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Most Recently Selected profile:
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The data below comes from testmagic forums and shows accepted, waitlisted, and rejected applicants for 2010 for economics graduate school. Clicking on points in the graph above will make the most recent profile appear in the space below the graph.
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Acceptances:
Chicunomics 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Honours bachelor's degree at a big international university (econphd.net top 100) Undergrad GPA: 89/100-ish, 1st of 149 Type of Grad: N/A Grad GPA: N/A GRE: 800Q 700V 5.5AWA Math Courses: Advanced streams of first year linear algebra, calculus, also core undergrad probability, statistics subjects (As in subjects completed so far). For semester before I start: vector analysis, real & complex analysis. Econ Courses: up to grad level micro, macro, econometrics, auction theory, search theory, industrial organization (all As) Other Courses: Nothing any adcom would care about. Letters of Recommendation: 2 full professors, quite senior and relatively well known, 1 junior academic (honours thesis advisor) -- all economics. Research Experience: Thesis prize; theoretical IO paper (to be submitted to Information Economics and Policy soon co-authored with advisor), co-author on another paper to be submitted to Journal of Labour Economics soon. RA since 2004 - both empirical and theoretical stuff. Teaching Experience: TA in intro Micro and Macro, advanced undergrad IO and micro. Research Interests: IO and micro theory. SOP: Nothing special, just discussed my interests and research. RESULTS: Attending: Northwestern University Acceptances: Northwestern ($$), NYU ($$), Wisconsin ($$), MIT (No $), UCLA (No $) Waitlists: Yale ($$), Pennsylvania (No $), Princeton ($$) Rejections: Stanford GSB (EAP), Columbia, Maryland, Harvard, Stanford Economics, Berkeley What would you have done differently? Nothing really. I did the best I could. I can't help but feel that with another year's math preparation, I would have gotten admits to a better selection of schools. However, NWU was a really high personal preference, so it was worth cutting the math short a year!
Accepts: Attending: Northwestern University
Acceptances: Northwestern ($$), NYU ($$), Wisconsin ($$), MIT (No $), UCLA (No $)
Rejects: Rejections: Stanford GSB (EAP), Columbia, Maryland, Harvard, Stanford Economics, Berkeley
Waitlists: Waitlists: Yale ($$), Pennsylvania (No $), Princeton ($$)
Big Tuna 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Highly ranked US public university with top 25 econ phd program. Majors in economics/philosophy, minor in math. Undergrad GPA: 4.0 Type of Grad: No masters program; just 1 course while in undergrad. Grad GPA: 4.0 GRE: 800V/800Q/4.5AW Math Courses: Calculus I, I, III, linear algebra, real analysis, mathematical modeling, ordinary differential equations, currently enrolled in numerical methods and complex variables. Econ Courses: intro/intermediate micro/macro, stat for economists, undergrad econometrics, 3 thesis/independent study courses, a bunch of undergrad field courses, and PhD econometrics I. Other Courses: Mostly a lot of philosophy. Letters of Recommendation: Three from good people, all of whom have supervised an independent project I've done. Research Experience: The aforementioned thesis projects, plus 2 years as a research assistant and one empirical paper submitted to a decent (though not top tier) journal. I received an undergraduate research grant from my school to do this paper. Teaching Experience: Just tutoring. Research Interests: Applied micro, public finance, maybe econometrics SOP: I guess it was fine. Other: I had one withdrawal (W) on my transcript because I dropped abstract algebra; the professor was more boring than anyone else I'd ever had. RESULTS: Acceptances: MIT, Stanford, Yale, UChicago, Northwestern, NYU, Columbia, Duke, UMaryland. Waitlists: Harvard. Rejections: None. Pending: None. What would you have done differently? Probably nothing. I guess Harvard might have let me in instead of waitlisting me if I'd taken more advanced math or gone to an Ivy, but that's hard to tell and I wouldn't have wanted to do too much more work as an undergrad than I actually did; you have to leave time to have some fun.
Accepts: Acceptances: MIT, Stanford, Yale, UChicago, Northwestern, NYU, Columbia, Duke, UMaryland.
Rejects:
Waitlists:
gregobad 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Research university w/ top 5 econ program Undergrad GPA: 4.9/5 Type of Grad: none. GRE: 770V/800Q/5.5AW Math Courses: calc I & II, differential equations, linear algebra, probability, linear programming / optimization Econ Courses: intermediate micro and macro, econometrics, game theory, various field courses Other Courses: Minor in physics Letters of Recommendation: Two from econ profs, neither of whom are well-known but both know me well (one was my thesis advisor, another my undergrad advisor). One from a manager at my job (econ consulting firm). Pretty sure all three are very strong recs, but the third probably doesn't count for much because it's non-academic. Research Experience: Was an RA for a summer in a physics lab. Did an undergrad thesis. Worked for 1.5 years doing semi-relevant stuff at an economic consulting firm - I have a lot of experience with Stata, Matlab, other programming languages Teaching Experience: tutored undergrads in physics and econ Research Interests: Game theory, political economy, behavioral economics SOP: talked about possible research interests and what I had worked on RESULTS: Acceptances: MIT, Stanford GSB (political economy), Princeton, Caltech, Berkeley, Northwestern, Chicago Waitlists: Harvard Rejections: Stanford economics What would you have done differently? Not much, really. Maybe taken an academic RA job instead of working in economic consulting, and applied for last year instead of this year. Although, there's nothing like having a boring job to motivate you to get back to school.
