May 6, 2008
| Columbia University |
Quantitative Methods In Social Sciences Qmss, Masters |
Rejected via E-mail on 26 Apr 2008 |
A |
25 Apr 2008 |
Got an email saying decision was made. Went in and saw the reject. I tried my best. Rejected from 2/3. Grad school really discriminates against poor students who are making it on their own. I went to community college and to a University of California, graduated cum laude. I guess they didn’t like the community college part. |
| Columbia University |
Quan Methods In Social Sci, Masters |
Other via Other on 26 Apr 2008 |
O |
26 Apr 2008 |
To the poster below it appears you are being rather nieve about the intense competition in soc sci for an Ivy League school. I would also guess they expect you to have about 700/750 on your GRE quan scores and likely 650 min for verbal, and I imagine community college background was not the best. I’d just be sure not to narrow yourself to ivy league and try to get the best fit for your research interests, and cheer up- may be better program out there for you and there’s always next year. |
| Columbia University |
Quan Methods In Social Sci, Masters |
Other via Other on 26 Apr 2008 |
O |
26 Apr 2008 |
To the poster below: Do not belittle him because of his undergrad experiences. All of us do not have the money, family background or the chance to attend the top high schools and Ivy League institutions for undergrad. I applaud him for pushing on. Ivy League or not the graduate admission process is not a level playing field. I did not attend the best, not even ranked in the top 100 program not to mention all black university but I got into many top schools. Do not lose faith and keep sight of your goals. Graduate school admission is a crap shoot. Your background does not matter, you can do what you set out to do; just sometimes the road is a little rougher. Keep pushing on. Keep putting yourself through school, a lot of us have to do just that and once you make it, you will appreciate it much more. Just remember to keep the faith |
Posted in Politics | Tagged Higher Education |