T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
704.1 | me... | REFINE::BARTOO | USAF--Global Reach, Global Power | Thu Feb 21 1991 14:49 | 13 |
|
I go to the Rochester Institute of Technology. It costs about $15,000
a year, including everything. I pay for it by agreeing to be an Air
Force officer for at least 4 years after graduation. The ratio is
about 3:2 guys:girls. It is great because it has a co-op program.
You learn, you get experience, and you make money. WHo could ask for
anything more?
I just am not looking forward to putting anyone through college.
NICK
|
704.2 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | therrrrrre's a bathroom on the right | Thu Feb 21 1991 14:55 | 21 |
| First pass [1971+]
Where? Texas A&M University
Cost? ~ $2,000/year exclusive of room & board
Payment? Scholarship
[room and board on me, I cooked for +/- 20 people in the
house I lived in]
Gender ratio? Then 28M:1F, now ~1:1
Recommendation? sure. a lot of weird traditions, but a great
engineering school. used to have a fabulous History
department as well, don't know about now.
Second Pass [1988-1990]:
Where? Franklin Pierce College
Cost? $318/sem hr
Payment? Digital Equipment Corp
Gender ratio? not a clue
Recommendation? not for anything technical; but Continuing Ed great
in Business disciplines if you can stand the
accelarated schedule
|
704.3 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Thu Feb 21 1991 15:08 | 6 |
|
How interesting that reply #1 is where I went 10 years ago
- me and edp ;-) and reply #2 is where my husband went
(yup, he's an Aggie).
|
704.4 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a pickax a compass & night goggles | Thu Feb 21 1991 15:17 | 26 |
| Where did you go to school?
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
How much did it cost?
I estimate about $60,000 for the whole shebang
How did you pay for it?
I made $36,000 while attending there in a combination of co-ops,
work-study, and part-time jobs. I worked *real* hard. My parents
helped where they could. The rest was guaranteed student loans. I
really didn't get much scholarship help except for awards I got during
graduation from my technical high school - they said I wasn't qualified
for most of the scholarship/financial aid help they offered....
What was the gender ratio?
When I started it was 7:1 (12:1 in my intended major). When I finished
it was 5:1 at the school.
Would you suggest anyone else going there?
No. And Due to DEC's policies on negative recommendation if you wish
to find out why please contact me by mail.
-Jody
|
704.5 | Go, Cowboys! | EVETPU::RUST | | Thu Feb 21 1991 15:27 | 49 |
| [But most of the "Cowboys", as in scholarship athletes, came from
Chicago; wonder why that was? ;-)]
Where did you go to school? University of Wyoming (Laramie, WY)
'69-'73
How much did it cost? In-state tuition ~ $150/semester,
r&b on campus ~ $500/semester
[Those were the good old days; even
then, out-of-state tuition was
fairly steep, and all prices have
risen muchly since then...]
How did you pay for it? Got a $2K scholarship from my dad's
company's academic-award program;
split the rest with my folks,
paying my share out of savings
from summer jobs.
What was the gender ratio? Dunno - student body was about
8,000; ratio probably 2:1
(men:women) or thereabouts.
Higher in the Ag. college,
lower in Liberal Arts. ;-)
Would you suggest anyone else going there?
Sure, if they're looking for a relatively inexpensive way to find out
what life-after-high-school is about. I had no specific educational or
professional goals and relatively little life-experience after
graduating high school, so a low-key (and cheap!) college was fine for
me. If I'd discovered, after the first year or two, that I wanted
something that wasn't available at UW, there'd still have been time to
find a place that had it. (UW does have extremely good programs in some
areas, such as geology.)
I honestly have no idea how much difference there is between typical
undergraduate courses at a state university (or even a junior college)
and those at the more prestigious schools. It may be that if my
family'd sprung for M.I.T., I'd be a completely different person [and
how much *more* different, she wonders, if I'd gone to Bryn Mawr? ;-)],
but at the time it seemed totally unreasonable to spend that kind of
money when I didn't even know what I wanted to do with myself. [For
that matter, it still seems totally unreasonable to me - unless you
have the money to burn, of course, and/or have a burning desire to
take advantage of something that's only available at one of the ritzier
schools.]
