Showing posts with label graduate school guides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graduate school guides. Show all posts

3/26/2013

The Social Work Graduate School Applicant's Handbook: The Complete Guide To Selecting and Applying to MSW Programs Review

The Social Work Graduate School Applicant's Handbook: The Complete Guide To Selecting and Applying to MSW Programs
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The Social Work Graduate School Applicant's Handbook is one of the best books out there about obtaining an MSW, but it does have a couple flaws.
The first few chapters discuss the characteristics that applicants should look for in MSW programs, including accreditation, rankings, financial aid, micro vs. macro social work, concentration, fieldwork opportunities, faculty quality, housing, campus facilities, and alumni networking. Then the book continues by discussing the qualities that graduate schools look for in applicants, such as undergraduate major, coursework, GPA, letters of recommendation, biographical statement, employment, internships, volunteerism, research experience, etc. These chapters are useful to applicants who do not know much about graduate school admission. However, a downfall of this book is that it could be a little more informative about concentrations. It has a couple paragraphs devoted to child welfare, housing and homelessness, and substance abuse, but I wish that it included more information about social work pertaining to battered women, the elderly, and education.
The third and final section contains several appendices about various programs throughout the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Unfortunately, not all programs are listed, and even the 93 listed ones do not include all information, especially about concentrations, tuition, the percentage of accepted applicants, and accreditation dates. However, this final section also includes worksheets about visiting schools and preparing your biographical statement, which certainly ease the process of applying to graduate school.

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THE SOCIAL WORK GRADUATE SCHOOL APPLICANT'S HANDBOOKby Jesús Reyes, AM, ACSWWith a foreword by Congressman Ciro D. RodriguezAre you thinking about gettinga master's degree in social work?Find out from author Jesús Reyes, a former admissions director, how you can improve your graduate school application.In THE SOCIAL WORK GRADUATE SCHOOL APPLICANT'S HANDBOOK, you will learn about the admissions process from an insider's perspective. You will discover what will help (and hurt) your chances of being accepted to the school of your choice, and you will find tips on deciding which school is right for you.Read this book and find out:• What factors to consider when determining your interest in a school of social work• What admissions committees look for in an applicant• Whether your GPA and test scores matter• How to gain social work related experience that will help your application• Who to ask for letters of reference (and who not to ask)• What to include in your personal essay• Which schools are accredited by the Council on Social Work Education, and why this is important• Where to find out about social work licensing in your state.NEW IN THIS EDITION (previous editions titled Guide to Selecting and Applying to Master of Social Work Programs)—93 schools of social work provide tips to applicants and tell the most common mistakes applicants make, and also provide information about their programs! Applicants' tips for their peers are included, as well. Includes a complete directory of accredited schools of social work in the U.S., two chapters devoted to writing your biographical statement, and worksheets to organize your applications.Congressman Ciro D. Rodriguez, a master's level social worker, wrote the foreword to this book, stating in part, "Social work demands quality education, personal commitment, and endless practice. Choosing an appropriate master's degree program is the first step along the lifelong path of the social worker. This guide serves as a useful reference to help you in making that first, yet important, decision."

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3/23/2013

The Social Work Graduate School Applicant's Handbook: The Complete Guide to Selecting and Applying to MSW Programs Review

The Social Work Graduate School Applicant's Handbook: The Complete Guide to Selecting and Applying to MSW Programs
Average Reviews:

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This guide was extremely helpful. It gives insight into what admission committees look for in applicants. The do's and dont's sections of the guide are a great resource as well. I highly recommend this guide book to anyone who is interested in the field of social work and anyone who isn't sure if the field is right for them or not. This guide gives great insight into the field of social work and how it is organized.

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Written by a former social work admissions director at a top-ranking school of social work, this book helps master of social work (MSW) applicants improve their graduate school applications and decide which school of social work is right for them. With examples of tracking sheets, interviews, and biographical statements, this resource reveals the qualities admissions committees look for in applicants. A listing of schools accredited by the Council on Social Work Education and the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work is included with a checklist of questions to ask when visiting schools. Candid answers from surveys of the admissions staff at social work graduate programs throughout the United States also point out the most common mistakes applicants make. This new edition has been updated to reflect current trends in social work education.

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1/27/2013

The Best 282 Business Schools, 2007 (Graduate School Admissions Guides) Review

The Best 282 Business Schools, 2007 (Graduate School Admissions Guides)
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This book gives some information that can be helpful
1. A whole lot of stats (Academic rating, GPA ave, GMAT ave, # of students, student faculty ratio, joint degress, financial facts, and a lot more!)
2. A short description/info on academics, career and placement, student life environment, admissions, + more of every school.
Why I don't like it:
1. Most are just US schools. I expected more schools from Europe, Asia, Australia.. There are still a number of non-US schools. But I bought this book to have an idea of how other schools outside US are.
2. They are all MBA programs. I chose this book among others because it said "Best 282 Business Schools," not "Best 282 MBA programs." I intentionally excluded books with "MBA" on their title from my shopping list. There are a lot more programs than the MBA(Ms Finance, Ms Marketing, Ms International Business etcetc.) Business schools are not just about MBA programs. I was expecting see more of them from the book. The only non-MBA programs that they list are the joint-degrees available per school. If you're looking for an MBA program, this won't be a problem.
3. Academic rankings are........ absurd. I couldn't believe they gave University of Chicago just 78 points in academic ranking. Businessweek ranked that school #1, ahead of Harvard/Wharton/Stanford. They could have at least given Chicago an 85.
One final note, if you plan to use this book to gather research information for your essays in top 30 schools, this won't be enough. You'll still need to interview/talk to the adcom, teachers, students or alumnus/alumna.

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Get everything you need to know to make the right decision! This insider's perspective on the nation's top business schools provides rankings based on student surveys, just like those made popular by The Princeton Review's Best 361 Colleges guide.Best 282 Business Schools also includes student quotes about classes, professors, the social scene and more, as well as a complete index of schools throughout the country with basic information on their programs. Plus, it covers the ins and outs of admissions and financial aid, and the schools get an opportunity to talk back by including their own profiles. Best 282 Business Schools has all the information you need to find the perfect match in a business school.

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1/26/2013

The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006 Review

The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006
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it's a great help for foreign students to find a good M.B.A in the united states and offers all that a foreign student how to live while his studing

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The only business school guide that ranks M.B.A. programs by their reputation in the marketplaceUnlike other business school books and surveys, The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006 ranks M.B.A. programs solely according to what corporate recruiters–the "buyers" of management talent–say about them. Now prospective students can choose a business school based exclusively on its reputation in the real world–where it matters most.Combining the expertise of The Wall Street Journal, the world's most authoritative business publication, and Harris Interactive, the worldwide market research firm, this guide reveals:·recruiters' top-ranked national, regional, and international M.B.A. programs ·the top schools for major industries ·an honor roll of schools by academic discipline·detailed profiles of full-time programsEach profile of the 76 top M.B.A. programs includes information on the school's ranking, admissions process, test scores, the industries and companies most likely to hire the school's graduates, and graduates' expected first-year salaries. The Wall Street Journal Guide to the Top Business Schools 2006 also covers:·how to get hired, including the right skills, attitude, and work experience ·the debate over full-time vs. part-time degrees·the booming executive M.B.A. market·the scoop on online degrees·the top schools for women and minorities ·the schools whose graduates report the highest compensation

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