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Showing results for tags 'semesters'.
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Hi, I went to a ~top20 econ phd institution for undergrad. During most of the semesters when I had mix of econ/math + other courses, I had a lot of downs in terms of grades. But during the last three semesters, I showed improvement (at least that's what I think) - during the first of those three last semesters, I took the first sequence of real analysis, an econ elective, did the thesis, and the rest were random gen-ed courses. During the last two semesters, the courses were basically almost all math courses (4/5 math courses each semester) and these courses were all advanced courses. Thankfully I managed to pull up my grades straight As in the past three semesters. It also seems strange to me that my academic performance were much stronger when I stacked up my schedule with all the advanced/math courses (I guess the skills just built up overtime through struggles and they thankfully helped eventually), but would the admissions committee rather see this as something suspicious/bad? I would like to hear some opinions, thanks for the help! :)
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Hi, I'm looking for suggestions on how I could improve my profile before I need to apply. I changed majors my freshman year so I've been trying to play catch up to get all of my math credits in. PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: BS in Economics, Math minor. At a regional university Undergrad GPA: 3.99 / 4.00 (4.00 in math and econ) GRE: Taking it this May, studying weekly with a friend also applying for grad school. Targeting 165+ Quant, anything lower and I'll study and retake it. I'm not focusing on studying for Verbal or Writing (should I?). Notable Math Courses: Cal 1, 2 (A, A), Multivariate/Vector Calc (A), Linear Algebra (A), Differential Equations (In progress), Stats for the Sciences/Math stats (In progress). This fall I plan on taking Introduction to Analysis, Probability, and will take Advanced Calc, Modern Algebra in the Spring. (The only other semi-relevant math courses my University offers that I'll be missing are Complex Variables and Numerical Analysis) Notable Econ Courses: Intermediate Macro (A), Labor (A), IO (A), Behavioral (A), Financial Economics (A), Intermediate Micro (In Progress). Will take International over the summer, taking Grad Econometrics next fall. Letters of Rec: Two of the professors that I am an RA for, they should be both be strong letters, I am close to my adviser (who I am an RA for) and work with him on a daily basis. Last letter will either be the College of Business Dean (econ PhD) or Mathematics department dean, I know the Math department dean fairly well. Research Experience: I've been an RA for 4 semesters now, will graduate with 6 semesters as an RA. Finishing up my second paper this semester, my first paper I presented at a few conferences and won my regional conference with. I am more interested in experimental economics research and have focused in that area. Will work on a third senior thesis/capstone beginning next semester. I reckon this is my strongest attribute, next to a letter from my adviser who I've worked with. Teaching Experience: I've been a student assistant the principles classes for 4 semesters, I've gotten opportunities to lecture and work one on one with students. SOP: Obviously this isn't written yet, but I plan on using it to explain the lack of course offerings I've had at my U, and financial issues for why I was unable to transfer to a university with a broader amount of course offerings. My Worries: 1. My University is regional (it has an accredited and ranked business and engineering program though, so there's that?), so I worry that could overshadow any work I've done here. 2. My University's math department is tied to engineering, so most of the math courses are catered toward that program. Due to this, the courses I need are offered on weird rotating intervals, and courses like Probability are only offered when one of the professor's feels like teaching it (as we don't have a stats program, so it isn't necessary for any of the engineers degrees). Not sure if I'll be lacking any specific courses, or if there'll be an issue I'll be getting my analysis and proofs courses my senior year (as they won't get my spring grades before admittance decisions, obviously). 3. I'm nervous about the GRE, simply because time standardized tests with a ticking clock on the screen freak me out and make me more prone to make mistakes. I reckon with enough practice I can get over that standardized testing anxiety (that weirdly doesn't seem to effect me during classroom tests) Obviously, I'm missing info that'll be filled in these semesters, so I'm not really looking for chances of admittance. More looking at is there anything I should be doing or looking into. I also haven't decided exactly where I'll be applying yet, planning on applying to around 10-12. I'd like to shoot for a highly ranked program, but I'd also be perfectly happy landing at a mid-ranked University. I'm wanting a job at University so I can research and teach Economics, so I'd be hoping for a University ranked high enough so I could land an academic job. Thanks in advance for any advice!