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- Medical Student
Does having a famous school on your resume or CV help? It certainly does a little bit. But I'm not sure it's anywhere to the level you're probably thinking if that's the main reason you'd like to go to school A versus B. Attending one school versus another will not dramatically alter how you are as a worker and skills.
I'm getting really nervous now =/
I really like BU but people are getting accepted who submitted way after me. Oh well, might be first rejection![]()
Congraulations on some great acceptances such as Tulane and Emory.
You seem to be a strong applicant, not that BU doesn't take strong applicants, but they are targeting applicants who will be mostly likely to attend BU, versus those who are just very promising in terms of making a real contribution to public health.
Each year only about 30% of BUSPH applicants actually decide to attend the school after being accepted. BU is happy to turn down the Peace Corps applicant with extensive experience and great grades over the applicant with the less stellar application out of the hope that they will actually attend the school. I've personally known excellent candidates who applied to BU, in addition to a lot of other schools, and were treated very rudely by admissions almost as if they resent the fact that such a good applicant was applying to their school.
So, I guess what I'm saying is that it is definitely their loss and not yours.
Thanks. I sent them an email asking about the status of my app and expressing interest. I was hopeful for BU as I haven't gotten any merit aid anywhere. Getting into schools has been great but the massive debt waiting for me is not.
I haven't even gotten the supplemental essay or whatever request.
...Well, it seems like H2OPropre is the one doing most of the 'BU bashing' . I'd place a lot more credence on his/her opinion if ALL their posts over the last couple years hadn't been anti-BU, to be honest. Personal vendetta,perhaps? 🙂...and so the railing against BU continues. It's like an annual right of passage around here, isn't it - the insults against BU, its students, and its applicants.
...Well, it seems like H2OPropre is the one doing most of the 'BU bashing' . I'd place a lot more credence on his/her opinion if ALL their posts over the last couple years hadn't been anti-BU, to be honest. Personal vendetta,perhaps? 🙂
...and so the railing against BU continues. It's like an annual right of passage around here, isn't it - the insults against BU, its students, and its applicants.
...Well, it seems like H2OPropre is the one doing most of the 'BU bashing' . I'd place a lot more credence on his/her opinion if ALL their posts over the last couple years hadn't been anti-BU, to be honest. Personal vendetta,perhaps? 🙂
Yeah, seriously. I'm very curious what the story is with that, because I remember him from last year. (Porkbunsrule is right, it seems like an (irritating) tradition.)
Overall you seem to be saying that brand recognition helps only a little bit and that the specific school you go to doesn't matter in terms of what you learn and how efficient/productive you are? 😕
If that's the case, then applicants wouldn't be very selective at all, but we know this not to be the case. Certainly, how you spend your time earning the MPH will impact your future career trajectory and outlook, independent of "how you are as a worker." Outside of just plain "skills" you also learn, implicitly or otherwise, a school-specific paradigm which colors your thinking, and which varies from school to school.
Is it possible that sometimes weaker schools promulgate the idea that it doesn't matter where you go out of the hopes that strong applicants will overlook a less than stellar school reputation? Not so sure that an Emory/UNC person would necessarily be talking up how it doesn't matter where applicants go, I think that the truly good/unique schools have something upbeat to say about their school.
A lot of people feel that having a good fit between the school and the student is important, and doubtlessly the high achieving/motivated students want to surround themselves with like minded people, and have a diverse range of opportunities suited to their tastes. The more competitive applicants are often the most discriminating when it comes to public health schools.
Enrollment at public health schools has skyrocketed in recent years, and many schools seem to be quite a bit of $ off of the increase in enrollment, of course often without a commensurate increase in faculty numbers/mentors.
BU emailed me back and said I wouldn't get a decision until mid March. I submitted early January 🙁
I applied to international health. I thought I was a strong candidate. No request for additional info or whatever.
Well, you've got some solid acceptances already!

