Sociology and Graduate School

<p>Hello.</p>

<p>I am a second year student studying Sociology and Strategic Communication at Ohio State. I plan on graduating a bit early (I received college credit from a community college in high school) and going straight on to graduate school.</p>

<p>In three years I will have a dual degree (B.A.'s in Sociology and Strategic Communication) with a minor in professional writing. I have significant research experience already and I am planning on more in the future (I placed in a forum and my goal is to get published in 2009-2010. I think I will have strong letters of recommendation. Also, I currently have a GPA of 3.7 and only A's in upper level Sociology courses.</p>

<p>Does anyone have any general advice regarding applying to graduate school in Sociology for a student like me who will only have three years of undergraduate study under my belt? I am planning on applying to Ohio State and numerous other programs (NYU, Brown, etc.)...but I am not sure what the norm is in regards to numbers, except that most "top" schools are extremely competitive.</p>

<p>I am specifically interested in Sociology of Culture, Adolescents, Aging, Social Movements, Death and Dying Studies, and Qualitative Methodology. I am taking the GRE next October. I am also working on an independent research fellowship. I have a really strong extracurricular background in student government, community service, and greek life.</p>

<p>Please provide anything helpful.</p>

<p>the student government, community service, and greek life don’t mean anything for grad school applications. if you like doing it and it doesn’t distract from your work, then stick with it, but know that none of it will go anywhere on your grad school application. it is not a factor, and greek life can be considered a detriment (whether that is fair or not, that’s the reality), so make sure you keep that information to yourself.</p>

<p>doing your degree in three years won’t hurt you at all. i assume most of the community college credits were for lower level courses. so as long as your upper level grades come from OSU, and you have a full schedule of upper level classes, then the transfer credits make no difference.</p>

<p>your GPA is excellent. keep it up.</p>

<p>for sociology, you will need reading knowledge of one or two foreign languages. for most sociology programs, you’ll need french and german, although you can substitute one or both for other languages that are relevant to your research if you happen to have regional interests. many programs will allow you to pick up your second research language while you’re in the grad program, but you want to apply with at least one under your belt. you don’t need to be fluent, but you should be able to understand an academic article written in another language with the aid of a dictionary. if you can do that, you’re good to go. if you can’t, start taking those languages classes ASAP. most people don’t realize they need language prep for grad school and it sinks their applications. make this a priority.</p>

<p>publishing, presenting at conferences, getting fellowships… all of those things look really good on an application, but none of them are necessary to get in. if you’ve got it, great, but most undergraduates don’t publish a thing. you do want some research under your belt, though, which means for sociology, if your school has an honours thesis track, get into it and write a research paper.</p>

<p>foster close relationships with your professors. you’ll need letters of recommendation from three, and the more they know you, the better. they need to attest to your potential as a researcher, so keep in mind that you want three profs (preferably well known in their field and with tenure) to work with you directly. if you can get work as a research assistant for one of your profs, that’ll definitely help you out.</p>

<p>also, consider moving that GRE test date up. if you bomb it (and a lot of people do, nerves happen) you want to leave yourself enough time to retake the test. i’d recommend taking it in august. that way, if your scores are good, you can forget about it and focus your fall semester on preparing your application. and if you mess up, you have enough time to study some more and retake the test before the december deadlines. taking the test in october means you’d have less than a month to retake it, if you can find an open spot (they fill up quickly), and it’s probably just cutting it a little close.</p>

<p>I appreciate the reply. I have not heard anything about languages (French/German). Can anyone else discuss this?</p>

<p>I am applying to sociology PhD programs and I have never heard or read of a French and/or German language requirement. Some programs do have a language requirement but it is specific to the work you plan to do.</p>

<p>contact departments directly and ask the director of graduate studies which languages they expect you to have.</p>

<p>as i said, if you have specific regional interests (i.e. china) then whatever relevant language you would need replaces french/german. but a lot of important work has been written in both french and german, and many of the top programs will expect you to be able to read this stuff in the native language.</p>

<p>the two language proficiencies for a PhD (usually just one for the MA) are required by virtually every humanities and social science discipline, including sociology. this requirement is not listed along with average GPAs or GRE scores of admitted students, but if you read the graduate handbooks for admitted students, you’ll see that demonstrating language proficiency is ALWAYS in there.</p>

<p>they don’t need to be french and german. but those two are the most useful to sociologists whose own research interests would have them working primarily in english.</p>

<p>Can you tell me which schools you have seen that at?
Princeton wants second year students to show proficiency in one foreign language.
UIC specifies there is no foreign language requirement. I have scoured the websites of a lot of programs and have never seen more than one foreign language requirement, or a specified language. Am I missing something?</p>

<p>any updates/additional suggestions?</p>

<p>specifically looking for sociology programs that are stronger or are more open to sociology of culture, qualitative methods, adolescents.</p>

<p>It’s not virtually every social science - in fact most humanities require the language proficiencies, but most social science programs do not. I go to Columbia and psychology doesn’t require two language proficiencies, and neither does our sociology department, economics, or political science (you have to have command of two “research tools,” and you can choose proficiency in two languages, or you can choosen formal modeling or quantitative analysis or a bunch of other things instead). The only one here that does require that knowledge is anthropology.</p>

<p>I was also looking at sociology programs when I was in undergrad (I’m a social psychologist) and none of the ones I looked at required language proficiency, especially not in two languages.</p>

<p>OP, the really important thing in graduate admissions is fit. Where are the professors doing research in the fields in which you are interested? (You will need to get more narrow than sociology of culture, for example. What cultures? How culture affects what? What processes? What qualitative methods? Grounded theory? Content analysis? Ethnography? What about adolescents?) Find them by doing your own research and then see where they teach. Those are the universities that will be good fits for you.</p>

<p>Your process won’t be any different from a student who spent four years in school. Get excellent recommendation letters that testify to your maturity and readiness for graduate work; write a strong statement of purpose that explains why you want to undertake graduate study in the specific areas of interest you specify, and get good scores on the GRE.</p>