-b
|
704.6 | Thanks DEC | MRED::SMALLER | Dress in black | Thu Feb 21 1991 15:30 | 16 |
| Northeastern University for my BA. It probably cost about $80,000 for
the whole thing (NU is a 5 year school if you do co-op).
I paid for it with a few scholarships (about $8000), student loans
(about $18,000), and my parents paid the rest (thanks Mom and Dad).
I thought it was a great school, especially the co-op program....thats
how I came to DEC.
Ratio of F:M, who knows....too many students.
Lesley College for my MS. Cost about $8000 - 9000, but I can't be
sure. DEC paid for the whole thing.
Right now I'm going to BU (about $25,000) for another Master's degree
and DEC is paying once again!
|
704.7 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Feb 21 1991 16:29 | 20 |
| Virginia Polytechnic Institute (82-86). Tuition begins around $1200 a
year and went up to around $2200 a year. Have no idea how much I paid
in total. All I knew then was I gotta pay, so why bother to add 'em
up? Got two degrees there (Math and Electrical Engineering), so took 17
to 18 credits each quarter on average. As to how I paid, I was a
foreign student, so I couldn't get any money from the government (loan
or grant). Neither was I qualified for 90% of the scholarships. But I
did get a merit scholarship from the Math department ($2000 total) and
$500 senior award in the EE dept. The rest I made by working on campus
(not allowed to work off campus) with a maximum limit of 20 hrs/week.
I cut about 30-40% of the classes to do that. My relatives chipped in
a few bucks here and there.
Went to University of Illinois for grad school with a TA/RA, a salary
of around $8000 a year not including summer, and a tuition waive, so I
don't know exactly how much it costs to go to U of I either. Got an
M.S. in CS there. Boy I felt rich then. Imaging 8000 bucks a year and
no tuition payment, and I could work in summer too.
Eugene
|
704.8 | Go Huskies!! | BROKE::RUSTIE::NALE | Expert Only: I'll do it anyway | Thu Feb 21 1991 17:09 | 25 |
|
University of Connecticut ('83-'88)
Out of state tuition, R&B, fees, etc. came to about $8000 - $9000 per year. My
folks paid the bills, and I paid them whatever I could (summer jobs, programming
jobs at school, co-op, worked in a bar [that was the *fun* job!] ). The deal
was, when I got out of school I paid them back 50% of the total cost. I'm still
chipping away at that....
UConn is a pretty big school: 20,000 - 25,000 students. I'd say the overall
student body was about 50(f) - 50(m). However, in the engineering school the
ratio was probably more like 25(f) - 75(m). Within the school, the ratios
differed even more depending on one's major. In my major, CS, it was probably
33(f) - 67(m). In majors such as EE or ME, the ratio was more skewed; maybe
20(f) - 80(m).
I'd highly recommend the school. I never really ran into any sexism there. I
was well known among my professors and the head of the CS department. Two of
them hired me to program for them, allowing me to make ~ $6,000. The program
was very challenging and prepared me well for my work at DEC. The co-op was
*invaluable*. I have a brother studying engineering at Syracuse and I've
stressed to him that co-ops are practically *required* to get your first job out
of school.
Sue
|
704.9 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Feb 21 1991 17:21 | 24 |
| Where: MIT
When: 84-88
Price: At least $80000 for the four years.
I took out $7500 in loans each year, worked on a research
project during the year for money, and worked at DEC during the
summers. I got about $7000 in grants per year (amazingly
generous.) My parents paid about $5000 per year which was all
they could afford at the time.
Would I recommend it: I don't know. The work was hell when I was
there, but I loved Boston so when I had some free time I had a ball.
