Alexander, 

my advice to aspiring grad students is NEVER to go into a grad program (Masters 
or PhD) without funding. That adviser on the east cost is not really great if 
she expects you to go to grad school w/o an assistantship. You are saddling 
yourself with debt you may never be able to repay. Your GRE scores are good, 
spread your wings and apply to 5 or 6 different places with a range of 
reputations. 

--
Silvia Secchi
Associate Professor, Department of Geography and Environmental Resources
Faner Hall, Mail Code 4541
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale, Illinois 62901
Phone:(618)453-6020
Fax:   (618)453-6465

Vous avez beau ne pas vous occuper de politique, la politique s'occupe de vous 
tout de même.
Charles Forbes de Montalembert

The way we organize the modern American university fragments our knowledge 
badly. Not only are we divided by discipline, but we are divided by the methods 
that scholars use.
Elinor Ostrom

________________________________________
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news 
<[email protected]> on behalf of Alexander Sousa <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 1, 2016 9:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Geobiology Grad position without funding?

Hello.

I have just been informed of my acceptance to a Geoscience/geobiology
M.S. program with a great advisor on the east coast. The only catch is a
total lack of funding as of now. The professor pulling for me has told
me she has a few pans in the fire for securing funding but that they are
all somewhat unlikely and that given the burden of 27,000 tuition that
she does not expect me to matriculate.

My question to all of you kind and intelligent Ecologgers is: Should I
take this position or should I wait?

Here is some background to help you understand my situation:

I am an aspiring researcher/professor of astrobiology or some such
related field (geomicrobiology, extremophile microbiology etc. with a
bachelors degree (2.74 GPA) in biology from BU and a current teaching
position at a local high school. I intend to obtain a PhD as soon as
possible (although maybe that is a poor plan)

I have about 3 years of collective experience in labs ranging from
biogeochemistry to extremophile microbiology and am hoping to be
published in the coming months.

My GRE scores are:

162 in the verbal reasoning putting me in the 90th percentile
159 on the quantitative reasoning putting me in the 75th percentile
4 on the analytical writing putting me in the 56th percentile.

I am also taking 2 graduate courses at local universities as a non-
matriculated student and expect to do well in them. (ArcGIS & Chemical
oceanography)


My largest unknowns are; my lack of real understanding as to what sorts
of employment opportunities exist for me to recoup my expenditure in the
short term and the mysterious nature of the graduate funding machine...

The real question is... should I wait until next cycle and try my luck
again, hopefully with better results since my grades from my grad
courses will now be in and my publication should be completed. OR is the
nature of these things pretty ephemeral and should I just jump on this
opportunity and recoup the loans later? (The Bureau of Labor Statistics
projects great growth and median salary for geoscientists at a masters
level.)


WHAT DO YOU THINK!!!???

thanks so much everyone!

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