How to get into Grad School
Nov. 23rd, 2003 09:29 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
how to get into grad school. discuss amongst yourselves.
additionally, see strengthening your graduate application to u.c. berkeley
additionally, see strengthening your graduate application to u.c. berkeley
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Date: 2003-11-23 09:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-11-23 11:00 pm (UTC)Ugh. I need a Math Confidence Pill real quick.
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Date: 2003-11-23 11:17 pm (UTC)i particularly appreciated that the writer referred to a potential grad student as "her" and "she".
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Date: 2003-11-24 01:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-11-24 01:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-11-24 01:14 am (UTC)Because we know of the convention of using "he" and "him" to represent any unknown person, we can easily generalize it to "she" and "her". It's certainly easier to alternate between genders in different examples than to constantly use "him or her" or any of the other convoluted expressions that indicate either gender.
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Date: 2003-11-24 01:25 am (UTC)p.s. Hi Kenny!!
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Date: 2003-11-24 01:42 am (UTC)I wonder if any Uralic languages have any grammatical gender at all. And now I wonder how much non-Indo-European families use gender. I know Swahili has something like 18 genders, so it's clearly not just an IE phenomenon, but perhaps other families have similarly diverse types of genders that have little or nothing to do with human sex/gender.
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Date: 2003-11-24 01:27 am (UTC)well, maybe not. (-:
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Date: 2003-11-24 03:31 pm (UTC)so yes, not surprised, but appreciative, because i honestly would not have noticed if he'd used "he" and "him."
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Date: 2003-11-23 11:35 pm (UTC)Law school is getting less and less appealing. I want to do research, damnit!!
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Date: 2003-11-28 03:10 pm (UTC)Also, about the visits, if you have a particular professor in mind to work with, talk to the graduate students of that professor, and, if you can find them, former graduate students of that professor. Take their comments with perspective, though--just because X didn't work well with Y doesn't mean that you won't work well with Y. But knowing why X didn't work well with Y is probably good.