Archive for application tips – Page 23

The summer before applying to graduate school

A blog contribution by Megan Tackney, a recent SIPA graduate and former Admissions Program Assistant. (We miss you Megan!)

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It was just as hot and humid as it is now, maybe even worse. It was the beginning of summer in Washington D.C. and the women of Mintwood Place had decided to go to graduate school. I had lived in D.C. for almost 8 years and worked in advocacy at a women’s legal organization. My roommate was employed at one of the top political consulting firms in the country. Our third roommate, quite coincidentally also named Meaghan (different spelling), had moved out a year ago to go to SIPA, it was her dream school and it was all she talked about. We blame her for the higher education craze that took over our apartment.

That summer we began to prepare for the graduate school application period. I collected packets and tracked information sessions for every school I was going to apply to, a total of 7. My roommate had a Volkswagen beetle, which for some reason always smelled like crayons, and we would squeeze ourselves in, and find these events in faraway places without transportation, like Georgetown. I asked co-workers if they knew students or alumni from possible schools and if I could talk to them. I wanted to know what jobs they held now, what the student body was like and if they were regretful of anything, and if so, what?   I tried to imagine my life in every city or in some cases, small towns, which was sometimes just as important as the school’s academic program.

In addition to stalking alumni, we also had to take the GRE’s in the Fall. This meant studying and taking a test, something we hadn’t done in quite a while, but we were determined. Step 1 – We bought the prep. books. Step 2 – We made flash cards. We were going to learn 20 new words a week, which we actually did, in between some DVR sessions. Step 3 – We recognized our weaknesses. We tried doing the math practice problems together, but it wasn’t exactly successful. I got a tutor.

The schools also demanded essays – lots of them. Having the self control to write that many essays is really hard. We identified nights after work where all we would do was write and give the other creative and some terrible ideas on how we could sell ourselves to the top schools in the country.

That summer was intense and exciting. It was full of possibilities for the residents of our little apartment. With applications due in January the work continued into the Fall and included the new awkward task of asking for recommendations, which could be a blog post in itself.

In the end it was all worth it. We got into every single school we applied to and begrudgingly left each other. That was the last step in the application process, saying goodbye to our old lives and imagining the next. As I graduated last month, this is one step I have unfortunately not yet completed.

 

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.

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 Waiting Game

 

“…of all the hardships a person had to face none was more punishing than the simple act of waiting.”

Khaled Hosseini, A Thousand Splendid Suns

We will begin rolling out decisions today; however, don’t be discouraged if you haven’t heard from us yet.  It can take a few days from when a decision is made to when it is released to the system.  We don’t publish all our decisions in a single day, so if yours doesn’t happen to be one of the first to be finalized, hang in there.  Waiting isn’t easy but sometimes “it’s” worth the wait.

2012 Applicant facts #1

SIPA’s diverse student body is one of its greatest attributes. Each year we receive applications from nearly 100 different countries from applicants with varied academic and professional backgrounds.

As you await your decisions, we thought it would be fun to post a few entries based on factoids about this year’s applicant pool.

This first post has some information on the citizenship of the Fall 2012 applicants. Columbia and SIPA, in particular, has one of the most international student bodies in the world. Columbia University ranks third in the United States in terms of international student enrollment and SIPA commonly enrolls students from more than 100 countries per year.

This year applicants for our two-year programs hail from 98 different countries.  This figure, however, does not include U.S. Permanent Residents.  Many Permanent Residents represent countries not reflected in the 103 countries below.

Afghanistan
Albania
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Belarus
Belgium
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Bulgaria
Burma
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Denmark
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Guinea
Honduras
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kuwait
Latvia
Lebanon
Malawi
Mexico
Mongolia
Morocco
Mozambique
Nepal
The Netherlands
New Zealand
Niger
Nigeria
Norway
Pakistan
Paraguay
People’s Republic of China
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovenia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tanzania
Thailand
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United States
Uruguay
Venezuela
Vietnam
Zambia
Zimbabwe

"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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