Since I returned
recently from an invited grad school visit (and I’ve organized a few visits for
philosophy grad students before), I thought it would be interesting to talk
about what you should expect, should your philosopher be in the same situation.
So, let’s say that your philosopher was just accepted into a
grad program (or several!) and was invited to visit the department. It is the
season for such things, after all. What sorts of things should you expect to
occur at such department visits?
[Note: This information
does not apply to potential grad students who decide, on their own, to just go
and visit a program before they apply. Departments will not wine and dine someone,
nor will they pay for travel expenses or make much of an effort unless they
have already accepted this person into a program. This is not like an
undergraduate campus visit].
1. Much wooing.
One of the most difficult mental things to handle (in my
opinion) is to switch gears from being the applicant to being the pursued. As
an applicant, your philosopher had to try—on several levels—to impress the
socks off an admissions committee. Your philosopher was just competing with
hundreds of other qualified applicants for only a few positions. Now, all of a
sudden, the tides have changed and your philosopher has become the pursued.
Departments will likely treat your philosopher to the best
restaurants, alcohol, and very nice hotels. They will inundate your philosopher
with meetings with their star grad students and professors. Your philosopher
may even receive regular phone calls from a certain professor with whom they
particularly want to work.
For you, one of the best parts about this is that if you go
along with your philosopher on this visit (as a spouse or partner), you will
also be treated to some of the wining and dining. The department will likely
not pay for your travel expenses, but they will try to treat you well once you
get there, as you might have some influence on your philosopher.
Now, it may seem from this description that the department
is being a bot dishonest by only showing your philosopher the best of
everything. This is true; they are being somewhat dishonest. Encourage your
philosopher to ask the grad students serious questions at vulnerable times
(after there has been some drinking, for example) so as to get a better idea of
the “truth” about a program.
2. Information
overload
Your philosopher is going to be absolutely bombarded with
information on this grad school visit. Here are some methods that I used to
help me stay focused and not feel too overwhelmed:
- Make a list of questions beforehand (I noted on my
questions which ones I wanted to ask of which groups of people in certain
situations).
- Take notes (during presentations, when speaking with
people one-on-one, at all times!)
- Review these notes at the end of each day or at breaks
(there will be very few breaks during a day, though)
Really, with these methods I avoided feeling too rushed and
tired (while all of the other grads visiting at the same time as me were
definitely exhausted at the end of each day). Be willing to talk over each day’s
information with your philosopher, but understand if they are just too tired to
talk, too!
3. Interest over-sharing
Your philosopher will probably have to explain her/his
interest areas to professors and grad students about 100 times every day of the
visit. Seriously. By the end of my visit I wondered why we were not given
placards with our interests to hang around our necks the whole time.
Your philosopher will be tired of talking.
4. A tour of the living
areas of the city
You and/or your philosopher can almost always find someone
in a grad program to give you a tour of the area, and they will have opinions
about the best places to live. Take advantage of these sorts of opportunities!
Grad students especially have figured out what sorts of cheap places are good
or bad to live in. Take notes so that you can have some sort of idea of where
you might want to/not want to live if your philosopher chooses to attend this
program.
For those of you who have never had to try and find an
apartment in a college town before: it is very tricky to figure out where to
live in such places. Apartments know that they can charge high rents in areas
close to campus because undergrads will live there—regardless of how yucky they
are. Most universities have some sort of system of transportation that can enable
you to live farther away from the campus. This is why asking current grad
students about apartment living conditions in the area is so important, though,
because they will know the best and worst places to live in town (and they will
know which units are not favored by undergraduates, which are the quietest, and
which are not infested with roaches!).
As a note: In my experience, grad student housing is almost
always not worth it. GSH will be overpriced, boring (like living in a dorm
room), and cheaply thrown together.
I hope this guide helps you and your philosopher as you
begin to receive invitations to visit grad programs. I wish all of you well in
this admissions season!
~The Philosiologist
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