You are free to change majors when you want, and you don't declare a
major until your sophomore year, so you can use your freshman year to
try lots of things. Great job placement office, which is EXTREMELY
helpful for graduates.
But would I recommend it.....well only if you wanted to go into science
or engineering. There are some other good places to check out for
science/engineering, unfortunately the ones I can think of are all
private schools.....except for UC Berkeley, which is still big bucks.
Lisa
|
704.10 | another from WPI | MEMIT::GIUNTA | | Fri Feb 22 1991 08:24 | 34 |
| Where: Worcester Polytechnic Institute (class of 1980)
How much: About $28k for the whole 4 years which was tuition and room
and board.
How it was paid for: I got a bunch of scholarships (RI has a 4-year
renewable one which was quite nice), and I took out about $5000 worth
of student loans. My folks paid for the rest, but I think that
amounted to about $8000 for the whole 4 years because I was so
fortunate to get scholarships.
Gender ratio: When I started, the ratio was about 15M:1F, and it was
down to about 10M:1F when I graduated. I found that with such a high
ratio, most of my close friends were men, and I still keep in touch
with them today. I didn't find the gender ratio to be a big deal, and
didn't feel awkward being the only woman or one of a few women in my
classes. I always felt comfortable and accepted, although there were
one or two profs who thought that women just didn't belong there. But
I figure there are jerks everywhere, so there were bound to be people
like that around.
Would I recommend it to other people: Highly, and I have. I was the
second one from my family to go to WPI. My cousin went before me, and
she graduated the year after I started. And I have another cousin
there now. She will be graduating next year. It's kind of funny to
note that of my relatives on my mother's side, all the girls (that's
all 3 of us -- all the others were boys -- maybe that's why I was so
comfortable and unthreatened by the high M:F ratio) went to the same
technical school, and we are the only ones in the family with technical
degrees. I think I got a great education at WPI, both academically and
socially. I gained confidence there, and definitely came out of my
shell and started to overcome my shyness. I think the education that I
received was very practical in nature, and I have always felt that I
was well-prepared to join the work-force and have a satisfying career.
|
704.11 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 22 1991 08:53 | 28 |
| Boston University 1959-1968
cost $30.00 a semester hour ($900.00 a year full time, tuition; it's
14-15k now EXCLUDING tuition)
Lived with parents 2 years -$25 a week)
Lived in my own apartment across the street from B.U. for $60.00 a
month. 2 years
Rest of time with various roommates.
How financed G.I. Bill ($100.00 a month for full time, prorated -very
generosly- for part time, more near end)
Elevator operator [in a girls dorm :-) 3 years]
Full time work (most of the time) in computer field (computer operator,
programmer) part time some of the time.
Would I recommend B.U. now? If you want the Boston ambiance along with
a _good_ education sure!
If you just want the best possible education there are lots better
-perhaps more than 100. (I mean B.U. is _good_ (much better than in
60s) but it ain't no Harvard or MIT or Oberlin or Bates or Bowdoin or
Vassar or Mt Holyoke, or Bryn Mawr or Grinell or Dennison or Stony
Brook or Stamford or Duke or Macalister (sp?) ... for the same money.
Not to mention ones for a lot less -even out of state- like U of Mich,
U.S.C, U.C.<almost everywhere>, UNC, UMass Amherst, etc etc etc
p.s. in most of the small 'elite' schools almost ALL the faculty
have PHDs and there ARE no grad students.
herb
|
704.12 | | GAZERS::NOONAN | Quaker hussy | Fri Feb 22 1991 08:55 | 5 |
| herb,
UMASS Amherst only *seems* out-of-state! (*8
E Grace
|
704.13 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:02 | 3 |
| re .11
EXCLUDING tuition should read EXCLUDING room and board, of course
|
704.14 | no place fancy, but I got my degrees | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:33 | 25 |
| University of New Hampshire, graduated in 1974.
My ex-husband and I got the first two BSCS degrees from UNH.
