Yet another grad school question thread

In summary, the conversation discusses the importance of various factors in graduate school applications, such as GPA, GRE scores, research experience, and letters of recommendation. It is mentioned that different schools may prioritize different factors and there is no simple algorithm to determine the best candidate. The importance of recommendation letters and research experience is emphasized, with the GRE General test being considered less significant. The conversation also touches on the possibility of applying for graduate school in the US as a Canadian student and the need to take the GRE subject test. The conversation ends with a brief mention of the importance of GRE subject test for entry into most American schools and the idea of applying for a Master's degree in Canada first.
  • #1
Benzoate
422
0
I know these grad school threads have been overdone but nobody ask this question yet:

Would it be fair to say that the grad school applications commitee looks at :

30 % gpa
30% GRE score
30 % Research experience
10% letters of recommendation?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
No, I think it would be fair to say that each graduate school figures out what is important to them. There are to many factors to consider for a some simple algorithm to figure out. For example, if you have a lot of experience and decent recommendation, does that make you better than a guy who has some experience but awesome recommendations from world famous researchers? According to your little system there, it does.
 
  • #3
PowerIso said:
No, I think it would be fair to say that each graduate school figures out what is important to them. There are to many factors to consider for a some simple algorithm to figure out. For example, if you have a lot of experience and decent recommendation, does that make you better than a guy who has some experience but awesome recommendations from world famous researchers? According to your little system there, it does.

In that case scenario you just describe, I think I would be the better candidate because experience matters a lot than who you know(or should matter) . I think to grad school applications commitee will be well aware of the fact that most of the grad school applicants have not rubbed shoulders with stephen hawking or michio kaku. And I don't think it should matter whether the physicist has won a nobel prize or not, but only if he/she knows the students weaknesses and strengths whether the student was a student of that professor or worked as his research assistant.
 
  • #4
Benzoate said:
In that case scenario you just describe, I think I would be the better candidate because experience matters a lot than who you know(or should matter) . I think to grad school applications commitee will be well aware of the fact that most of the grad school applicants have not rubbed shoulders with stephen hawking or michio kaku. And I don't think it should matter whether the physicist has won a nobel prize or not, but only if he/she knows the students weaknesses and strengths whether the student was a student of that professor or worked as his research assistant.
Okay, but the admissions committee knows they can trust the opinion of someone they think highly of because that person has a reputation to uphold. If this is the first time they've heard of your adviser or your school than they have nothing to go on.

This is the way the system works.

P.S. Most physicists have not won a Nobel Prize, and don't expect you to have worked with someone who has, either. But it certainly wouldn't hurt.
 
  • #5
Benzoate said:
I know these grad school threads have been overdone but nobody ask this question yet:

Would it be fair to say that the grad school applications commitee looks at :

30 % gpa
30% GRE score
30 % Research experience
10% letters of recommendation?

No way, from what a lot of my professors are telling me it's more letters of recommendations than anything, if not a majority at least a plurality.
 
  • #6
The GRE General test counts for very little. Research experience and reference letters are key. It also helps to ace the subject test, but the subject test score (if applicable) is mostly used as a disqualifier.
 
  • #7
Gokul43201 said:
The GRE General test counts for very little.

For admissions, this is probably true.
However, for university-wide competitions for fellowships, a good score on the General Test might help win one.
 
  • #8
I have one crappy recommendation letter, one decent one, and one good one (my most recent one). How will an admissions committee view that? Will my crappy recommendation be enough to kill my chances to get into a certain school?

My crappy recommendation is from a research-for-credit course I took last year. I was taking more than a full course load so I kind of rushed my results and thesis. I felt I had to include it since it was one of my research experiences related to what I want to get into.
 
Last edited:
  • #9
Gokul43201 said:
The GRE General test counts for very little. Research experience and reference letters are key. It also helps to ace the subject test, but the subject test score (if applicable) is mostly used as a disqualifier.

Really?

I'm Canadian but I didn't write the GRE, does this mean I can still qualify for graduate school in the US?

I did really well in my subjects, I have research experience, and I already have lots of TA experience (probably more than most graduate students!).

