at what school you went to for the admissions process?

The ones I know don't. Also don't confuse "top school" with "famous school."

In other words, do astronomy graduate programs factor in if you went to a good school (Caltech, Harvard, UC Berkeley, etc.) or an ok school (ASU, etc.) for admitting a student?

It's not clear to me that Harvard does or does not have a better department in some things that ASU. There's probably some area of physics or astronomy that ASU does better than Harvard (looking at the web pages, it seems like planetary science and spacecraft instrumentation) and you can focus on that.

If you get recommendations from professors that the committee has heard of, it will help a lot. and well-known, respected professors are pretty well scattered.

Assume that the grades are similar.) I'm curious because it seems that a Physics major at different schools are so similar in difficulty and quality, that maybe name-recognition will eventually win out.

Schools may similar but students aren't.
 
eri said:
Yes, actually, grad schools DO care where you went to college. It's one of the factors they take into consideration. A friend of mine was on the admissions committee at a top school the year I was applying, and said they basically threw our every applicant not from another top school in the field.

What a dark world
 
I’ve been looking through the curricula of several European theoretical/mathematical physics MSc programs (ETH, Oxford, Cambridge, LMU, ENS Paris, etc), and I’m struck by how little emphasis they place on advanced fundamental courses. Nearly everything seems to be research-adjacent: string theory, quantum field theory, quantum optics, cosmology, soft matter physics, black hole radiation, etc. What I don’t see are the kinds of “second-pass fundamentals” I was hoping for, things like...
TL;DR Summary: I want to do a PhD in applied math but I hate group theory, is this a big problem? Hello, I am a second-year math and physics double major with a minor in data science. I just finished group theory (today actually), and it was my least favorite class in all of university so far. It doesn't interest me, and I am also very bad at it compared to other math courses I have done. The other courses I have done are calculus I-III, ODEs, Linear Algebra, and Prob/Stats. Is it a...

Similar threads

Replies
7
Views
798
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
2K
Replies
32
Views
3K
Back
Top