I worked half time while I was in school, lived in the cheapest dorm (I
think it is now international students' housing - Smith Hall), and had
three different small scholarships (National Merit Scholarship, one
from the school, and one from the college my father taught at, which
was WPI). I don't recall what the total cost was, but I borrowed the
rest from my folks. And I got the degree in three years - I didn't
sleep much in those days! And didn't have much spare time. During
semester breaks I worked both my half-time job and an additional
full-time job, and I had a full-time job in the summers.
I got by. One reason I had to scrape so hard was that the money
available from my father employer had a per-family maximum, and we had
to earmark most of it for my brother's college education because he is
legally blind, and so was not expected to be able to graduate a year
early like I did (in fact, he never finished his degree, but that's
another story).
I got my MSCS at Boston University, at night school, one semester at a
time, paid for by DEC reimbursements.
/Charlotte
|
704.15 | | REFINE::BARTOO | USAF--Global Reach, Global Power | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:40 | 9 |
|
I have a question--
How difficult is it to get accepted at a college for graduate work
towards a master's degree?
NICK
|
704.16 | can you be more specific? | DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:48 | 13 |
|
> How difficult is it to get accepted at a college for graduate work
> towards a master's degree?
Depends on the field of study and the school.
That's like asking "How difficult is it to get hired for a job?"
D!
[PS: "college" and "graduate work" are mututall exclusive. College means
undergraduate. you want to go to a "graduate school", which very often are
in the same institution as colleges. Just a nit...]
|
704.17 | | REFINE::BARTOO | USAF--Global Reach, Global Power | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:58 | 11 |
|
OK I'll be more specific.
"Would I be able to attend the academic institution of my choice for
graduate work if I had a BS in Comp Sci with a corresponding GPA of
2.8?"
NICK
|
704.18 | | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:59 | 28 |
| WHERE?
Boston University, 1969-1973
University of Minnesota, 1974-1976
COST?
I really can't remember; would guess full-time tuition,
fees, and books averaged $1500 per year.
HOW FINANCED?
Scholarships/grants/student loans/work study/a myriad of other
jobs.
GENDER RATIO?
By school--don't know, didn't care, must have been acceptable. 8*)
By major--the first three years in the Math department => lot of
males, very few females; the last years in Classics departments
=> more even.
RECOMMENDATION?
Don't think I'd outright recommend any school--depends on the
person. Would *I* go again? Probably no to BU, probably yes
to U of M.
nla
|
704.19 | | WLDKAT::GALLUP | a much better dancer than stander | Fri Feb 22 1991 11:05 | 17 |
|
RE: .17
Uhmm, maybe not right after graduating....with a company like Digital
supporting you after a few years, yes, you would be able to (part
time).
Graduate school is TOUGH to get into. I know that you have to maintain
a 3.2 gpa in order to STAY in grad school in most places.
You might get in, but I know the bottom level for giving grants and
fellowships at my university was about a 3.4 gpa.
kathy
|
704.20 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 22 1991 11:10 | 13 |
| re .17
No.
There are Universities (perhaps varying from field to field) that might
have as many as 100 applicants (or perhaps even more) for each
available slot.
The graduate program in Mathematics at Princeton comes to mind.
The PHD program in Psychology at B.U. was -at least at one time,
and maybe still- another example.
|
704.21 | Don't take a pessimistic attitude! | ASDG::FOSTER | | Fri Feb 22 1991 11:15 | 19 |
| I got into Northeastern with my 2.0 gpa undergrad.
Everyone I ever knew who wanted in, got in, although not necessarily to
the top schools. And I don't just mean engineering school, but also MBA
programs.
Oh, they'll make a fuss, they'll make you take extra courses to "prove"
yourself, but I think this "its hard to get in" stuff is bogus.
If I can do it, it must not be that hard. And I now have a 3.5+ gpa, so
don't let the numbers intimidate you. Its not difficult to maintain a
high gpa in grad school, higher than the one you had as an undergrad.