Accepts: Acceptances: MIT, Stanford GSB (political economy), Princeton, Caltech, Berkeley, Northwestern, Chicago
Rejects: Rejections: Stanford economics
Waitlists:
nergal 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: BA in Econ and BS in Math, Double Major in top university in my country Undergrad GPA: 3.77/4.00 (at the time of application) Type of Grad: na Grad GPA: na GRE: 700V 800Q 5.0AW Math Courses: Too many :P Highlights: Real Analysis I&II (BA&pending), Complex Analysis I (The GRE Big Book), Calculus of Variations (BA), Mathematics of Finance (graduate math course, AA), Number Theory (CC), Algebra I&II (CB&AA), Differential Equations (AA), Linear Algebra (AA) Econ Courses: Graduate level Econometrics (AA), Advanced Micro (AA), Public Finance (AA), (Undergrad) Econometrics I&II (AA), Mathematical Statistics I&II (AA), Intermediate Micro and Macro (AA), Game Theory (AA) among other things ... Other Courses: Letters of Recommendation: Four LoRs, three from econ professors with whom I studied as RA, and one from a senior math professor. Two of the econ professors are senior and one of them is pretty famous. Submitted three LoRs in each application. Research Experience: RA for two years in two different projects. Teaching Experience: TA for Intermediate Micro for one term. Research Interests: Micro Theory, Game Theory, Political Economy SOP: Delineated my research interests, talked about my motivation for a phd degree in economics, detailed my research experience RESULTS: Acceptances: Caltech ($$), Michigan-Ann Arbor (??), Northwestern ($$), UPenn ($$), Yale ($$) Waitlists: none Rejections: Duke, MIT, Stanford Pending: Princeton, Harvard (most likely rejected) What would you have done differently? I would not have taken the elective Number Theory Maybe would have taken the graduate level Topology course. One problem with our Math department is that the faculty is really stingy with grades! For instance, I was the second ranked student out of some 100+ people in the Complex Analysis I course and I still got The GRE Big Book. The first guy got BA. No AA to no one, no sirrie. The mean of the cumulative grades was 35 (out of 100). This is just one case among many. I hope one of my professors managed to communicate this issue.
Accepts: Acceptances: Caltech ($$), Michigan-Ann Arbor (??), Northwestern ($$), UPenn ($$), Yale ($$)
Rejects: Rejections: Duke, MIT, Stanford
Waitlists:
Antonio 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Good Italian University (not Bocconi, but good) Undergrad GPA: 28/30 Type of Grad: Italian School of Excellence (oooooh) Ggrad GPA: 30/30 GRE: 800Q 540V 2.5AWA TOEFL: 107/120 Math Courses (undergrad and grad): Mathematical Methods, Mathematics for Economics I&II, Statistics I&II, Advanced Statistics, Generalised Linear Models. Econ Courses(undergrad and grad): Advanced Micro/Macro, Game Theory, IO, Advanced Econometrics I&II, Public Finance, Corporate Finance, Applied Econometrics, Financial Economics, Experimental Economics, Advanced Topics in Macro (PhD Course). Letters of Recommendation: 2 from Economics professors, my graduate academic tutor and a guy from LSE (summer school). The others changed with respect to the target. However they were all economists but one (math). Research Experience: Undergrad Thesis, one Working Paper and visiting researhcer at ENS-PSE for my grad thesis. Teaching Experience: Undergraduate Micro. Research Interests: Applied Micro, IO and Applied Econometrics. SOP: Pretty good...I think. Other: GMAT; LSE Summer school (A+); Visiting for 6 months at University of Southampton in UK. Italian, 22 (almost 23). RESULTS: Acceptances: Berkeley ($$), Northwestern ($$), BC ($), Toulouse (M2). Waitlists: NYU. Rejections: MIT, Harvard, UChicago, Yale, Stanford, Princeton, UCSD, Brown, Duke, UPenn. Pending: BU. What would you have done differently? I really have not understood almost anything! My results show a lot of randomness (i.e. MIT was wrong in rejecting me) and/or luck (i.e. Berkeley was wrong in accepting me). On one hand I think that waiting another year, with another master from a well reputed European University and with two more well known LORs I could have had some better shots for Cambridge MA or Princeton. On the other hand, I could say that I have been very lucky and that I must take this opportunity as soon as possible. Just some advices for European and, more in dept, Italian guys since this forum is too American-oriented: there is always a trade off between time (apply just during my last year of school) and odds (wait one year in order to improve my chances). And only you can decide upon this. You can speak with your profs and they will suggest you. But in the end it is just a matter of your own preferences. However I have learnt two things: 1) Getting accepted in a very good US School (Berkeley or Northwestern) is less difficult than I used to think. 2) Getting accepted in a TOP US School (MIT or Princeton) is more difficult than I used to think.
