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PhDACA

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  1. Dear Community, Thank you for taking the time to read my post! I have been a lurker for quite some time now, and decided it would be best to finally post my profile up for evaluation. I have an atypical situation, so please bear with me - apologies in advance for the block of text. First, some stats: Undergraduate school: Large state school, relatively unknown however, with an economics department that seldom puts people in PhD programs Undergraduate / Major GPA: 3.94, 4.0 Type of undergrad: BA Economics, Math minor GRE (V,Q,A): 161, 166, 5.5 Econ courses (All A's): Intermediate Micro/Macro, International, Advanced Economics Seminar, Applied Econometrics, Financial Economics, Business Cycles and Forecasting, Mathematics Fundamentals for Economists (Chiang), Development of Economic Thought, Public Finance Math courses (All A's): Calc I-III, Linear Algebra, Statistics (will be taking Real Analysis and Probability next semester, not sure if I should also take Differential Equations, Numerical Analysis, Vector Calculus, or an Applied Statistics for the Social Sciences course also) LOR's: Economics department chair with whom I helped establish our school's Omicron Delta Epsilon chapter (have taken a few classes with him, and spoken at great length regarding PhD goal), another econ professor (who studied at Cornell) who has allowed me to work on a math boot camp he administers to an Ivy League school during the summer, and has personally been working on edifying my math, and another econ professor (coincidentally from Cornell as well) who is also my adviser and whom I have done light research work with. Overall, rather strong. These professors know me very well and are superbly enthusiastic and encouraging for me to apply to higher ranked schools (such as Cornell) due to their connections and their perceived potential for me (according to what they say) Other: I have owned and operated private tutoring companies since high school, and have worked for international ones as well. Not sure if that would be seen as some sort of teaching experience. I also had the chance to work under an economist at a Fortune 100 doing regulatory (FRBB) and capital risk related work (not quite academic research, I know, but it did help pay the bills while giving me great connections) Concerns: Obviously, math. Further, research experience. The largest concern, however, is my status in the United States. Here is where things get complicated. I am a DACA recipient*, and I am rather fortunate to have been able to go to college at all. I had to claw my way into an undergraduate program based on my academic merits after having it be financially impossible for me to do so, and I know pursuing a graduate degree for someone of my background is extremely rare. However, I have had this as a goal of mine, in part to study the economic effects of policies such as DACA, for many years, and I simply do not see any other option for me that would be fulfilling. I am not applying to a PhD because it is easy, or I have nothing else to do, but rather because of my passion. Schools I am currently working on applications for (please feel free to knock any or all of them down): Cornell (honestly, just for the sake of the two aforementioned professors who have told me they will speak with someone. Otherwise, I would not even try that), Ohio State, Indiana - Bloomington, UC Boulder, FSU, U Delaware, Fordham, UMass Amherst. Any suggestions of what I should keep/give up on/consider applying to?** * For anyone who may be unfamiliar with DACA, this is the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals executive action that President Obama issued in 2012. It allowed undocumented children who arrived in the US under the age of 16 (I came at the age of 5) the chance to come out of hiding and be granted deferred action of deportation for 2 years (with renewals every 2 years). This was recently rescinded by Trump. Regardless, DACA was fantastic because it allowed for people like me to work, drive, and do other basic things young teenagers and people in their early 20s should do. However, what it does not help with is granting any aid or benefits given to citizens, such as federal aid to pay for school. For example, I was admitted into Columbia for undergrad and granted some grants from the school, but due to my status I was unable to meet the rest of the financial requirements. Similarly, ASU was offering me a full scholarship but my inability to file a FAFSA (the free application for federal student aid) and prove my tax status (or, at least, my parents status, who were undocumented and eligible for DACA) did not allow me to accept it. Due to this, I had to enroll in community college my first two years while working full time, and then I sought around my state for any school that would look at just my transcripts and allow me to apply for private scholarships, which is what my current institution did. I am forever grateful for that. ** I get it. I am not like the 99% of you here with the most amazing credentials (and I truly have to applaud the vast number of you who have amazing profiles), and I also know that there will be some stigma against me due to my DACA status. I humbly ask that you please just give me your honest opinion on schools I should apply to, or anything else that may help my chances at getting in. Thank you all very much in advance!
  2. Dear Community, I've been a lurker for quite a while (May), and feel that it is a good time to ask you all for your suggestions and advice on my applications. I will first put down some of my profile stats: I am coming from a large state school (The department has not placed anyone in an economics grad program) GRE: 166 Q, 161 V, 5.5 A Major/GPA: BA Economics, Math minor, 3.94 GPA / 4.0 Econ GPA Economics classes (all A's): Intermediate Micro/Macro Analysis, Business Cycles and Forecasting, International Economics, Money and Banking, Public Finance, Advanced Economic Seminar, Applied Econometrics, Math Fundamentals for Economists, Development of Economic Thought, Financial Economics Math classes (All A's): Calc I-III, Linear Algebra, Advanced Calc 1, Differential Equations, Statistics [Quick aside, I have the chance to take Numerical Analysis, Probability, or Statistical Techniques for Social Sciences for my last semester. Not sure which to take] LOR: Two graduates (2010/2012) from Cornell (older, international professors), both with whom I have taken classes and have been personally working with me on getting my applications ready and keep my math up. One of them actually teaches the math camp course at an Ivy and has close ties to faculty still. The other LOR I am deciding between the chair of the department with whom I began a chapter of Omicron Delta Epislon and have taken classes with, or an Economist at a Fortune 100 Financial Services company (Risk Management department) with over a decade of experience with the New York Fed and being professor at CUNY (he himself went to Fordham) Experience: Other/Concerns: I know I have a relatively weak profile compared to others, and I will appreciate being given advice to me straight up as I have seen you guys been. Truth is, I am a DACA recipient and am extremely lucky to have gone to college*. A few months after high school, I was kicked out of my home for financial reasons and worked to pay for community college for a bit, and, after months of grinding and sending applications to all of my state's schools for aid, I was granted a full scholarship due to my strong high school and community college profile. Due to the limited resources of my school and me working full time still, I have not had any research assistant opportunities, although I am doing some light research work with a professor in my department. For what it is worth, and I assume it is not much, I have management, industry research, and extensive tutoring experience. I have wanted to go for a PhD for a long time, in part, to research the kind of behavioral constraints that an immigration program like DACA (which has been likened to being told, "you are a person, but not really") has on people, and how constraints like this affect other types of economic players and the nature (rational/irrational) of their decisions. I have other research interests, of course, but this is my main drive that keeps me going. I am hungry for education and I want to further understand this thing we call life. Schools I am currently working on their applications: Cornell, Iowa State, Fordham, CUNY, UC Boulder, U. Southern California, Clemson, UMass Amherst. The two professors from Cornell have been encouraging to apply to higher but I simply do not see how I can get in, and the cost of these applications is of growing concern for me. I would love any and all sort of comments and suggestions. Thank you, once again, and good luck to the rest of the applicants for this year! It is extremely inspiring hearing about other high achieving academics in this field. * For anyone who has not had a chance to learn or hear about what this is, DACA is a deferred action executive order from President Obama given in 2012 that allowed undocumented immigrants brought as children to the United States to work legally, go to school at in state tuition rates (in some states), and obtain driver's licenses. It does not qualify the recipients from getting federal aid for school or loans. This came full circle after I could not qualify for loans I needed in order to go to Columbia for my undergrad.
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