At least, it hasn't been hard for me. And obviously, its not some
bullsh*t Affirmative Action thing, either. (sorry, I just don't want
anyone to make those assumptions. Its a hot button.) Maybe I've been
lucky for two years. I don't know.
However, I didn't say they'd give you MONEY!
|
704.22 | the grad school dance | DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Fri Feb 22 1991 11:43 | 48 |
| > "Would I be able to attend the academic institution of my choice for
> graduate work if I had a BS in Comp Sci with a corresponding GPA of
> 2.8?"
Depends. What is the "academic institution of your choice?" What do you
want to study? What else do you have going for you? What school did
you graduate from?
If you are looking to get into a CS program at a top-10 CS school like
Berkeley, MIT, Stanford, UMich, CMU etc...very, very unlikely. Actually, most
of the *really* good schools don't even offer a Masters in Computer Science.
Stanford and CMU, for instance, only have doctorate programs (although
I think they both have Masters programs in something called "software
engineering" whatever that is.) Anyway, most of the top-10 type
schools have a minimum GPA of 3.5.
On the other hand, there are things that are just as imporant as grades.
for instance, if you have really *great* recommendations from professors
that are very wellknown in the field, that counts for a *lot*. (I can't think
of any professors at RIT [that is where you go, right?] that are Big Names, but
I am hardly an expert.) Work experience isn't that great but it does count
for something.
If you want to go to a good school that isn't a top-10 school, such as
WPI, Northeastern, etc, etc, then you have a fair chance.
If you are looking to go into something other than Comp Sci, then none of
the above applies. In general, MBA programs are easier to get into than
CS programs. And more schools offer them, and (this is my impression) there
is less difference between the schools than in CS. Othe programs I know nothing
about.
Then there is the matter of paying for it. In full-time CS graduate programs
at top-notch schools, most people don't pay for it themselves. Most grad
students get assistance-ships (either teaching or research) which gives
a tuition waiver and a stipend of between 8-12K / year. But they are harder
to get than just getting in (except at schools like CMU which guarantee
assistanceships for all people accepted into the program.) This is especially
true if you are a Masters student, since most assistanceships go to doctoral
students.
i really hope if you are seriously considering going to
'ren: of *course* you got into a good program. After all, it doesn't matter
what your GPA was - you are from RPI!!! That right there demonstrates that
you are obviously not only intelligent and hard-working, but that you are
kind, caring, creative, witty and a good cook! :-) :-) :-)
D! who is doing the Grad School Thing herself and so is real up on this stuff
|
704.23 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Feb 22 1991 12:04 | 29 |
| Yep, Diana is right. Another depressing thing about those top notch
schools is that they essentially swap students between them and
occassionally take a few top ten students from other schools. This
usually means that the grad students of Princeton are mostly from
Berkeley, MIT, Harvard or Chicago; the grad students of Chicago are
mostly from Princeton, Berkeley, MIT and Harvard; and it goes on and on.
As a matter of fact, a friend of mine told me that there is an MIT club
(or something like that) at Berkeley because there are so many MIT
graduates at Berkeley. Another thing about the private top notch
schools. They essentially don't take M.S. students. That is if you
tell them you want to get a M.S. from them, they will tell ya to take a
walk. Officially, they all have masters programs, but these are sort
of safety nets for those who can cut it after a few years, so they give
them an M.S. degree as consolation. Of course, they will never admit
to it, but us insiders know better. :-) Of course, occassionally, they
will make exceptions for people who are willing to pay outrageous amount
of money to eroll. If ya daddy is willing to donate one million bucks, any
school will take you (and perhaps graduate you if the money keeps
coming in).
The down to earth state schools (such as UMass, U of I, Wisconsin and
etc) will require a GPA of at least 3.0 for admission and 3.5 for
assistantship although in the end, everything is competitive. The best
recommendation I can give to Nick is to try to up your GPA to at least
3.0. Also, many schools will also ask the GPA of the last 60-100
credits. They want to know how you did with the difficult stuff.
