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What is a decent number of schools to apply to?
What is a decent number of schools to apply to?
What is a decent number of schools to apply to?
What is a decent number of schools to apply to?
I only applied to eight and I was okay. My thought was why would I want to apply somewhere I wouldn't want to go.
I understand the 3 tier route in theory, and I'd love to be able to come up with a list like that for myself, but in reality, I consider all of them "reaches." I have competitive grades, test scores and a good amt of research experience, but I am just having trouble formulating a tier system like the one that was easy to make for college apps, and I am by no means only looking at the UCLAs of the programs.
It's relevant in today's economy because applications and interviews cost a lot of money. You're spending about $100 when you consider the application fee plus GRE submission costs plus official transcript costs plus possibly snail mail and subject GRE costs. If you add in interviews, that can get to over $500 if you have to fly there and they won't host you with a grad student.
I think the 3 tier route is a good idea. I'm applying to 16 schools. Four are crazy competitive like UCLA, 5-6 are still really competitive, and the rest are mid to low range competitive. I think it's a good mix even though it is a lot of schools. I started my applications but I know it's going to take a loooong time.
Thank you for your replies.
I am interested in the Clinical route. PhD or PsyD (prefer the PsyD). I've narrowed the list down to 15 schools, but the total for the application fees is almost 1,000$. I'm just wondering if I should cut the list again.
Sounds pretty tidy right? WRONG. Total amateur mistake...and we all made it. S*** makes me laugh when I look back at it.
You fit into a tier and you need to find what it is or you'll waste almost all your applications and trust me, it's a crap shoot so if you don't have at least 5 apps within your tier...your toast. I'm sorry, but HOPE to succeed, but EXPECT to fail your first time around because the vast majority do fail.
If your coming straight out of undergrad (*with a finger on the trigger*) you are third tier nuff said, unless you went to a top 30 institution and your mentor was a ghost of some big name. Rule of thumb, if your not at least 2 years out, having acquired research experience across that time, do not even bother with those top 50ish schools as they are all research intensive. Start at 60 and move back. If you get rejected from a tier without an interview, expect all schools from that tier will reject you.
A N Y professor will tell you that you gain entrance by tier. You will not get into a school in the 60-90 USnews rankings and then not get into all your 120+ programs...although you will get rejected from some. I would load over half your applications in 100+ institutions and backwoods places with 100 or less applicants per year. I go to a solid program (third tier - 80-120) and the average age is 26...think about that. Oh yeah, that GRE better be 1350 if you want to get into a top 30. And if you don't clear a 600 verbal...it sucks, but hey.
Do not assume tier denotes quality...it does not. Those rankings mean next to nothing, but that's another thread. What you need to worry about is apa match rate, location, and mentor. You might want to stay out of the woods or institutions that are "clinical based", especially the clinically based ones because they have great internship match rates, but certain post-docs can be harder to get due to a lack of research focus (go for 5 pubs by your 5th year, posters don't mean a thing...it's grad school not your 7th grade science fair. Posters are fine and show involvement in the field, but do not think they are going to supplement for something).
Commence the flaming.![]()
Don't listen to Pug. It's tough to get into a school but he/she is making it sound like you have to be plucked from the gods. And whatever school pug goes to, I would avoid at all cost. Their screening process clearly has some kinks to be worked out 😉
Everything I said was viable advice.
I think Mr. G. is hoping I'm just nuts, because I just scared him. Soon to apply perhaps?
It is important to note though that the OP is interested in PsyD programs, and while they can still be very competitive, they are also a very different world then PHD clinical programs. In my experience, high GREs and high GPA alone are often enough to get you an interview at a PsyD program, and this is definitely not remotely true for PhD.
certain post-docs can be harder to get due to a lack of research focus (go for 5 pubs by your 5th year).
Any non-pugs care to chime on the 1 pub/year suggestion? Seems reasonable if you are hoping to go for a T-T (where you'll need to produce >= 2/year), but I could swear I've heard people on this forum suggest that 2-3 pubs is competitive for folks hoping to go the clinical route.
I don't know that rigid "rules" are helpful. Last I checked the modal number of pubs was still zero, but that doesn't mean that's a good idea for anyone looking at some of the higher-paying/more competitive job sites. 5 is probably a decent number to be competitive at academic places (that's probably around the norm for our students, who pretty much all go to VAs or academic med centers), but you'll see anywhere from 2-20 pubs for people matching to the research internships. Again, the nature of the pubs matters too - if your goal is simply numbers it would actually be very, very easy to get 15+ pubs if you are willing to produce trash and don't care where you publish it. I've seen CVs like that...everything in virtually unknown journals, all piecemeal-publications from one survey study, etc. Its pretty obvious and while its better than no publications, I think someone with 3 publications in Abnormal/JCCP/etc. will do better than someone with 15 publications, only 2 of which will even pop up on Psycinfo. I'll probably have 10 or so when I graduate, most will be mid-tier (APA divisional journals, specialty journals with IF ~2-3) which I suspect will be fine. However, I'm also going to take forever to graduate so it probably won't look as good as someone with 5 publications who was in and out in 4 years - and certainly won't look as good as someone with 10 publications from studies that actually came out the way they were supposed to do🙂
you'll see anywhere from 2-20 pubs for people matching to the research internships.
Wow--thanks Ollie (and cara susana).
Now, for anyone who was still unsure, I am going to admit to being a complete idiot (I said it here so no one else has to). It sounds like there are various categories of predoctoral internships (some which are research focused and some which are clinically focused)--is that right? Is research a part of any predoctoral internship? If I go the PsyD route (still undecided) I would definitely be shooting for university counseling centers, not VA or medical. What kind of research component do folks at university counseling centers typically do as part of their internship?