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Higher Education in the United States. Seminar „Höhere Bildungssysteme im internationalen Vergleich“ 2009/2010 Andre Gaschler December 14, 2009. Scope of this seminar. What’s different in the US? How do you apply for a US university? How do you become a research intern?
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Higher Education in the United States Seminar „Höhere Bildungssysteme im internationalen Vergleich“ 2009/2010 Andre Gaschler December 14, 2009
Scope of this seminar • What’s different in the US? • How do you apply for a US university? • How do you become a research intern? • How was it in Baltimore, MD?
Basic facts • Kindergarten (1 yr) • Primary school, elementary (5 yrs) • Secondary school (4 yrs) • High school (3 yrs) • Undergraduate school (3—4 yrs) • Graduate school (Master’s 2 yrs, PhD 5 yrs) • For more information, refer to Piotr’s presentation http://www-db.in.tum.de/teaching/ws0809/hsufg/usa/higher_education_us/
American culture in education • Diversity • Highly decentralized and diversified education system • Great number of international students and immigrants • Competitiveness • Competitive application process • Financing tuition is one’s own responsibility • Competing with others is encouraged
Application Process 1—2 yrs ahead • Decide on appropriate programs together with guidance counselor and professors • Practice for tests • Take admission tests (SAT, GRE) • Draft statement of purpose and essays • Letters of recommendation • Transcripts • Rewrite statement of purpose • Submit application 9 months 6 months 2 months 1 month before application deadline
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Standardized tests • GPA varies widely, standardized tests give easily comparable scores • Standardized tests have got an unusual but fixed structure • Preparation is crucial and substantially improves scores • Pacing is important • SAT: general test for undergraduate admissions • GRE: requirement for many graduate schools
Letters of recommendation • Particularly important for competitive grad schools • Timing and preparation is important • The writer should be willing to • State that the student is perfectly qualified • Stress the student’s qualifications not visible in grades and scores (with example/evidence) • Write a very personal recommendation (not a template) • Letters of recommendation are more boastful and exaggerating than in Germany See book: Graduate Admissions Essays by Donald Asher
Statement of purpose • Most important part of the application • Give evidence that you qualify for the program of study • Tell personal stories of success • Address the specific program and why you chose it • Double check spelling, wording and grammar with somebody else See book: Graduate Admissions Essays by Donald Asher
Scholarships and Tuition • Tuition is among the highest in the world • Undergraduates: $5,000--$10,000 a year • Graduates: $15,000--$50,000 • Many students get discounts • Getting into debt is common (student loan) • Scholarships are widely available • Prestigious private scholarships (Rhodes, Marshall) • Research grants for PhD students (NSF) • Scholarships by the school or local authorities
Alternative ways into a US academia • Official exchange programs • TUMexchange • DAAD • Fulbright • … • Research internship • Interning at a private research institution (such as IBM, GE, …) • Visiting student, visiting scholar • Conducting experiments • Writing a thesis
Finding “host” professors • Ways how to find a host • Ask your adviser for recommendations • Ask for joint master’s thesis topics • Approach guest lecturers (i.e. after their talk) • How to contact hosts • Google people before talking/writing to them, address their particular interests • Tell them what you want and what you can offer • State that you are willing to work/program/running experiments, sell yourself
Personal experience Visiting student at JHU Computational Interaction and Robotics Lab
Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Gilham Hall on Homewood Campus
Johns Hopkins University • Private university in Baltimore, MD • Medical school is among the best of the world (ranked #1 by NIH) • High level of research activity, even undergrads can volunteer in research projects • Student life is focuses on campus • University strongly supports sports, clubs and student life
Computer Science at JHU Computational Science and Engineering Building
Experience as a visiting student • Settling down takes time (couple of weeks) • Lab mates are very friendly and helpful • Easy to make friends on campus • Labs are full of visiting students, I was not the only one • I met hardly any European students • Professors have got open doors • Got much less work done than planned
Further references • Guidelines • www.daad.de • Book: Graduate Admissions Essays • Book: DAAD-Studienführer USA • Book: Cracking the GRE 2010 • Scholarships for Germans staying abroad • Deutscher akademischer Auslandsdienstwww.daad.de • Max-Weber-Programm http://www.elitenetzwerk.bayern.de/12.0.html • Fulbright Scholar Programhttp://fulbright.state.gov/
Current position: Research Intern at JHU • Chair of Robotics and Embedded Systems (Prof. A. Knoll) maintains an exchange with CISST Lab at JHU • You can take part at computer vision and medical robotics projects, have a look at http://cirl.lcsr.jhu.edu/Research
Current position: Research Intern at JHU • You are expected to be a very good CS student and able to solve problems on your own. • Do not hesitate to contact Prof. Knoll knoll@in.tum.de, just give a rough outline of the progress with your studies and your motivation. • Your stay abroad should be at least 3 months. You can start a master’s thesis or a paper abroad and finish it here.