Eugene
|
704.24 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri Feb 22 1991 12:16 | 24 |
|
The main goal of getting into grad school is finding a professor who
wants you to work for hir.
If you have good recommendations from people who are known to the
profs at the school to which you are applying, that helps alot.
Actually knowing the professor you want to work for is definitely the
best way to maximize your chances of being accepted to grad school.
The problem with grad school in computer science os that there are
relatively few computer science professors. Most CS majors with
graduate degrees go into industry, where the pay is much better.
Because of the lack of faculty, it is VERY competitive to get into a
CS graduate program.
From my experience with MIT CS majors, 4.8/5.0 was not sufficient for
admission to Berkeley (#1), but could squeeze you into Stanford.
Graduate schools are preoccupied with your academic endeavors. Work
experience is not as important as what you did your undergrad thesis
on, who you did it for, and how much you've published. Unfortunate,
but true.
Lisa/
|
704.25 | | HPSRAD::SUNDAR | Ganesh | Fri Feb 22 1991 12:31 | 14 |
| Some graduate schools, even very reputable ones, have incredible faith
in GRE scores (the graduate school version of the SAT). I know
several people from relatively unknown colleges, and people with
unimpressive grades, who made it to some of the best schools here
for a graduate program. The only things they seemed to have in
common were the 790-800 GRE scores.
It makes very little sense but there it is. Doing well on these exams
is merely a matter of knowing the system and how to beat it. There are
many good reference books on the subject.
Good luck.
Ganesh.
|
704.26 | work experience - depends on what program | SPIDER::GOLDMAN | The simplest things... | Fri Feb 22 1991 12:47 | 12 |
|
> Graduate schools are preoccupied with your academic endeavors. Work
> experience is not as important as what you did your undergrad thesis
> on, who you did it for, and how much you've published. Unfortunate,
> but true.
If you're talking about CS (or other more scientific programs),
I'd tend to agree. For an MBA however, work experience is much
more important.
amy
|
704.27 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 22 1991 13:15 | 15 |
| With specific reference to CS...
When I applied to UMass in '68 (one of the very early programs)
I had a very low cum ~2.68 (degree in Mathematics)
but good GRE (don't remember but something like 90th percentile)
and 9 years experience in computer industry.
I had to dance a pretty good tune to get accepted, they weren't very
interested in me.
(i didn't do all that great in grad school either, never did my thesis;
what I like to say is that the 1970 recession and a baby took priority!
But in reality my undergraduate grades were a pretty good indication
that I just wasn't a very good student)
Your mileage may vary
herb
|
704.28 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a pickax a compass & night goggles | Fri Feb 22 1991 13:24 | 7 |
| also, some really great grad schools don't "eat their young" (accept
undergrads from that school into the grad program in that school). MIT
is one example. So if you know you want to go to MIT as a graduate
student, go elsewhere for your undergradute degree.
-Jody
|
704.29 | ah, ZooMass! | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Fri Feb 22 1991 13:28 | 25 |
| Herb, you triggered my memory
I got my undergrad CS degree from the grad school at UMassAmherst. You
read right. When I was there, there was no undergrad CS degree
offered, so I did BDIC, Bachelors Degree with Individual Concentration
-- ie, make-your-own -- in CS. Since my 1st time around at UMass
(69-71) I had taken all the humanity-language-history-lit courses
needed for core reqs, the 2nd time around I took 12 or 15 credits each
semester in math and computer science. It was, um, a challenge.
Best prof there imo was Dr. Caxton C Foster. I took three courses from
him (Real-Time Prog, Computer Architecture, and Data Structures) and
was a t.a. for one of his assembly language courses. It was he who
taught me the most important thing I learned in college:
Define the problem, then solve it.
It didn't matter whether your answer contained 19,000 fantastic
great bells and whistles, all of which worked and were original
ideas. If you answer did not contain a solution that worked for the
problem as stated, you blew it. (There may be a lesson here for DEC.)