Got a reply from BU today. Its a bad news. I am really shocked!Got a reply from BU today. Its a bad news. I am really shocked!
my top listed are JHU and michigan. I am not just prepared for this rejection.That sucks, sorry dude 🙁 Was it at the top of your list?
my top listed are JHU and michigan. I am not just prepared for this rejection.
I have got my acceptance from JHU, Michigan, But yet its Boston. Who doesnt want to be a part of it!!Did you get into either of those? If so, turn that frown upside down! Just because you get rejected doesn't mean a school thinks you're stupid. There are plenty of other possible reasons.
I have got my acceptance from JHU, Michigan, But yet its Boston. Who doesnt want to be a part of it!!
My I have a link to the page where you read about this? I am interested in doubling in Epi/BiostatsNevermind. Found it! 😉
My I have a link to the page where you read about this? I am interested in doubling in Epi/Biostats
http://sph.bu.edu/Registrar-Office/forms/menu-id-50218.html
Go to the Concentration Change Form, and on the form itself, there is an option to do a dual concentration.
School reputation is a proxy in most cases for ambition level.
. . .
Most people will not have a world changing experience or personality molding education in grad school in their mid-20's because most of these people's work ethics and dedication is already present.
Does having a famous school on your resume or CV help? It certainly does a little bit. But I'm not sure it's anywhere to the level you're probably thinking if that's the main reason you'd like to go to school A versus B. Attending one school versus another will not dramatically alter how you are as a worker and skills.
I don't believe we're talking about the plasticity of personality (which incidentally is not quite as static as you believe per new research), but rather we're talking about how different schools offer different opportunities for growth, and even post-graduation opportunities.
Many public health students will have a "life changing experience" in public health school/grad school in that what they learn, and new experiences, in many cases significantly affect their career trajectory. Most applicants are hoping/wanting to be inspired by their public health education, and to have meaningful experiences.
I think that some faculty at the degree mill institutions might hold your view, that of the public health school as an inactive participant in the student's education, and that nothing is "special" about their school per se. I would wager that the educators at the more prestigious schools are a little more ambitious when it comes to designing and implementing an innovative and educational curriculum, and with playing an active role in the educational process.
I think you're in error when you state that the quality of education afforded at different public health schools has no bearing on the "skills" you learn. Certainly students who go to school x known for have an excellent concentration in y will come away with a different skill set if they go to another school, perhaps one with a watered down concentration y.
Of course, going to a top ten school may provide the graduate with a broader range of career opportunities, and the more you're challenged the more you learn and continue to develop your skill set.
I don't believe we're talking about the plasticity of personality (which incidentally is not quite as static as you believe per new research), but rather we're talking about how different schools offer different opportunities for growth, and even post-graduation opportunities.
Many public health students will have a "life changing experience" in public health school/grad school in that what they learn, and new experiences, in many cases significantly affect their career trajectory. Most applicants are hoping/wanting to be inspired by their public health education, and to have meaningful experiences.
I think that some faculty at the degree mill institutions might hold your view, that of the public health school as an inactive participant in the student's education, and that nothing is "special" about their school per se. I would wager that the educators at the more prestigious schools are a little more ambitious when it comes to designing and implementing an innovative and educational curriculum, and with playing an active role in the educational process.
I think you're in error when you state that the quality of education afforded at different public health schools has no bearing on the "skills" you learn. Certainly students who go to school x known for have an excellent concentration in y will come away with a different skill set if they go to another school, perhaps one with a watered down concentration y.
Of course, going to a top ten school may provide the graduate with a broader range of career opportunities, and the more you're challenged the more you learn and continue to develop your skill set.
I am STILL waiting on BU...ready to take them off my list completely at this point. I should have heard weeks ago according to their schedule, and when I called a few days ago, they told me it would still be another 3 weeks. That's putting it way too close to the 4/15 deadline for me.
Glad to hear your story has a happy ending after all! Congrats on Michigan!