Accepts: Acceptances: Berkeley ($$), Northwestern ($$), BC ($), Toulouse (M2).
Rejects: Rejections: MIT, Harvard, UChicago, Yale, Stanford, Princeton, UCSD, Brown, Duke, UPenn.
Waitlists:
eqtisadi 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Econ,Philosophy,Politics from an Israeli university Undergrad GPA: 94% Type of Grad: Econ in the same university Grad GPA: 96% GRE: Q800, V450, A5.0 Math Courses: Calculus, (simple and calculus-based) Statistics, Linear algebra and advanced calculus, as well as two advanced logic courses by the department of philosophy (all 90+). I took Real Analysis too but I am not going to do the test. It was much more fun doing it without the pressure. Econ Courses: All around: undergrad: intro to econ I & II, price theory I & II, macro I & II, development, econ history, intro to econometrics, honors students seminar. MA: micro, macro I & II, industrial organization, econometrics I-III, econ history. All 90+ Letters of Recommendation: 1 from a very known professor, 2 from professors who are pretty known in their respective fields and 1 from a pretty young professor Research Experience: RA for the first professor mentioned above Teaching Experience: quite a few econ courses for BA, but I don't think it mattered. Research Interests: Too many. I have to narrow them down. SOP: 500 words (or whatever was the limitation) about why I want to do research in economics and how I decided that. Other: Nice set of teeth. RESULTS: Admitted: Berkeley, NYU, Yale, Columbia, Northwestern, Chicago, Stanford, Princeton Waitlisted: Harvard Rejected: MIT What would I have done differently? Nothing. Maybe get an American citizenship and apply for the NSF, but seriously, I'm very very happy with the choices I have.
Accepts: Admitted: Berkeley, NYU, Yale, Columbia, Northwestern, Chicago, Stanford, Princeton
Rejects:
Waitlists:
crutchboy3 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Top 20 Private University Undergrad GPA: 3.81 Type of Grad: None Grad GPA: N/A GRE: 800Q/600V/5 A Math Courses: Honors Calculus I-IV (A's), Honors Linear Algebra I,II (B+,A-), Intro to Probability (A), Honors Algebra III (A), Honors Analysis I (A-), Graduate Topology (A-), Graduate Optimization (A), Measure Theory (B), Functional Analysis (B+), Galois Theory (B+), Number Theory (A) Econ Courses: Intermediate Micro/Macro (A), Game Theory (A), Econometrics (A), Graduate Econ Prob and Stats (A), Grad Micro I (A), Letters of Recommendation: Two professors that had taken several classes from and had done research with, One that had just taken classes from, all econ Research Experience: Math REU, Summer REU to begin work on thesis project, Honors thesis, 2 years of RA Teaching Experience: Some tutoring Research Interests: Micro theory, game theory SOP: Nothing Special RESULTS: Acceptances: Northwestern ($)(Attending), NYU ($), Duke ($), UIUC ($), Caltech($), Chicago (Tuition Waiver + Health), Wisconsin (No $), Penn (No $) Waitlists: Penn (Eventually Accepted, no $) Rejections: Harvard, MIT, Yale, Columbia, Stanford, Princeton
Accepts: Acceptances: Northwestern ($)(Attending), NYU ($), Duke ($), UIUC ($), Caltech($), Chicago (Tuition Waiver + Health), Wisconsin (No $), Penn (No $)
Rejects: Rejections: Harvard, MIT, Yale, Columbia, Stanford, Princeton
Waitlists: Waitlists: Penn (Eventually
econphilomath 2008:
Type of Undergrad: B.A. in Economics from top institution in my country. Type of Grad: M.A. in Economics from the same institution GPA: Graduated 1st in my class, both programs. GRE: 800Q, 730V, 4.5AWA TOFEL: 118/120 Courses: Tons of econ, some math, no formal real analysis. TA: Lots of undergrad macro courses and some graduate macro courses. Teaching: I teach undergrad macro. Research: Several published papers. All applied. (average to low/mediocre national and international journals) RA: Current job is as an RA at Central Bank and lecturer at my university. LORS: One senior, one semi-senior and one junior. I know them all really well (for over two years) and with all I have co-authored different research. Interests: Macroeconomics, Labor and Development. SOP: Tried to be serious, signal I know what I'm getting into. No BS, no talking about whats in my CV, no naming professors and not very long. Schools: Shooting for the top 10 schools. Other: Male, 27 RESULTS: Attending: Yale ($$) Acceptances: NorthWestern ($$), Columbia ($$), UMinn ($$), UPenn (), UChicago () Waitlists: Harvard and MIT. Later rejected. Rejections: Princeton, Berkeley, Stanford, NYU. What would you have done differently? Applied earlier. Would not have stressed so much and spent less time on TM! The extra stuff on your CV doesn't make all that much of a difference. Past decent grades and GRE, basic math requirements, its all LORs. Its how you get the LORS that differs among applicants. Randomness that I was worried about was confirmed but its not that big once you know the underlying decision making structure. Also I would have gone with more famous professors LORs who didn't know me as well, but who were willing to write beaming letters, instead of my junior professor/coauthor. ALSO wait-lists suck. They do move around (not for me) but the wait is terrible. Last Recommendation: Try as hard as you can to go to fly-outs. It can make a huge difference when you have to choose on the margin. Talk with professors and students as much as you can. It helped me a lot. EDIT: See my buddy asianecon's next post. To avoid confusion, I recommend visiting (something usually done at fly-outs). However as asianecon suggests, it might be more informative to go on a regular day and sit in at classes talk with people etc as he has done and skip the marketing. Either way try and go get a feel for the program in person.
