1 / 14

Applying to Graduate School

Applying to Graduate School. Naomi Altman Graduate Admissions Chair naomi@stat.psu.edu. Summary. Pick your program Pick your degree Pick your schools Pick your references What are we looking for? CV Statement of Purpose Cover Letter Miscellaneous. Pick your program. Statistics

lavender
Download Presentation

Applying to Graduate School

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Applying to Graduate School Naomi Altman Graduate Admissions Chair naomi@stat.psu.edu

  2. Summary • Pick your program • Pick your degree • Pick your schools • Pick your references • What are we looking for? • CV • Statement of Purpose • Cover Letter • Miscellaneous

  3. Pick your program • Statistics • a mix of theory and applications • support through teaching and research • requires lots of math • Biostatistics • more applied • support through teaching and collaboration • Analytics, Data Science ... • usually business oriented • not much theory • may have more computing

  4. Pick your program • Statistics • a mix of theory and applications • support through teaching and research • requires lots of math • Biostatistics • more applied • support through teaching and collaboration • Analytics, Data Science ... • usually business oriented • not much theory • may have more computing

  5. Pick your Degree • Ph.D. • M.S. • M.A. • M.A.S. or M.P.S. • BS → PhD • BS → MS → PhD

  6. Pick your Degree • Ph.D. • research oriented • 4 - 5 years • should get full financial aid • need strong math • M.S. • research and course oriented • 2 – 3 years • might get full financial aid • need strong math • probably optimal job ops & lifetime earnings

  7. Pick your Degree • M.A. • usually course oriented • financial aid?? • 2 years • M.A.S. or M.P.S. • course and consulting oriented • no financial aid (but extra year of earning) • 1 year (after BS in Statistics or math)

  8. Pick your School • read web pages • check American Statistical Association for programs in the US and Canada (www.amstat.org) • Ask your professors • Be realistic • apply to X at your level + reach and safety • 4.0 in math/stat from PSU → reach any top program • What are their recent grads doing? • How long to graduation?

  9. Pick your References • Plan in advance so they know who you are (not just an “A” grade). • Talk with the person so they know your plans and so that you can get an idea of what they will say. • Best (MA, MS, PhD) academics who know you, especially if you have done research or been a TA • Best (MA, MAS) a couple of academics + a relevant work supervisor

  10. What are we looking for? • Good GREs. • Good grades (especially in math, stat, econ ...) • Good writing skills. • Letters that indicate that you are a self-starter and competent. • Research or relevant work experience. • Computing skills. • English skills. • Motivation geared to the program you are applying for.

  11. CV Highlight: • evidence of quantitative skills • relevant work or research experience • computing skills (not MS Office, Minitab, SAS, C++, etc) • leadership (whether marching band or head of analytics team) • data analysis projects, even if done for class Proof Read!

  12. Statement of Purpose • Specific about goals and motivation • not too specific about particular areas of interest • show you read the department web page by mentioning areas of relevant research • mentioning 1 professor to do research with is tricky, what if (s)he leaves or retires? Proof Read!

  13. Cover Letter • Usually required only to explain special circumstances such as: • poor grades • gap in program • late change in major • return to school after working • Parsimony works best. Proof Read!

  14. Miscellaneous • The best source of information is the Grad Admissions Chair, not your friend already in the program • Contact the department before the end of Oct.

More Related