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Writing the Statement of Purpose. Madhu Sudhan Rao. M Dept. of Communication & Soft Skills. Factors for Admissions. GPA GRE Letters of Recommendation Interview/Visit STATEMENT of PURPOSE Complete Application. Statement of Purpose. Idea of your research/study interests
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Writing the Statement of Purpose Madhu Sudhan Rao. M Dept. of Communication & Soft Skills
Factors for Admissions • GPA • GRE • Letters of Recommendation • Interview/Visit • STATEMENT of PURPOSE • Complete Application
Statement of Purpose • Idea of your research/study interests • Sample of your ability to write • Proxy for interview • Can be the difference between getting in or not • Opportunity to sell yourself!
Central Theme • Reasons for your interest in attending a specific program at a particular institution • Statement is tailored for the program & institution
The Key Idea • Look like you will be a success in graduate school. • coming in, you are prepared, motivated, focused, have needed skills (writing, math, research) • once there, you will successfully complete all requirements and you will progress as a researcher
Important to keep in mind: • Audience: admission committees are professors in your discipline - no need to define basic terminology. • Establish your voice: confident, but not arrogant • straightforward tone: explain how you are prepared for graduate school • acknowledge poor performances (GPA, GRE scores etc.) then focus on achievements not failures
Important to keep in mind: • Answer the question: most graduate schools don’t give much instruction about SoP, but if application asks a specific question, make sure to address it • Get feedback: At your current study, talk with professors and graduate students about graduate school and the application process, and get suggested revisions from them on your draft SoP.
Writing an Effective Statement • How did you become interested in your field? • - describe how research experiences, courses, professors, internships, work experiences, community service, things you’ve read, other independent studies, or life experiences that stimulated your interest • What are your interests and career objectives? • - be specific about discipline and objectives
Writing an Effective Statement • What are your research interests? • - introduce a few topics of interest • - don’t need to make a specific thesis or dissertation proposal, but should be able to pose 1 or 2 questions or problems • What attracts you most to the institution/ program and why are you a good match? • - interests should parallel those of the faculty in the program you are applying to—read their articles, mention their names • - the better the match, the better the chance of getting admitted
Statement Should Be… • Well organized • Concise • Free of grammatical, punctuation and spelling errors • Convincing that you will be successful graduate student • 1 to 2 pages in length • Including a last paragraph that mentions the names and work of potential advisors • Proof-read!!
Statement Should Not Be… • An undergraduate application • focusing on extracurricular, life history, hobbies, general world view • About your convenience • Unclear
Discipline-specific • Be prepared: research experience, statistics • Know what area you want to study • Show awareness of how topics are researched
In Conclusion The reader should be able to: • see what you are interested in, and why • see that you know what graduate school is about (research) • see that you will be a success