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I'm pretty much at the stage of uploading everything onto the AAPI and waiting for my rec letters. I can't wait until everything is submitted!
Haven't posted in...a very long time. However, just wanted to say hello again to familiar (faces?), and wish everyone luck this week. I am in the midst of finishing cover letters, and cannot wait for this part of the process to be over. Looking forward (lack of a better phrase) to commiserating over the next few weeks!
I'm pretty much at the stage of uploading everything onto the AAPI and waiting for my rec letters. I can't wait until everything is submitted!
Haven't posted in...a very long time. However, just wanted to say hello again to familiar (faces?), and wish everyone luck this week. I am in the midst of finishing cover letters, and cannot wait for this part of the process to be over. Looking forward (lack of a better phrase) to commiserating over the next few weeks!
Good luck to you too!
Having run a marathon in the past...this feels like coming up to mile 22...only 4.2 more miles to go! 🙄
As an FYI for those interested, it sounds like the Houston VA will be offering a neuropsych internship spot for the upcoming year.
Hi all, just wanted to get a feel for how many applications ya'll are planning on submitting? My DCT is 'strongly advising' maxing out at 15. thoughts?
hi all, question: what do you think the impact of having no publications will be on getting interviews at competitive hospital sites? I have an insane amount of hours, >1500 intervention and assessment combined, but still no publications to date.[/QUOTE
I can only relate my experience to answer your question, but I'm sure that experience varies widely. I only had a few publications and like you an insane number of intervention and assessment hours. I applied to 15 sites last year and probably 8 of those were competitive hospital sites. Not one of those competitive sites interviewed me. I attend a traditional PhD program, probably ranked somewhere in the middle. But when I look at the numbers, those sites receive a few hundred applications and only take 2 or 3 interns. I realistically didn't stand a chance. If I had it to do over again, I would not have wasted my time applying to competitive sites. But that's just my experience. I'm sure others will come along with success stories.
I ended up with only 2 interviews and matched to a consortium. I'm happy where I am. which is the important thing after all. Working 40-48 hours per week instead of the 60 hours per week that someone in my cohort is working at a competitive hospital site to which she matched.
Good luck.
When you say you applied to 8 competitive hospital sites, can you give an example of what one of these was? Or what type of hospital? I am applying to hospitals, and some of them are competitive, I am still narrowing down my site list, and trying to make sure I have enough "back-ups." Thank you in advance! 🙂
(I have been lurking on this site for some time, but this is my first time posting, I apologize if I posted wrong, I hit "reply" to PhDMiss2014)
Good luck to you too!
Having run a marathon in the past...this feels like coming up to mile 22...only 4.2 more miles to go! 🙄
I can only relate my experience to answer your question, but I'm sure that experience varies widely. I only had a few publications and like you an insane number of intervention and assessment hours. I applied to 15 sites last year and probably 8 of those were competitive hospital sites. Not one of those competitive sites interviewed me.
Thank you for your reply! You make some very good points (not having to worry about glitches, training directors thinking I may have a problem with deadlines). The main thing I am waiting on is some cover letters that are being copy edited, and I should have them back by 10/29. So I will make sure to get my stuff in by 10/30 at the latest. When you said "final hour," it made me wonder – do people submit applications on the due date all the way up until midnight? I don't know if that is what you meant, but it got me thinking. I just kind of assumed that an application should be in by close of business (5:00?) on the date it is due? Thanks! 🙂If your application is ready, don't wait until the final hour when technical glitches can happen at either end. More importantly, your application will not arrive in the final wave when staff who are processing these are weary too.
I have heard the argument that there is some "recency" effect to being in the final wave. Speaking from the receiving end, it is probably better to be screened when staff have not already read dozens of essays or are worrying about who they will have to cut because they can't interview everyone or wondering if arriving at the last minute suggests that meeting deadlines could be a problem.
Can I ask how many you mean by "a few"? Also, it sounds like these were child-focused sites?
Just trying to assuage my anxiety 😉
If I have applications due on 11/1, would it be a horrible idea if I did not submit them until 11/1? I am going to try and submit them a couple of days early, but if something happens and I am not able to until 11/1, will I have a lot of trouble due to heavy traffic on the APPIC site? Thanks!