Accepts: Attending: Yale ($$)
Acceptances: NorthWestern ($$), Columbia ($$), UMinn ($$), UPenn (), UChicago ()
Rejects: rejected.
Rejections: Princeton, Berkeley, Stanford, NYU.
Waitlists: Waitlists: Harvard and MIT. Later
asianecon 2008:
I'll just be following my friend econphilomath... Type of Undergrad: B.A. in Economics from a top institution in Southeast Asia. Type of Grad: M.A. in Economic Theory and Metrics from France GPA: Graduated 1st in my class for undergrad and 2nd for masters GRE: 800Q, 610V, 4.5AWA TOFEL: 114/120 Courses: Tons of econ, some math, no formal real analysis (only audited) TA: None Teaching: None Research: 1 published in IJIO; Honours and MA thesis RA: RA during undergrad; RA right now for profs in a top 5 program LORS: 1 really senior (Econometric Society Fellow), 2 junior but quite famous, 1 from undergrad (co-author) Interests: Microeconometrics + (Statistical) Decision Theory + (a little bit of) Mechanism Design/Game Theory --> IO applications SOP: Not so good I guess. Not focused enough and all over the place. Kinda sounded like I didn't know what I wanted to do. Schools: Shooting for the top 10 schools. Other: Male, 25 RESULTS: Attending: Northwestern ($$$$) Acceptances: Yale ($$$$$$$....), Chicago GSB ($$$), Stanford ($$), UChicago ($) Waitlists: None Rejections: Harvard, HBS (interviewed) MIT, Princeton, UCSD Never heard anything: Berkeley What would you have done differently? Made my SOP tighter. Maybe tried to impress my current RA bosses more, but I'm not really an applied/Stata guy so that won't be fun. An adcom head told me that they would've accepted me even without the current RA job so I don't know if it really helped (a friend of mine even speculates that it might have hurt me since it's not aligned w/ my interests). Contrary to econphilomath, don't put too much weight on the flyout. Try to visit the school on an ordinary day and see what goes on. I didn't go to a real flyout at NWU (not even the special TM day) but I decided to go there nonetheless, after visiting thrice and attending classes and seminars. Accepts: Attending: Northwestern ($$$$)
Acceptances: Yale ($$$$$$$....), Chicago GSB ($$$), Stanford ($$), UChicago ($)
Rejects: Rejections: Harvard, HBS (interviewed) MIT, Princeton, UCSD
Waitlists:
mysherona 2008:
My turn! Type of Undergrad: Economics from Philippine university Type of Grad: Mathematics from the same university (will not complete degree) GPA: I can't convert it so it's useless GRE: 800Q, 760V, 6.0AWA TOEFL: 118/120 Courses: Typical in the programs I took; nothing special Teaching: A year of intro calculus Research: First prize for undergrad paper RA: Small jobs here and there LORS: Former econ profs Interests: International, Monetary SOP: Used the same thing for all the schools Others: Male, 22 RESULTS: Attending: Columbia ($) Other acceptances: Northwestern ($), Duke ($), Georgetown ($), master's programs at Oxbridge, LSE and Toulouse ($) Waitlists: Berkeley, Penn, Brown---all rejected me in the end Rejections: the rest of the top 10 econ programs, UCLA, UCSD Comments: I was very lucky so I'm happy with the way it turned out. If I could start over again I'd probably do my BA abroad. Accepts: Attending: Columbia ($)
Other acceptances: Northwestern ($), Duke ($), Georgetown ($), master's programs at Oxbridge, LSE and Toulouse ($)
Rejects: rejected me in the end
Rejections: the rest of the top 10 econ programs, UCLA, UCSD
Comments: I was very lucky so I'm happy with the way it turned out. If I could start over again I'd probably do my BA abroad.