I do not recommend the BDIC method for CS degree. I had no counselling
worth a darn, took Data Structures last semester for ex. This may have
changed since '77 when I graduated.
|
704.30 | Brandeis, Yale | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Fri Feb 22 1991 14:17 | 34 |
| I went to Brandeis undergraduate (74-75, and 79-82) and found lots
there to recommend it. With a little effort you never take courses
from TAs (Even my science labs, I managed to get into the
professor's section), and most of the classes were small (a couple
had 3 or 4 people, most had about 10, and the big classes had 40.)
Of course, I chose courses carefully, and generally stayed away
from the huge ones. (I think there were some courses with 100
students, but I don't know in what.)
The physics, math, biochemistry, Near Eastern and Judaic, and
biophysics departments are all absolutely first rate. CS is pretty
volatile everywhere, when I went it was a really good department
for anyone who put in a little extra effort. The physics
department gave all the second year students summer (and winter
break) jobs, where I learned a lot about making experiments work.
When I graduated tuition was around $8500/year, but each of my
parents got up to $4000/year for each child in college, so the
tuition cost us next to nothing. My parents anted up for room and
board, and I made some money working which tended to go for books.
Graduate, I went to Brown for a year, and then to Yale. Brown was
awful. It seemed that they picked the people who you would most
want at a cocktail party, rather than good students. It was an
amazingly dead place.
Yale was wonderful. Lots of very sharp students, proffessors, and
random people. A very good seminar series which we each had to
give a talk for, and a tremendous sense of excitement.
Both grad schools provided me with a stipend in addition to
tuition.
--David
|
704.31 | Make sure you get advice from someone who knows the ropes | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Feb 22 1991 14:21 | 21 |
| Another piece of advice for someone seeking admission to grad school - get
advice from your advisor or someone similar who's familiar with graduate school
policies.
I did my undergraduate studies (electrical engineering) at Johns Hopkins Univ.
and had a respectable GPA (don't remember exactly; 3.2-3.5 range), but didn't
ask any advice. (Also decent GRE, no recollection of #) I decided to apply for
an MS in EE and then switch to Computer Science for a PhD.
My advisor would have told me (and later did!) that I could have stuck with EE
or switched immediately to CS and taken exactly the same course. But by
proposing to switch schools between degrees, I guaranteed myself no financial
aid whatsoever (fellowships). Nobody wanted to fund someone who was dropping
out at MS, and nobody would start funding a PhD candidate in a different school.
Dumb?
The schools in question (I was accepted at all) were Johns Hopkins, Stanford,
and University of Pennsylvania (Moore School of EE). I wound up going to
Stanford, got an MSEE in one year, and left school (in debt) to start working.
Never did get that PhD. (Never missed it all that much, truth be told.)
|
704.32 | Graduate admissions are wierd | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Fri Feb 22 1991 14:24 | 28 |
| Admission to grad programs is wierd. I had essentially the same
application to grad school as I did to college, and it was a very
strong grad application, and a very weak college application. I
had very high SATs and GREs, some research experience (and
published papers outside my current field), and a weak GPA.
It got me into very few colleges, but most of the grad schools I
applied to (including Berkely, Yale, and a few others).
I asked the grad advisor at Yale (after I was there) about the
application process, and how they chose among the applicants. He
told me that there was nothing he knew of which correlated with
ability to do research (which is what PhD programs want), except
earlier research, and many students didn't have the chance to do
that. They selected on intelligence, interest, and some sort of
"liveliness" ie. did this person have the sort of curiousity
necessary to do research?
Recommendations are a very important part of the grad school
(particularly PhD) application process, much more so than for
college. Talk to people in you field, talk to people you might
want to work for, and talk to people about the different
departments and what their strengths are. If you find one person
you want to do your thesis with, and he wants you as a student,
you'll almost certainly get in, regardless of grades, GREs, and
everything else.
