A little about myself:
Applied to 10 schools for a Clinical PhD program with emphasis in neuropsychology. Got one interview (my POI graduated the professor I do research with now...suspect that's the reason), and no acceptances.
- 1300 on GRE
- over 3.8 Magna cum laude (graduating this May)
- 2 years research experience as a research assistant (no publications of my own, just helping others with theirs....however may get on authorship on a project that was not my idea, but that I have done all the work on)
What else should I do? Every professor I know at my school can give me no reason, and all though I should have gotten more looks. Every POI I asked for advice said that the competitive applicants that they accepted had post-undergrad experience and knowledge on how to do all tests they prefer, all computer programs they use, publications and experience in their specific field on interest, AND neuroimaging experience (if the program used neuroimaging)....
What is the point in a graduate EDUCATION if they expect applicants to already be proficient in every single field of experience?
I am moving back home, and the only opportunity I have now is to extensively learn the famous neuropsychology batteries (about 7 of them), and then help with research. However, I fear this is not enough. My other ideas were looking into medical schools, and different nursing homes and senior centers (I want to do aging and dementia research).
Any other advice that could help me would be greatly appreciated. Thanks everyone, and congrats if you got into a program this year!
PS: Here is an excerpt from one of my POI's about what else I need (after telling me that my application was very strong):
"In the case of the ideal student, it would be one that has a solid experimental psychology background, some neuroscience, good math skills, physics exposure, and some clinical exposure to an aging population. Importantly, firsthand experience using MR technologies, either in data acquisition or in data processing, or in computer programming is highly valued and will set a student apart."
How cannot I not feel I will NEVER get in to a graduate program? Ha ha ha
Applied to 10 schools for a Clinical PhD program with emphasis in neuropsychology. Got one interview (my POI graduated the professor I do research with now...suspect that's the reason), and no acceptances.
- 1300 on GRE
- over 3.8 Magna cum laude (graduating this May)
- 2 years research experience as a research assistant (no publications of my own, just helping others with theirs....however may get on authorship on a project that was not my idea, but that I have done all the work on)
What else should I do? Every professor I know at my school can give me no reason, and all though I should have gotten more looks. Every POI I asked for advice said that the competitive applicants that they accepted had post-undergrad experience and knowledge on how to do all tests they prefer, all computer programs they use, publications and experience in their specific field on interest, AND neuroimaging experience (if the program used neuroimaging)....
What is the point in a graduate EDUCATION if they expect applicants to already be proficient in every single field of experience?
I am moving back home, and the only opportunity I have now is to extensively learn the famous neuropsychology batteries (about 7 of them), and then help with research. However, I fear this is not enough. My other ideas were looking into medical schools, and different nursing homes and senior centers (I want to do aging and dementia research).
Any other advice that could help me would be greatly appreciated. Thanks everyone, and congrats if you got into a program this year!
PS: Here is an excerpt from one of my POI's about what else I need (after telling me that my application was very strong):
"In the case of the ideal student, it would be one that has a solid experimental psychology background, some neuroscience, good math skills, physics exposure, and some clinical exposure to an aging population. Importantly, firsthand experience using MR technologies, either in data acquisition or in data processing, or in computer programming is highly valued and will set a student apart."
How cannot I not feel I will NEVER get in to a graduate program? Ha ha ha