Waitlists: Waitlists: Berkeley, Penn, Brown---all
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Rejections:
Andronicus 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Regional state university in North Carolina Undergrad GPA: 4.0/4.0 Type of Grad: Same as undergrad Grad GPA: 4.0/4.0 GRE: 760Q / 720V / 4.0AW Math Courses: Calculus I-IV, Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, Introduction to Topology, Probability and Statistics I, Advanced Calculus I. Taking Probability and Statistics II and Advanced Calculus II this spring. Econ Courses: All the basic micro, macro, and econometrics for BS and MS, plus electives in mostly applied micro fields. Other Courses: Logic Letters of Recommendation: Three from econ professors (Ohio State, Iowa, South Carolina), 2 of whom I have done research with. One more from the math professor (Michigan State) who taught my topology and advanced calculus courses. Research Experience: I did a master's research project on dividend taxes. A further paper on this topic, coauthored with several professors (including one of my letter writers), is currently under review. I worked with another letter writer on a project examining the impact of brownfield cleanup and redevelopment on surrounding residential housing values. I've also worked with a professor in the geography department on a study of public transportation cost-effectiveness in North Carolina and another study of traffic congestion relief. Teaching Experience: During my MS program I was the economics department tutor for managerial economics. I've also tutored and/or TA'd for many other courses at the undergrad, MBA, and PhD Public Policy levels. Last semester, I taught micro principles at the local community college. I'm teaching macro principles this semester. Research Interests: Public, Urban/Regional, Experimental SOP: Mostly talked about my coursework and research experience, with the last paragraph customized to the school. Other: American male, 26, married (no kids) RESULTS: Acceptances: UT-Austin ($?), Ohio State ($?), Pittsburgh ($), Vanderbilt ($$$) Waitlists: None Rejections: Northwestern Pending: UIUC, Indiana, Houston, Georgia State What would you have done differently?: Worked extra hard to improve my GRE Q-score. Applied to a couple more top-20 programs instead of Houston and Georgia State. Applied to Wharton Applied Economics instead of Northwestern.
Accepts: Acceptances: UT-Austin ($?), Ohio State ($?), Pittsburgh ($), Vanderbilt ($$$)
Rejects:
Waitlists:
AstralTraveller 2008:
Type of Undergrad: Top research institution in the country (Latin America), Economics major. Undergrad Ranking: 54th out of almost 300 people Type of Undergrad: Doctoral Stream MA in Econ at same University as undergrad. Grad Ranking: 4th out of 38 GRE: 780Q, 550V, 3.5 AW GMAT: 710 Overall, Percentile 95%Q, 83%V. Math Courses: Calc I,II, Statistical Probability, Statistical Inference, Classic Algebra, Linear and Matrix Algebra, Optimization Methods, Mathematical Economics (Differential Equations). Econ Courses: UG: Intro Econ, Intro Micro, Intermediate Micro I & II, Industrial Organization, Intro Macro, Intermediate Macro I & II, International Economics, Econometrics, Urban Economics, Econ Growth Theory. Graduate: Micro Theory (MWG), Macro Theory (Journal articles), Econometric Theory incl. Probability Theory (Spanos, Greene), Applied Econometrics (Hamilton, Maddala, Baltagi), Resource Economics (Journal articles), Behavioral Economics (Becker + Journal articles), Economics of Regulation (Tirole), Macroeconomic Programming (too many things to mention!), Social Projects Evaluation (Fontaine + Journal articles). Letters of Recommendation: 3 Profs from my alma mater (two econometricians who graduated from Econ departments ranked 30-50, plus the director of grad studies who graduated at a top-15 institution), 1 prof from the current B-school I work at (graduated from a B-school in Europe, but who has held visiting positions at several top-5 US schools) and 1 letter from a professor (Info Systems and Technology Management) at a US Top 30 B-school who studied at a top-5 PhD program in the New England area. To all I related either as a student, research assistant, or both. Research Experience: RA for three years: one at my alma mater's Econ department, two at a nascent local B-school. Several working papers. Publications: Published an empirical paper on an ISI indexed blind-refereed minor journal, and a chapter on Maximum Likelihood Estimation on a Math for Economists textbook. Teaching Experience: TA for entire Econometrics and Statistics sequence, undergrad and graduate Economics, and MBA. Lecturer for graduate econ: Math camp (you know, the pre-enrollment course we'll all have to go through before our PhD...I have taught it!), plus Introductory Econometrics and Optimization Methods the following term. Also lecturer of Statistical Inference (for 2nd year undergrad business and econ) and Advanced Econometrics (for 6th year engineering students). Research Interests: Industrial Organization, Econometrics. SOP: Prepared over a 18 months timeframe. Other: Male, single, 25 years old. Since I didn't take analysis at college, self taught Real Analysis from Baby Rudin and Topology from Ivorra. Pointed it out on my SOP. RESULTS: Acceptances: none so far Waiting: UCLA (Anderson) [interviewed, shortlisted according to prof, but "not admitted" according to PhD program secretary] Rejections: Northwestern (Econ), Chicago (GSB), Minnesota (Econ), Stanford GSB (EA&P), Duke (Fuqua), Brown (Econ). Pending: NYU (Stern), MIT (Sloan) [these two already notified their admits], UCSD (Econ) What would you have done differently? Don't quite know yet . Prepared this season's application for years. As Mr. Keen, I don't know what a Micro or Macro course is without calculus. Have done my best throughout years to get admitted at a good place and so far I only have been "booted out". Maybe I applied to one too many business schools. Should have tried more Econ schools (2 top 10's) and some definite safeties. Not sure if I want to go thru this process once again.