I can also get really good reference letters.

Would I have a shot a nice school in the US?

Note: I might be sending in a paper of an alternative proof to a theorem. I'm getting another prof. to look it over and then it's in.
 
  • #10
The GRE General is mandatory for all applicants.

Most schools require the GRE Physics subject test

I hope you're not applying for entry in 2008. If you are, I'd recommend that you do a Master's in Canada first because you won't get into most American schools without writing the GRE subject test. Then apply again next year or the year after for an American school.

Which school do you go to?
 
  • #11
vincebs said:
The GRE General is mandatory for all applicants.

Most schools require the GRE Physics subject test

I hope you're not applying for entry in 2008. If you are, I'd recommend that you do a Master's in Canada first because you won't get into most American schools without writing the GRE subject test. Then apply again next year or the year after for an American school.

Which school do you go to?

I'm thinking of doing mathematics not physics though.

Maybe I'll just apply next year.
 
Last edited:
  • #12
You might as well write the GRE General test since it's offered throughout the year. So that you don't have to cram for it along with the Math Subject test when you write it next year.
 
  • #13
vincebs said:
You might as well write the GRE General test since it's offered throughout the year. So that you don't have to cram for it along with the Math Subject test when you write it next year.

Math subject test?
 
  • #14
What makes a good letter of recommendation?

Is it the professor's glowing review of your achievement? It seems that any professor you've got a good relationship with would give you the best review he possibly could, even if you're not the best student he's ever had.

Is it the reputation of the professor? Does a letter from the head of the department get more weight than a tenured professor, which counts for more than a non-tenured one? Is a letter from an alumnus of the school you are applying to better than one from a non-alumnus?

What should I write for my students if I were a professor (I'm not)?
 
  • #15
JasonRox said:
Really?

I'm Canadian but I didn't write the GRE, does this mean I can still qualify for graduate school in the US?
No. Taking the General test is mandatory. But an admissions committee is hardly likely to pick someone else over you because their verbal score was 600 and yours was 500. However, if your quant score is really low (unlikely, in your case), that could possibly kill your application. That's typically how it works with admissions.

I'm not aware of other potential uses, such as those that Robphy mentioned. I had a Q800, V690 score and landed university fellowships at 3 of the schools I applied to. I didn't think my scores were fantastic, so I'm not sure if there was necessarily any correlation.
 
  • #16
Gokul43201 said:
I'm not aware of other potential uses, such as those that Robphy mentioned. I had a Q800, V690 score and landed university fellowships at 3 of the schools I applied to. I didn't think my scores were fantastic, so I'm not sure if there was necessarily any correlation.

How is a combined 1490 not fantastic? Perfect quant and probably like 90 percentile for verbal. Am I missing something? Most graduate applicants (in all fields, not just physics) would kill for scores like these.
 
  • #17
JasonJo said:
No way, from what a lot of my professors are telling me it's more letters of recommendations than anything, if not a majority at least a plurality.

so letters of recommendations and research experience are more important than GPA and GRE score ? Also will letters of recommendations from professors normally com from professors who taught a physics course or professors who observed your research skills.

To all professors, what do you normally consider a good letter of recommendation and a bad letter of recommendation. Would a good letter of recommendation be a dedicated student with average physics grades, who shows up for all her classes, and that she is intensely interested in the subject?
 
Last edited:
  • #18
Benzoate said:
so letters of recommendations and research experience are more important than GPA and GRE score ?

Absolutely, without a doubt. It is nice to have a good GPA, good GRE scores, but letters of recommendation are so much more important, and having some research experience also helps. Letters from professors who are well known within their field is even better.
 
  • #19
Benzoate said:
so letters of recommendations and research experience are more important than GPA and GRE score ? Also will letters of recommendations from professors normally com from professors who taught a physics course or professors who observed your research skills.

A good letter of recommendation would be one from a professor that knows you well, outside (and inside, if possible) the classroom. This generally means through research experience. However, it could also be from your involvement in a group such as the Society of Physics Students (SPS) at your school. The way I think of it is that any information that cannot be seen on your transcript would be useful. So, it would seem to me that a letter saying that "so and so showed up to class, got good grades, and seemed interested in the subject" is not too valuable a letter. For a professor like that, it might be OK if you are actively involved in class discussion and come to their office often, especially to talk about things outside of class, such as your future plans or research areas.
 