Sites may vary on this and assuming 5 is wiser. I am always amazed at how many folk cut it very close or ignore time zone differences. Why risk it if at all possible. Submit the day before the deadline and go celebrate.Thank you for your reply! You make some very good points (not having to worry about glitches, training directors thinking I may have a problem with deadlines). The main thing I am waiting on is some cover letters that are being copy edited, and I should have them back by 10/29. So I will make sure to get my stuff in by 10/30 at the latest. When you said "final hour," it made me wonder do people submit applications on the due date all the way up until midnight? I don't know if that is what you meant, but it got me thinking. I just kind of assumed that an application should be in by close of business (5:00?) on the date it is due? Thanks! 🙂
I have seen only one site specify in their brochure that their deadline was midnight, and it surprised me. I am guessing people who are submitting at 11:59 PM are probably finishing up their cover letters or editing their CV at the last minute on that day? I agree, get it done a day (or two if possible) before the deadline and go out and celebrate! 😉Sites may vary on this and assuming 5 is wiser. I am always amazed at how many folk cut it very close or ignore time zone differences. Why risk it if at all possible. Submit the day before the deadline and go celebrate.
I agree! Will send them when done. My only concern is that somebody is copy editing some stuff for me, but I just emailed her and asked if she could be done by 10/29 for sure, so that I can upload everything the evening of 10/29 or the morning of 10/30 at the latest. With my luck, my cat would sit on the computer while I am submitting on 11/1 and delete files or something, lol.In my year, the site started to go down at the deadline. What if (insert any of a million things, from spilling coffee on your computer to a tree falling in a storm and cutting off the power grid over miles)? Just send em in when you're done.
If I have applications due on 11/1, would it be a horrible idea if I did not submit them until 11/1? I am going to try and submit them a couple of days early, but if something happens and I am not able to until 11/1, will I have a lot of trouble due to heavy traffic on the APPIC site? Thanks!
I have only seen a specific time listed in one brochure, it said application is due on 11/1/13 by midnight. Other than that, I haven't seen anything referencing specific times, just dates.I'm actually wondering if sites specify the time. Do they mean, like, 11:59 PM on the deadline?
You're absolutely right! I have started uploading some things, and have had to go back and fix it, like a " will show up as # or whatever.Another reason for getting it done early - pasting the cover letters into the text boxes on the website can be tricky. Even after saving the letters as text files before the pasting, I got some funky translations of symbols and spacing, and had to go back and edit it within the text boxes.
You're absolutely right! I have started uploading some things, and have had to go back and fix it, like a " will show up as # or whatever.
Actually, since you brought this up, I am kind of confused by the instructions for uploading the cover letters and the essays. The instructions say, "click the W button (Paste from Word) on the right of the row of buttons in the text box and paste your text into the box that comes up." Then it says, "The safest option is to paste that text into Notepad first, then copy and paste from Notepad to the AAPI Online form, and apply any final formatting in the essay box itself. This will guarantee that no extra hidden Word characters impact the formatting of your essay." What is Notepad?? And, what if you just copy and paste your essay directly into the large box (not the Word thing), is that OK?
The CV and the supplemental information sections I am not having problems with, because I am just uploading my documents as PDFs. Is PDF format best for this section, or does it not really matter?
Thank you in advance!! 🙂
One more question! From UCSD's brochure:
"Interns are expected to have completed at least three years of doctoral study before beginning the internship year, including at least 1,000 clinical practicum hours; applicants must be on track to complete this requirement."
Does anyone know if they include support hours in this? Also, do they calculate it using anticipated hours? It sounds like you only need it before internship, not before applications are due, right?
Thanks for the response! I am on a Mac as well, which makes sense why I didn't know what Notepad was. I will download the TextWrangler. 🙂Fun, fun. I am on a Mac, but if I was working in Windows, I would paste my letter from Word to Notepad, which strips out formatting that may cause a problem in the application's text box. I would then click on the "W" button above the text box, copy the text from Notepad, and paste in to the "W" pop-up box. On the Mac, there is no exact equivalent to Notepad. I was using the TextEdit software that came with the mac, but it left in some problematic formatting even when set to text only. Then, I downloaded a program called TextWrangler, which is working very well.
If you are uploading a CV and want to keep the formatting intact, a pdf is definitely the way to go.