Accepts:
Rejects: Rejections: Northwestern (Econ), Chicago (GSB), Minnesota (Econ), Stanford GSB (EA&P), Duke (Fuqua), Brown (Econ).
Waitlists: Waiting: UCLA (Anderson) [interviewed, shortlisted according to prof, but "not
Internationalstudent08 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: top U.S. school Undergrad GPA: 3.7+ GRE: 800q, 670v, 4.5w (yeah, me knows how to writing) Math Courses: Multivariable Calculus, Linear Algebra, Groups and Topology (intro proofs), Mathematical Probability. In my senior fall I took optimization and now in the spring I take analysis. Econ Courses: many... Letters of Recommendation: 2 from econ profs (1 of them is famous, the other is well-known) Research Experience: 2 summers Teaching Experience: I have some. does it count anyway??? Research Interests: Macro, Pol. Economy, Public stuff. SOP: I bet they don't read it Other: International student, good at foosball. RESULTS: Acceptances: Waitlists: Rejections: Northwestern, Columbia, Duke, Stanford, Brown, Berkeley Pending: Princeton, Chicago, NYU, UCSD, What would you have done differently? I could write an essay about this, but I'll do it at the end
Accepts:
Rejects: Rejections: Northwestern, Columbia, Duke, Stanford, Brown, Berkeley
Waitlists:
ward 2008:
PROFILE: School: Oklahoma State University Type of Undergrad: Economics (Honors) and Mathematics Undergrad GPA: 3.9 (4.0 Econ, ~3.8 Math) Type of Grad: none GRE: V 530, Q 790, A 5.0 Math Courses: Calculus 1-3, Differential Equations, Linear Algebra, Calc. of Several Variables, Intro. to Modern Algebra, Intro. to Modern Analysis, Mathematical Statistics 1 & 2, Mathematical Modeling, Advanced Calc 1. Econ Courses: Intermediate Micro, Intermediate Macro, Public Finance, History of Economic Thought, Econ Development, Econometrics (undergrad), Grad Micro Theory, Grad Math Econ. Other Courses: Computer Science I, SAS Programming Letters of Recommendation: not from well known professors but must have been fairly strong. Two tenured Econ professors and my Intro. to Analysis prof Research Experience: honors thesis, but nothing substantial Teaching Experience: none Research Interests: Applied Micro, Micro Theory, Behavioral and Experimental SOP: I put some time into it but it was essentially the same for each school; I just changed a few sentences here and there. Other: RESULTS: Acceptances: Duke($$) <attending> Wisconsin (no$) Ohio State ($$) UIUC ($$) Arizona ($$) Waitlists: NYU Rejections: Harvard M.I.T. Northwestern UCSD Penn State RA position at NYC Fed What would you have done differently? I would have tried to pick programs that fit my interests better and probably would have applied to more schools - especially in the 10-25 range. That's really about all I would have changed.
Accepts: Acceptances:
Duke($$) <attending>
Wisconsin (no$)
Ohio State ($$)
UIUC ($$)
Arizona ($$)
Rejects: Rejections:
Harvard
M.I.T.
Northwestern
UCSD
Penn State
RA position at NYC Fed
Waitlists:
Chess is life 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: Public University BA Undergrad GPA: 3.94/ 4.0 Math/ Economics Type of Grad: Public University MA Grad GPA: 4.0/ 4.0 Economics GRE: 670 V 800 M 5.0 Writing (I took it when I was 19 to get a job at Kaplan and it worked!) Math Courses: Topology, Real Analysis, Linear Algebra, Calculus 1-3, Differential Equations, Probability and Statistics, Numerical Analysis, Econ Courses: International Economics I and II (MA), Math for Economists (MA and PhD), Microeconomics (MA and PhD), Urban Economics (MA), Econometrics (MA and PhD), Health Economics (MA), Macroeconomics (MA), Intro. to Econometrics, Statistical Methods, Intermediate Micro and Macro, Industrial Organization (Best Class ever), Seminar in economics, Money and Banking, several independent studies, Other Courses: Physics 1 and 2 (I seriously considered majoring in it). Computer science 1.Letters of Recommendation: Math and Economics professors. I did research with the economics professors. Research Experience: A lot. Washington, DC think tank work for almost a year now, mainly immigration and trade issues. However, I am currently doing research on state policies that effect economic growth and presented at the CATO Institute on microcredit. I also have done research on child abuse, social capital, fed policy and housing prices, a senior thesis on NAFTA's effects on Mexico, municipal government efficiency (Global Perspective), and the fed challenge (Rutgers won our district). Teaching Experience: Tutor for my University 2 years and tutor/teacher for Kaplan test and prep. Research Interests: Probably Microeconomics, most likely something very game theoretical. This is subject to change given that I have yet to take a PhD level economics course in Macroeconomics. SOP: General but adapted to each university I applied to. Other: I think being affiliated with the CATO Institute (libertarian think tank) hurt me. Also, Rutgers has a tendency of sending students to programs and watching them promptly fail the qualifier. This couldn’t have helped me.[/font] RESULTS: Acceptances: Rochester (24k Fellowship), Duke (17k fellowship), Washington University, St. Louis (TA/ RA 20k), Rutgers (30k Presidential Fellowship), Michigan (Nada), UCLA (Nada), Wisconsin (Nada), Georgetown (Wait-list for funding), UCSD (TA and after a complicated formula 7k), Cornell (Nada) Waitlists: Minnesota, NYU (High whatever that means), MIT (later rejected) Rejections: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Chicago, Columbia, UPenn, Brown, Stanford, Berkeley, Northwestern, Pending: Nothing Concerns: My letter writers are not very well-known What would you have done differently? Maybe take more math? I really don’t know what else I could have done. I think I will regret not taking more computer science courses.