  • #20
bravernix said:
A good letter of recommendation would be one from a professor that knows you well, outside (and inside, if possible) the classroom. This generally means through research experience. However, it could also be from your involvement in a group such as the Society of Physics Students (SPS) at your school. The way I think of it is that any information that cannot be seen on your transcript would be useful. So, it would seem to me that a letter saying that "so and so showed up to class, got good grades, and seemed interested in the subject" is not too valuable a letter. For a professor like that, it might be OK if you are actively involved in class discussion and come to their office often, especially to talk about things outside of class, such as your future plans or research areas.

my advisor said extracurricular activities like sps did not matter like they might have mattered in high school. Have there been a professors that gave bad letters of recommendation?
 
  • #21
Benzoate said:
Have there been a professors that gave bad letters of recommendation?

If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all.
 
  • #22
Benzoate said:
my advisor said extracurricular activities like sps did not matter like they might have mattered in high school.

Leadership positions within extracurriculars was the major factor in my acceptance into an internship program which directly led to my acceptance into grad school (same research group). Additionally, the value of networking and opportunity listings from physics-related extracurriculars cannot be measured. It's all connected. YMMV, of course.
 
  • #23
Benzoate said:
my advisor said extracurricular activities like sps did not matter like they might have mattered in high school. Have there been a professors that gave bad letters of recommendation?

I didn't mean the fact that you were in a group like that would be helpful, but I know at my school there are a couple professors that are involved in the SPS here. Also, as some have said, having held leadership positions may be beneficial.
 
  • #24
I'm just shocked that nepotism is used in graduate schools. I guessing that's for the top schools that are really really hard to get into ?seriously, why is it important whether or not a student might have been stephen hawking's research assistant or stephen hawking may have been my professor. That will not make the student a great physicist like stephen hawking. I think the only important thing should be that the professor should know the students strength and weaknesssess of the student working as a research assistant, as a student , and the student's overall personality.
 
  • #25
Benzoate said:
Also will letters of recommendations from professors normally com from professors who taught a physics course or professors who observed your research skills.
You will want to have both, but the latter is more important. Your skill with the subject can be reasonably deduced from your grades and test scores. But unless you've got papers published in high impact journals, there's no way to really know anything about your research skills, barring the letter from your research advisor (and what you put in a resume is nearly worthless if it can't be backed up).

Benzoate said:
my advisor said extracurricular activities like sps did not matter like they might have mattered in high school.
This is true. They count for very little in most cases.

Benzoate said:
I'm just shocked that nepotism is used in graduate schools.
Ha ha! You're shocked? Wait till it's time to apply for post-docs!
 

What is "Yet another grad school question thread"?

"Yet another grad school question thread" is a popular online forum where individuals can ask and answer questions related to graduate school, such as admissions, funding, and academic life.

Who can participate in "Yet another grad school question thread"?

Anyone can participate in "Yet another grad school question thread", whether you are a current or prospective graduate student, a professor, or a graduate school admissions officer.

What kind of questions can I ask on "Yet another grad school question thread"?

You can ask any question related to graduate school, such as the application process, tips for success in graduate school, and career prospects after graduation.

How can I get the most helpful responses on "Yet another grad school question thread"?

To get the most helpful responses, make sure to provide enough context and details in your question, be respectful towards others, and follow up with any additional information or clarification that may be requested by others.

Are the answers on "Yet another grad school question thread" reliable?

The reliability of the answers on "Yet another grad school question thread" can vary, as they are provided by individuals with different levels of knowledge and experience. It is always a good idea to do additional research and consult with multiple sources before making important decisions based on the answers provided on the forum.

Similar threads

  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
18
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
834
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
3
Views
950
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
2
Views
938
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
26
Views
1K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
3
Views
765
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
28
Views
2K
Replies
15
Views
2K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
4
Views
2K
Back
Top