<p>Good afternoon guys, I've read this blog for quite a time now and I finally decided to enter to the discussion :). </p>
<p>I'm posting this topic because I would like to know if I have a real chance of getting admitted to the master’s program of the following universities:</p>
<p>Columbia (Msc in Industrial Engineering) </p>
<p>Cornell (MEng Systems Engineering) </p>
<p>University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (Msc in Industrial Engineering)</p>
<p>University of Washington - Seattle (Msc in Industrial and Systems Engineering)</p>
<p>University of Wisconsin - Madison (Msc in Industrial and Systems Engineering) </p>
<p>NYU Poly (Msc in Industrial Engineering)</p>
<p>University of Houston (Msc in Industrial Engineering)</p>
<p>University of Toronto (MEng in Operations Research)</p>
<p>Waterloo University (MEng in System Design)</p>
<p>Currently I'm studying the last quarter of my bachelor's degree on Industrial Engineering at the Technological University of the Center (Universidad Tecnológica del Centro) at Venezuela and I'm projecting that I'll graduate with a GPA of 18.8 over 23.45 points with an upward trend at the last two years of my career, plus, I achieved 180Q/135V and 4.5 AW on my GRE exam. I know that perhaps I'm not the strongest candidate for those program because I´ll not graduate from an internationally recognized university and my low grades, especially the ones I achieved on the first two years of my career mainly because I was an immature kid and had to work 8 hours a day by shifts in order to help my family economically and to maintain my scholarship on the University (work scholarship)... Also, I think I'll get pretty good letters of recommendation from my research consultants (three in total) and I don't think I'll need to ask for an scholarship because my employer will fund me through the masters, so perhaps that's a plus for my application, beside the fact that I would potentially add more diversity to those departments of engineering, as I´ve read the fact that there are not that much Latinos on the department, but maybe I´m wrong... </p>
<p>I would really appreciate your opinion on my chances on those programs, right now the only way I'll succeed is by doing a master’s degree on a foreign country, because of the chaotic economy of my country and the few qualified job positions here, for example: an average engineer here ends up working as a taxi driver or in similar jobs :(. </p>
<p>Have a great day, greetings from Venezuela :).</p>