|
Clinch your graduate school acceptanceInsiders offer tips on ways to stand out from the pool of graduate school applicants.
By the time he came to work with me on research in his junior year, hed already been collecting his own data, presented it at a conference...and was able to relate it to existing research in the field, Addis recalls. Greens experience and clear focus boosted his chances for acceptance into Clarks clinical psychology graduate program, Addis says. But you dont need gobs of poster presentations and research projects under your belt to get accepted to graduate school. Here are some ways to boost your chances of getting in.
Research experience is the best preparation for graduate school, and these days is virtually a requirement, she says. To find research opportunities, ask professors from your undergraduate psychology courses if they need research assistants or want to take on independent study students. And completing a senior thesis is a must, she adds, because it shows that you have the ability to conduct an entire research experiment from idea conception to final data analysis. Green, now a first-year doctoral student at Clark, also recommends working on different research projects at various labs to help you narrow your interests. The only way to figure out what you want to do is to make mistakes and study things that maybe dont pique your interest, he says. Studentsespecially those without much research experiencemay want to put off graduate school for a year or two and work as research assistants at a local university, says Moore. Working post-college may provide some perspective and help you fine-tune your career plans, she adds. In two years, youll have asubstantive amount of work done, maybe even enough to submit for publication, before you apply, she says.
Its easy in the abstract for someone to say that they want to help other people, but sometimes they discover that it is more difficult than they realize and that it is not really for them, he says. Its better for them to discover that before they enter graduate school, rather than after.
Several months before she applied to graduate school, Moore e-mailed professors she thought she might eventually interview with and set up time during an upcoming conference to introduce herself. After meeting them, professors recognized my name when they read applications, which probably gave me a bump in the admissions process, she says.
Often, students think that graduate school is a lot like undergraduate study and that theyre going to take classes, write papers and take exams, and at the end of that, theyll have a PhD, he says. Its not really like that. He adds that students should view graduate school as more of a mentorship program, where theyll be required to transition from being consumers of knowledge to producers of knowledge by conducting their own research, analyzing data and writing research papers. To identify the right graduate program, Moore suggests asking trusted professors or graduate students for advice and reading through research papers in your intended field to find programs that might interest you. Putting in the extra time to get to know certain programs and their research openings can yield great results, she says. How much you want to go to graduate school often determines whether you end up getting in,Moore concludes. BY AMY CYNKAR Also in the Cover Package …
|
||||||||||
|
© 2008 American Psychological Association |
||||||||||