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This action plan is not
intended for students seeking admission to Medical School or Law School.
Alternate resources and advice are available for students seeking
admission to
Medical School and
Law School.
1. Research Graduate
Schools
A.
First consult
Petersons Guide to Graduate Schools
to find which schools have the academic programs you seek and
information on application deadlines, acceptance rates, standardized
admission testing requirements, number of assistantships, etc. (This is
your homework to do outside appointment time at the CHD.) Hard copies of
the Petersons Guide to Graduate Schools are available at the CHD
(without appt.) and in the reference section of Mantor Library.
B. Once you have identified a set of graduate schools that match your
selection criteria (right location, a history of providing
assistantships, viable acceptance rate, etc.), read research posted by
graduate school faculty at the graduate program website to determine
whether the research being done at the graduate school matches your
interests. This is a critical step in the research process that cannot
be overlooked. The information you gather at this stage will help you
address the question "Why do you wish to pursue graduate study at (name
of school)?" in the application essay. If you have researched faculty
expertise and information about the graduate program, you will be able
to answer the question. (Again, this is your homework to do outside of
appointment time at the CHD.)
C.
Learn more about common forms of financial aid in
graduate school.
2. Communicate with
Graduate School Faculty (Not for Medical School or Law School
Applicants)
There are at least two goals in making
contact with faculty prior to applying or during the application
process: a) to gather necessary information and b) to create an identity
for yourself as an applicant. The first goal should be self-explanatory.
The second goal relates to the reality that graduate school faculty make
admissions decisions. (This is one way in which the graduate school
admission process differs from the undergraduate admission process. At
the undergraduate level, admission decisions are made by administrative
staff in the Office of Admissions -- not by faculty in different
academic programs. In other words, UMF faculty had
no say in your admission to UMF. In graduate school, the faculty have
all the say in who is admitted to their academic programs.) So, any
correspondence you have with departmental faculty during the admission
process is an opportunity for faculty (who make admission decisions) to
form an impression about you -- which is why you should always read all
the information about the graduate program online before e-mailing
graduate professors with questions.
Learn more about the "right" kind of questions to
ask graduate school faculty and how to ask the questions.
3. Prepare for Your Required Standardized Admission Test
Your research about graduate program admission requirements on Petersons
Guide to Graduate Schools (see above) should have yielded information
about which -- if any -- standardized admission test is required of your
graduate program. Learn more about the structure of and test preparation
resources for the
►Graduate
Record Exam-General Test
►Graduate
Record Exam-Subject Tests
►Miller
Analogies Test
►Graduate
Management Admission Test
4. Register for Your
Required
Standardized Admission Test
See links above for registration information and test-center sites
nationwide.
5. Request Letters of
Recommendation
Request letters from faculty in whose classes you have earned good grades,
from faculty who are organized and responsible enough to provide the
letter on time, and from faculty whose discipline relates to your graduate program.
You may request letters of recommendation from internship or work supervisors if the internship/work relates to
your graduate school academic program. Do not supply
“personal” (family/friends) references unless specifically requested.
Learn more about how to ask a professor for a
letter of recommendation.
6. Draft Essay/Personal
Statement
►Consult “how-to” books in the CHD library
►Consult with CHD career counselor, faculty, and others for ideas
►Consult with the Writing Center for feedback/assistance
►The
actual writing of the draft is your homework to do outside
appointment time at the CHD
7. Edit Draft of
Essay
►Consult with the Writing Center for feedback/assistance
►Consult with CHD career counselor, faculty, and others for feedback
8. File Applications
(by admissions deadline)
Standing Suggestions
►Keep up
your GPA during the application process; fulfill your course work
obligations
►Save money for applications, exam fees, and travel associated with your
application process
►Operate under the “one-a-day” principle to avoid feeling overwhelmed by
the process. If the one thing you do for the day is spend 30 minutes
reviewing sample questions for your standardized admission test, you're
done for the day. If the one thing you do for the day is write to a
professor to request a letter of recommendation, you're done for the
day. If the one thing you do is spend 30 minutes researching graduate
schools online, you're done for the day. Following this approach, you
will be more productive with less stress.
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