Archive for March 2012

Have you made plans to be in NYC for Admitted Students Day?

The following post is an interview with Carolina Escalera from Tallahassee, Florida. She’s a first year MPA student concentrating in Urban and Social Policy.

Why did you attend Admitted Students Day?

I wanted to get a feel of the school; to literally feel how I felt on campus, the environment, and most importantly meet current students so that I could get their personal feedback. A lot of times a school sounds great on paper, but to me it is important to see how I fit in and if I felt it was a place I could thrive in. Admitted Students Day is a great way to meet current students and ask “real” questions.

What was the best information you learned?

The best information I learned was getting a better understanding of the concentration and specializations. During Admitted Students Day, I was able to meet the director of the Urban and Social Policy concentration and talk to students about the classes they were taking and their experience at SIPA overall.

How did it help you decide to come to SIPA?

Meeting the students and learning more about the concentration is what helped me decide to come to SIPA. I liked the flexibility of the concentration and the positive experience of the students.

What else did you do besides visit the school to make your decision?

As a student of color, I wanted to be comfortable in graduate school. The diversity of classes, students and the New York City experience led me to choose SIPA. I wanted to be able to fit in and feel comfortable in school and just being in New York City where there is a diversity in the population, I knew the dialogue would be stimulating and studying urban policy, there would be no better place. Moreover, SIPA has a student organization SIPA Students of Color (SSOC) and to me having a safe space to talk about issues that affect my community was important. I am now currently on the board of the organization.

What’s one word of advice you would give to a newly admitted applicant this year?

Network! SIPA Students of Color (SSOC) will be hosting a happy hour for admitted students on Monday April 9, 2012 at Havana Central. Come network with current students and get to know SIPA better!

 

Check here for more information about Admitted Students Day.  We hope to see you there!

Different strokes for different policy schools

Most applicants apply to several different schools and it is only natural not only to compare the characteristics of those schools, but the admission decisions of those schools.

When decisions go out each year, applicants will often contact our office to discuss their SIPA admission decision. Statements and questions like the following are not uncommon:

  • I don’t understand why I was put on the waitlist at SIPA when I was admitted to all of the other schools I applied to. Can you explain why?
  • I received a fellowship offer from another school but not from SIPA. Why didn’t I get SIPA fellowship funding?
  • SIPA’s letter said that I should get more experience and apply again at a later time but other schools admitted me? Why?
  • My decision letter from SIPA said I could benefit from additional English language study but I was admitted to other U.S. programs. Why?
  • Why have I heard from other schools but not SIPA?

To offer some insight to these types of concerns…  If every single applicant applied to the same exact schools, were read by the exact same committee, and the committees shared the exact same budget then these questions might not exist.  Obviously, this is not what happens.

Policy schools are similar in many ways. We have similar core classes, faculty that study, teach, and practice common subjects, and we seek to prepare students for similar careers. However, each school differs in many ways when it comes to shaping an incoming class.

Each school has its own unique Admissions Committee structure. Each school has its own unique applicant pool. Each school has a different fellowship endowment and can choose to use it in different ways. Each school has different donors who set different criteria for awards. Each school has its own time lines.

The reality is each policy school is different in its own way and will make decisions based on its history, goals, preferences and yes, limitations.

The Writing on the Wall

Posted by Molly Powers

In many areas, SIPA is ahead of the curve on paperless and wireless innovation. Classrooms are multimedia, occasionally even connecting lecturers and other classrooms from around the world. Your readings and the lion’s share of research materials are online, papers are submitted via a course dropbox, students collaborate on projects over google docs, lucid charts, and prezi.  But perhaps because SIPA students’ inboxes are so constantly brimming, when it comes to publicizing school-wide events, we tend to resort to old-fashioned forms of marketing, i.e. posters.

It is one of the great frustrations of my SIPA experience that each day as I walk from the 4th floor to the 6th floor café, I read about all the amazing things that are happening on campus that I won’t be able to attend because, oh yeah, I have to go to classes. A seminar on digital politics in Tibet. A film screening of Food Inc. by the SIPA Food Group. A speakers panel on Rio +20 with the UN Ambassador from Brazil. A public policy forum on voters’ rights with the NAACP President. A workshop on salary negotiation.  I find myself wishing that for a semester, instead of taking courses, I could attend every interesting panel or seminar. But then the courses are pretty good too.

 

Here’s a taste of what’s on the wall this week.

 

Humanitarian Negotiations Revealed: The MSF Experience

Monday, March 19 from 6pm to 9pm

Humanitarian negotiations are life-and-death issues for people in need, but they also raise troubling political and ethical dilemmas for the organizations that are engaged in them. In the forthcoming book Humanitarian Negotiations Revealed: The MSF Experience, published by Columbia University Press, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) takes a critical look at how its teams have negotiated to gain access to people in urgent need of lifesaving medical assistance in the 40 years since MSF was founded, including recent case studies from Somalia, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

Please join us at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs for a moderated panel discussion of these issues with John Fiddler, an experienced MSF aid worker; Sophie Delaunay, the Executive Director of MSF-USA; and the iconoclastic author David Rieff (A Bed for the Night). They will describe the often complicated process of negotiating with governments, armed groups, public health officials, international actors, community leaders, and local officials; as well as the struggle to define what compromises are acceptable in order to run programs in crisis zones.

Sponsored by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières, SIPA’s Humanitarian Affairs Program, and SIPA’s International Organizations Specialization.

SIPAWESOME TRIVIA NIGHT

Wednesday March 21, 9pm- Midnight at the Harlem Tavern

SIPA Students vs. Engineering School Students: who will win when the battle when analysts and engineers match wits? I guess we’re hoping that most of the trivia questions are not word problems, huh SIPA? $15 Ticket includes drink and food. Live music until 10, followed by trivia, with prizes for the winning team.

SHOOT THE WASTE

March 5- April 2

A Photo Competition for the best and worst examples of sustainability in New York and beyond. Awards Ceremony April 9 at 8pm.

 

  1. Focus on objects, not people 
  2. Upload all photos to the facebook page with your name, UNI, and a 1-2 sentence description of why the photo fits into its category
  3. You must be the photographer, but the photo does not have to be recent. Look in past albums.
  4. Open to everyone in the SIPA community. 

Sponsored by SIPA Food Group, Net Impact, and SIPA Environmental Coalition

 

 

 

Upcoming information session

People generally attend information sessions to learn more about the school and about the program(s).  You also have an opportunity to meet representatives of the program and ask questions that you may not be able to find answers for on the website or publications.  The most valuable information usually comes from speaking with students — the actual people living and experiencing the program and school.

One of the questions we have been asked by prospective candidates is what is the difference between our full time two year Master of Public Administration, Master of International Affairs and MPA in Development Practice programs so in response to your question, we are making our busy MPA/MIA and MPA-DP students available this Friday (March 23) from 12pm – 1:15pm  to share with you their backgrounds, why they chose the their particular program, as well as answer your pressing questions about each program.

So if you are in the New York City area and you want to spend a hour with us, please register for the session.  Hope to see you at SIPA on Friday.

Still waiting…

The Admissions Office has been fielding many calls and emails regarding decisions.   We have not forgotten you.  We began releasing decisions on Wednesday and continue to release decisions as they become available.  If you have not heard from us yet, it does not mean your application is in a better or worse position.  It only means that the Admissions Committee did not complete their evaluation of your application yet.  We hope to provide decisions for every submitted and complete application by the end of next week.  Thank you for your patience.

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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