<p>Can anyone tell me my chances for MPH at these schools: </p>
<p>GPA 3.6
GRE 1500</p>
<p>Good e/c's, recs, essays</p>
<p>Yale, George Washington, Georgetown, Hunter College, NYU, Columbia, Dartmouth, Brown, UPenn, Drexel, Temple, Emory</p>
<p>Can anyone tell me my chances for MPH at these schools: </p>
<p>GPA 3.6
GRE 1500</p>
<p>Good e/c's, recs, essays</p>
<p>Yale, George Washington, Georgetown, Hunter College, NYU, Columbia, Dartmouth, Brown, UPenn, Drexel, Temple, Emory</p>
<p>It is tough enough (i.e. impossible to do with any sense of accuracy) to do chances for undergrad admissions. But grad school? Especially with the information you provided: what major? what school? what recs? what relevant background? And even with that information, it would be the blind leading the blind, as no one has many data points to draw from.</p>
<p>So, why does it matter? Apply, but be sure to have a backup plan. Or, better yet, talk to the program you are applying to.</p>
<p>Check out some posts at:</p>
<p>Masters</a> of Public Health [ MPH ] - Student Doctor Network Forums</p>
<p>to get an idea of what the MpH admissions game is like. Your GRE and GPA look solid, but as newmassdad wrote, it's hard to guestimate when</p>
<p>a) we don't know your undergrad institution
b) we don't know your exact recs and ECs</p>
<p>cheers!</p>
<p>Hi newmassdad, what can you ask when you talk to the program you are applying to regarding chances? I've emailed quite a few (not public health), but maybe I didn't know what to ask, so didn't get much useful info.</p>