- #1
beethovenscroissant
- 7
- 1
Hi all!
It's been a decade since I graduated with a bachelor's in philosophy. I went to an ivy planning double major with physics, but I ultimately dropped the latter after my introductory courses and graduated with a poor GPA (2.7). To save you the sob story, I basically had no ability to cope with the various non-academic hardships I first experienced in college.
Those problems are long in the past and I intend to make my way toward a PhD in Physics. I've been self-studying a lot, but I'm well aware it will still be very hard and that career opportunities in physics research are few and underpaid. I still want to try.
So I apologize for the long-winded post, but I was wondering which of these potential routes to grad school seems to make the most sense to you.
1) Open University
I'm based in NYC, but am currently strongly considering enrolling in the UK's Open University (regionally accredited in the US). There are three physics degrees I'd be interested in:
That said, I do wonder whether it might just be smarter to get one of the bachelors and try to apply for a Masters's or even a PhD program in the US immediately afterward. I do also have some worries about whether the OUs degrees would be recognized in the US, but it seems plenty others have had success with this route.
The master's is estimated to take 8 years part-time (4 years full), which is what I'd likely do, although I could likely skip the introductory classes and take on a few extra credits for the first year or two.
2) A local public university degree
Alternatively, there's the option of studying locally at a CUNY or SUNY school (NY's public universities). It seems 'safer' in that I'd be going to a brick US school. But it seems much harder to be able to take the classes I would need outside of work hours and to generally maintain a work-study-life balance in the long-term.
These schools don't really seem cheaper than the OU aside from small tax incentives so I see little benefit over the OU besides doing the labs in person. Which I realize might be a big benefit to some people, but it does seem like the OU's remote labs are pretty neat. I'm much more interested in the theoretical side of things anyway, but I realize that often changes.
3) Self-study, ace the GREs, and try really hard to get into a Master's program
Lastly, I've heard some folks with liberal arts BA's getting into physics master's programs before earning their PhD. But I assume that would be virtually impossible without proving some physics competency first. So is there any chance a Master's program might accept me if, say, I aced the Physics and Math GRE subject tests, managed some great professional letters of recommendation, reached out to the department, and maybe took a couple of non-degree higher level physics classes?
This would seem the 'fastest' route -- I know I'd likely have to take some undergrad courses during my Masters's program -- but while I don't doubt my ability to perform excellently in the subject tests, I don't know if great GRE scores would offset the lack of a formal education to get into the program at all.
I realize any choice I make will get me closer to my goals, just wondering which route seems to make the most sense to those of you in the field. Any other options I'm missing? Thank you so much in advance.
It's been a decade since I graduated with a bachelor's in philosophy. I went to an ivy planning double major with physics, but I ultimately dropped the latter after my introductory courses and graduated with a poor GPA (2.7). To save you the sob story, I basically had no ability to cope with the various non-academic hardships I first experienced in college.
Those problems are long in the past and I intend to make my way toward a PhD in Physics. I've been self-studying a lot, but I'm well aware it will still be very hard and that career opportunities in physics research are few and underpaid. I still want to try.
So I apologize for the long-winded post, but I was wondering which of these potential routes to grad school seems to make the most sense to you.
1) Open University
I'm based in NYC, but am currently strongly considering enrolling in the UK's Open University (regionally accredited in the US). There are three physics degrees I'd be interested in:
- M06 - Integrated Master of Physics (including research)
- R51 - Bsc in Physics
- Q77 - BSc in Mathematics and Physics -- not quite a full double major like in the US, but something a bit in between
That said, I do wonder whether it might just be smarter to get one of the bachelors and try to apply for a Masters's or even a PhD program in the US immediately afterward. I do also have some worries about whether the OUs degrees would be recognized in the US, but it seems plenty others have had success with this route.
The master's is estimated to take 8 years part-time (4 years full), which is what I'd likely do, although I could likely skip the introductory classes and take on a few extra credits for the first year or two.
2) A local public university degree
Alternatively, there's the option of studying locally at a CUNY or SUNY school (NY's public universities). It seems 'safer' in that I'd be going to a brick US school. But it seems much harder to be able to take the classes I would need outside of work hours and to generally maintain a work-study-life balance in the long-term.
These schools don't really seem cheaper than the OU aside from small tax incentives so I see little benefit over the OU besides doing the labs in person. Which I realize might be a big benefit to some people, but it does seem like the OU's remote labs are pretty neat. I'm much more interested in the theoretical side of things anyway, but I realize that often changes.
3) Self-study, ace the GREs, and try really hard to get into a Master's program
Lastly, I've heard some folks with liberal arts BA's getting into physics master's programs before earning their PhD. But I assume that would be virtually impossible without proving some physics competency first. So is there any chance a Master's program might accept me if, say, I aced the Physics and Math GRE subject tests, managed some great professional letters of recommendation, reached out to the department, and maybe took a couple of non-degree higher level physics classes?
This would seem the 'fastest' route -- I know I'd likely have to take some undergrad courses during my Masters's program -- but while I don't doubt my ability to perform excellently in the subject tests, I don't know if great GRE scores would offset the lack of a formal education to get into the program at all.
I realize any choice I make will get me closer to my goals, just wondering which route seems to make the most sense to those of you in the field. Any other options I'm missing? Thank you so much in advance.
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