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Archive for the ‘operation: don't get rejected’ Category

Operation: Don’t Get Rejected

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Filling in the blanks.

(I probably should have led with this, but oh well, such is the nature of hindsight and chronological blogging)

The challenge: Blog about my graduate school applications with minimal internet humiliation

The subject: 23-year old college admissions-advice blogger, female, undisclosed location (okay, it’s in an office…I even have a little wheel-y chair!)

The goal: In general, don’t get rejected. Specifically, don’t get rejected in front of millions of people on the internet.

The back-story: Since the time I could write, I have wanted to be a writer. Despite a brief emo-poetry phase when I was thirteen (hey, we’ve all been there) my writing has usually been very straight forward, simple, and honest. Tortured poet is really not my gig. Since my time at CampusCompare, I have come to realize that I love working on assignments, I love the internet, and I love finding the hidden story beneath a bunch of boring facts (no offense, SATs, but you’re not exactly a font of excitement). I want to cover stories that excite me, as well as my readers, and I want to do it well. In short, I want to be a journalist.

There’s a lot of debate out on the net right now about whether it’s even necessary to go to journalism school. A lot of people scoff and stammer about “real world experience” and “starting at the bottom, getting your foot in the door, and working your way up.” This sounds great, and if somebody could please tell me HOW I get this miracle “foot in the door,” then I am all ears. But seeing as the New York Times isn’t exactly knocking down my door or putting a want ad in my local paper, I feel at a loss.

What I do have is a few years of blogging and editing under my belt, some nifty technical skills (does Diane Sawyer know HTML? I don’t think so) and a good GPA at a good university. I also genuinely like school, and I think two-years of studying how to be a better writer and reporter would be two-years well-spent. And so to journalism school I will go! Now, if only I knew how.

Can a college admissions blogger take her own advice and get into graduate school?

Inquiring minds want to know.

Follow me on Twitter to get notified as I post updates on adventures in admissions.

Missed my first installment? Check out “Operation Don’t Get Rejected: Advice from Alice

Operation: Don’t Get Rejected

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Recently, I was sitting over dinner with my good friend Miriam, kvetching about our graduate school applications and their impending doom. As I listened to her describe her own woes concerning her admissions essay (otherwise known as the statement of purpose), I found myself rehashing some of the same advice I give readers at my day job as a blogger and advice columnist for CampusCompare: “Be unique. Find the aspect of yourself that’s different from the other applicants and highlight it.”

“Speak with professors in the department, or ones who know about the program you are applying for. They will be able to tell you what kind of applicant they are looking for.”

“If you don’t get in, call the admissions office to ask why, so that next year when you re-apply you’ll know what to improve upon.”

I’m a pretty smart cookie, if I do say so myself, and I know a thing or two about college admissions. Yet, despite being a college admissions “expert”, my own graduate school applications have fallen by the wayside. The deadline is inching closer and closer, and I have yet to crack my essay, obtain my recommendations, or even, *gasp!* fill out the application form.

So what’s a girl to do? Blog about it, of course! Follow me over the next few months while I scramble with forms, chase down former professors, and ponder the real reason why I’m 23, employed, and I still want to go back to school. Check back here and follow me on twitter at /campuscompare to stay tuned!

After her stint in Wonderland, a girl named Alice remarked: “I give myself very good advice, but I very seldom follow it.” Truer words were never said, sister.