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Preparing for Graduate School
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To prepare yourself for graduate school, you should
take courses that insure a solid grounding in the major authors and literary
periods of English and American literature. A broad exposure to
survey courses in our English 220-26 and 270-71 sequences is highly recommended,
as is study of figures like Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton. Because
graduate work stresses the ability to pursue independent research, you
should look to gain some experience working with critical scholarship
as an undergraduate, particularly in our smaller seminar courses.
Genuine proficiency in at least one foreign language is also advantageous,
and you might begin studying Latin now if you have any thought of becoming
a professional medievalist.
In reaching their final decisions, the Admissions Committees
of most graduate schools consider the breadth and depth of the applicant’s
course preparation, grades, letters of recommendation, the applicant’s
personal statement, and scores on the Graduate Record Exam. Because
letters of recommendation are extremely important, you should request
these from professors who are best acquainted with you and your work.
It often helps to provide your recommenders with copies of the best papers
you had previously written in their courses, thereby refreshing their
memories with specifics. Be sure to notify them also of precise
deadlines and the nature of the schools and programs to which you are
applying. Your personal statement should be carefully conceived
to reflect something of your individuality and intellectual disposition.
And by all means make sure this document is neatly typed and impeccably
phrased.
Most schools require both the aptitude and subject
area (English and American literature) sections of the Graduate Record
Exam (GRE). Besides last-minute cramming with anthologies and review
books, a course program of the sort outlined above is the only way to
prepare for the subject exam. Practice materials are available for
the aptitude section. For further information on the GRE Exams,
consult with Career Services at 181 Auditorium Road (behind the Infirmary)
or contact them by email at www.petersons.com or by mail to GRE, Educational
Testing Service, P.O. Box 6000, Princeton, NJ 08541-6000.
When casting about for good graduate programs to send
your application, you should of course remember the one right here at
the University of Connecticut! For further information on this program,
consult the Director of Graduate English or assistant in room 234 of the
CLAS Building. You may also wish to telephone the Graduate Office
at 486-2329 for an appointment or check out our Graduate
Program.
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