Accepts: Acceptances: Rochester (24k Fellowship), Duke (17k fellowship), Washington University, St. Louis (TA/ RA 20k), Rutgers (30k Presidential Fellowship), Michigan (Nada), UCLA (Nada), Wisconsin (Nada), Georgetown (
Rejects: rejected)
Rejections: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Chicago, Columbia, UPenn, Brown, Stanford, Berkeley, Northwestern,
Waitlists: Wait-list for funding), UCSD (TA and after a complicated formula 7k), Cornell (Nada)
Waitlists: Minnesota, NYU (High whatever that means), MIT (later
nash12 2008:
Undergrad: B.A. in Mathematics (2006) from a well known college/university in my country (South-East Asia). Grades: 84% Graduate: M.A. in Economics from a well known school of economics in my country. It is a two year course and I only had the grades of the first year or two semesters when I applied. Grades for the first year: 70% GRE: 800Q, 530V, 5.0AWA. TOEFL: 117/120 Math Courses: Since I'm a math undergrad so lots. Real Analysis, Basic Algebra, Topology, Ordinary Differential Equations, Partial Differential Equations, Probability and Statistics, Linear Algebra, Group Theory, Ring Theory, Mechanics, Multivariable Calculus, Numerical Analysis, Number Theory, etc. Econ Courses: All Grad Level. On my transcript with grades when I applied- Microeconomic Theory, Macroeconomic Theory, Introductory Econometrics, Mathematical Economics and two more. On my transcript without grades when I applied- Topics in Economic Theory, Game Theory-I, Topics in Macroeconomic Theory and Econometric Methods. Research Experience: Was a visiting research scholar in a European Institute during the summer of 2007. Wrote two papers there. Both were selected for decent conferences which I mentioned in my application. Sent one of the papers in all the applications. LORs: One a well published and reasonably well known econ theory professor at University of Warwick. One econ professor in my grad school, phd from Princeton. Another econ associate professor in my grad school, phd from Yale. I think all of them were strong. SOP: Talked about my interests- Micro and Game Theory. Talked about some of the papers that I've really liked. Also, about my motivation to do economic theory. Teaching Experience: None. Other: Male, 22 years old. Results Acceptances: NYU($), Columbia($), University of Chicago($), LSE MRes/PhD($), Cornell($), Brown($), Penn State($). Waitlisted and finally Accepted: Yale($) and Princeton($). Rejected: Harvard, MIT, Northwestern, UPenn and Stanford. Attending: Princeton. Yuhoooo.. What would have I done differently? Nothing in particular. Well I don't really know if I would have ever made it to Harvard and MIT. None have made from my school in the past 10 years. As an aspiring economic theorist, Princeton was really my dream school and I'm over the moon to have got it.. My suggestion to all the future applicants, esp the International Students is guys dream big and work hard. Dreams do come true..
Accepts: Acceptances: NYU($), Columbia($), University of Chicago($), LSE MRes/PhD($), Cornell($), Brown($), Penn State($).
Rejects: Rejected: Harvard, MIT, Northwestern, UPenn and Stanford.