--David
|
704.33 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri Feb 22 1991 15:45 | 13 |
| Actually MIT eats quite a few of it's young.........depending on what
type of young they are. If you get the bachelor's, then go for PhD,
you can get in. I knew quite a few "career students", who had been at
MIT for 8-9 years getting various degrees.
However, if you do a co-op program where you get a BS and MS in 5
years, consider yourself poisoned for a PhD. This applied in quite a
few different departments.
I personally can't understand how someone can go to school at MIT for 7
years in a row and remain sane, but I've seen it done.
Lisa
|
704.34 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Feb 22 1991 15:56 | 15 |
| re .33,
I think most schools (and most professors) discourage students from
staying in the same place for graduate study. The rationale is that
one gotta learn to do things differently and see the world in a
different perspective. Such tradition is the strongest in the case of
Ph.D. graduates. It is usually a no-no for someone to get a Ph.D and
then become a faculty member in the same school although I have known
a few Harvard Ph.D's remaining in Harvard after graduation. Things
get a bit strange when you get to the top or the bottom of the barrel.
I mean if someone gets a Nobel prize while working on his Ph.D. thesis
at Harvard, and wants to remain there after graduation, it is unlikely
that Harvard will turn him down.
Eugene
|
704.35 | | SFCPMO::NGUYEN | | Fri Feb 22 1991 17:45 | 27 |
| This note becomes a good source of information for graduate school.
I have a few questions for you. First I have a BS in Comp.Sci. and now
try to get a master degree in French Literture, is it possible?
It seems whacko, but I tried CS Grad. School, I had to drop out
because of a major surgery, and because CS no longer intrigued me.
Then I tried Math., but I got so bored, I to Arts ofcourse I had to
take few undergraduate classes.
I finished all those classes, and I had good recommendations from my
teachers, but I could not pull myself together to submit my final
porfolios. I still don't know the reason for it.
I then switched to French Lit. and music. I am doing very well in
both fields. I am thinking about International Management degree, but
I don't know what school offer it?. My GPAs in both French Lit. and
Musique are very high, and so far I don't get bored yet. Again, my
teachers gave me very good recommendations to go to grad. school, but I
don't know whether they will accept me, and any good school in this
field. Can I apply for leave of absence? and how do I do it?
Merci beaucoup pour vos informations.
Bisous
P.S: I feel some strange feelings creeping up to my heart, maybe it is
that boredome again. :)
|
704.36 | foreign student? | HANDVA::MICKWIDLAM | Don't blame me on this! | Tue Mar 05 1991 01:38 | 12 |
|
How about if me as a Hong Kong Chinese want to study MS in CS in
US? What should I do? I'm a coop student in Hong Kong and soon get
a BA in computing studying. I hope I can get MS and then Phd after
graduation and have some working experience.
(I remember that we have to take TOFEL and SAT if we want to study
in US for Bachelor.)
Any help?
|
704.37 | | CFSCTC::KHER | | Tue Mar 05 1991 09:50 | 10 |
| You have to take TOEFL even for graduate studies. Most schools also
require you to take GRE. You have to write to a few schools and ask
them to send you application forms and then basically follow their
instructions. The assistanships often come from CS department and not
graduate school. Sometimes you have to send in copies of everything to
both the Graduate School and the department. I've heard that you have
better chance of getting an assistantship if you're a PhD student.
Getting admited into a Graduate program is fairly easy. Getting an
assitantship is more difficult.
manisha
|
704.38 | GRE? | HANDVA::MICKWIDLAM | Don't blame me on this! | Wed Mar 06 1991 20:23 | 0 |
704.39 | Graduate Record Exam | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Mar 06 1991 20:26 | 8 |
| The GRE is the Graduate Record Exam, which is similar to the SAT
(Scholastic Aptitude Test), except that the SAT is used for
admission to college, and the GRE is used for admission to
graduate school. There's a general section (split into math,
English, and, I think, logic), and a section which is specific to
your field of study.
--David
|