Waitlists:
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Waitlists:
Sammy6 2008:
Type of Undergrad: Top 25 Econ Undergrad GPA: 4.0/4.0 Type of Grad: MA, Top 25 Econ Grad GPA: 4.0/4.0 GRE: 800Q, 650V, 5.0 AW Math Courses: calc 1-3, diff eq, linear algebra, stochastic processes, optimization theory, adv. prob/stat (all A's), audit topology, self-study real analysis Econ Courses: Micro, Macro and Metrics (Intermed, Master's and 1st semester PhD), Health (MA), Trade(MA and PhD), Internat'l Finance (MA), Game Theory (MA) Letters of Recommendation: 5 very strong (1 Harvard, 1 Chicago, 2 MIT, 1 Michigan). 4 of the professors are very well known. 4 I took classes from, and 2 I worked with. Research Experience: RA for one year, about to submit co-authored paper with supervisor Teaching Experience: private tutoring Research Interests: no f***'in clue SOP: pretty good, my adviser took a look Other: female, 21 years old, transfer RESULTS: Acceptances: Harvard($$), MIT(waiting on NSF), Stanford($$), Yale($$), UPenn($$, declined), Northwestern($$), Chicago($$) Waitlists: NYU, Berkeley (declined) Rejections: Princeton Pending: NSF/Javits What would you have done differently? Relaxed during the waiting game
Accepts: Acceptances: Harvard($$), MIT(
Rejects:
Waitlists: waiting on NSF), Stanford($$), Yale($$), UPenn($$, declined), Northwestern($$), Chicago($$)
Waitlists: NYU, Berkeley (declined)
ForTheWin!_08 2008:
PROFILE: Type of Undergrad: International, best in South Africa (University of Cape Town for those in the know) Undergrad GPA: We don't use the GPA system. About 80%, which is 4.0 according to the WES conversion scale. Type of Grad: N/A Grad GPA: N/A GRE: 800Q, 5.0 A, 670 V Math Courses: A year and a half of calculus, Linear Algebra, Algebra I and II, Real Analysis, Metric Spaces, Complex Analysis, Measure Theory, Functional Analysis I + II, Differential Geometry, Topology I + II. All above 75%, so I guess A- to A+ range. Undergrad thesis: Explained the Delbaen-Schachermayer version of the "Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing" (basically, a financial market satisfies No Arbitrage iff there exists an equvalent martingale ["risk-neutral"] probability measure). Essentially, it was just a whole lot of functional analysis and a little bit of stochastic integration. Econ Courses: Intro macro/micro/game theory, Intermediate Macro/Micro, Honours Macro/Micro (i.e. 4th-yr level - we used adult Varian for micro, to give you an idea of the level), Undergrad Metrics and Quantitative Methods, Computational Political Economy (4th-yr elective on simulation methods and behavioural econ), Masters Econometrics, Masters/PhD Microeconometrics. All A- to A+ range. Other Courses: 3 years of Mathematical Statistics, including stuff on: basic probability theory, regression analysis, stochastic processes/time series (not that I remember much of it!), Bayesian statistics, generalised linear models/qualitative regression models. Some basic applied math courses on ordinary differential equations (A's). Letters of Recommendation: One should be very enthusiastic, from the one of the country's most hardcore empirical microeconomists (though his PhD is local)... another is likely to be good (I mean, I'm certain the guy thinks I'm smart, I got the second-best grade in his class), from quite a big-shot macro guy (PhD Cambridge, and he's co-authored some stuff with Phillip Aghion), but he's only taught me once. I'll probably use my honours thesis supervisor for the third one. Research Experience: Not a lot... I've ostensibly been an RA for one professor for a summer, but I'm not sure how much work you should do to say this of yourself... I attempted to solve this game theory problem for him (he kind of gave me a half-finished paper of his and said "Can you fix this up?"... I couldn't). So not so impressive on this front I think. Teaching Experience: Tutor for intermediate micro for two years, rewrote some of the problem sets for the same course. Research Interests: Development micro, game theory, criminology SOP: Decent, I thought. I posed a few questions that I thought were interesting and tried to show how my personal background led me to be interested in them. Customised one paragraph to mention which fields at the respective schools were strong, and why I thought they should want me. Weaknesses: No research experience, from a relatively unknown university; no money to live off of if financial aid is denied. Results: Admissions: Michigan ($16k + tuition + health insurance), Chicago ($20k + tuition + health insurance) [attending] Waitlists:Northwestern, Pennsylvania, Princeton Rejections:Yale, MIT, Berkeley, Stanford, Harvard No Reply:NYU What would I have done differently: Not much. I wish I had gotten my undergraduate degree from a more prestigious place. Other than that, I'm not sure there was much that I could have done differently. But I'm not at all unhappy with what I got...
Accepts: Admissions: Michigan ($16k + tuition + health insurance), Chicago ($20k + tuition + health insurance) [attending]
Rejects: Rejections:Yale, MIT, Berkeley, Stanford, Harvard
No Reply:NYU
Waitlists: Waitlists:Northwestern, Pennsylvania, Princeton
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Admit summary statistics:
| As submitted and recoreded from Test Magic: | There were 10 accepted out of 18 applicants.Of those accepted, average GPA was 3.86, average GREQ was 800.0.
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From the Department webpage in 2010 (please send me a link if this is wrong!) |
Most successful applicants to our program have math and analytic GRE scores above the 90th percentile. Applicants receiving financial aid generally have math and analytic GRE scores above the 95th percentile. The Graduate School indicates that scores on the verbal and quantitative sections of the GRE should typically be well above 600, and the analytical writing section score should be above 5 on the 6-point scale. These scores do not represent rigid requirements, and many applicants with lower scores have been accepted and given financial aid because of other outstanding characteristics, such as superb reference letters or excellent performance as undergraduates...The program receives approximately 600 applications each year. Each year, the department's entering class is about 18 to 25 students. (Source) |
Links: Test Magic Econ Forums
econphd.econwiki.com |
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