Anonymous wrote:You don't want to hear this, but where you go to undergrad matters a lot for both. That is because you need to get into an elite grad school or law school. Without that, you have very, very little chance for a viable career as either. Definitely re-evaluate your idea once you have applied to grad school or law school. If you're not in a top 5 grad program or top 5 law school, don't go down that road and waste a lot of time and money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: If you don't have a 4.0 GPA and GRE scores in the 99th percentile, humanities academia is a fool's errand for you.
And those aren't guarantees, either. Hiring committees have their own specific needs unrelated to GPAs and GRE scores.
Anonymous wrote: If you don't have a 4.0 GPA and GRE scores in the 99th percentile, humanities academia is a fool's errand for you.
Anonymous wrote:Academia?
Anonymous wrote:Undergrad prestige matters. It improves your chance to get into a prestigious grad school or law school. Yeah yeah it is not impossible to get into Harvard after attending Begonia State, but it is harder than if you went to an elite undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Huge difference between MA and PhD admissions at a place like Harvard -- student typically pays for the former, but gets paid (stipend/teaching fellowship) to do the latter. A terminal MA program isn't a path that leads to academia. Could be a great credential for a HS Latin teacher who wants to work at a prep school.
Anonymous wrote:I would look into St. John's in Annapolis or Santa Fe if ED doesn't work out. They are a non-obscure great books school. I will be honest with you: going to an undeard of Christian college won't help you unless you plan on going to get your PhD or EdD at a religious institution. Secular schools will raise their eyebrows at it. St John's is a good school for anyone considering law or academia. If St. John's doesn't work out--better to go to a big state school with a classics Department if you are unable to get into a small liberals arts college with a classics program.
Anonymous wrote:PaleoCon here
Why would attending a religious school put me at a disadvantage for PhD school? I spoke with the admissions director at New St. Andrews, and he told me that 1 student who graduated this May got into a Classics MA program at Harvard. Now I know there's a big difference between an MA program and a PhD program, but it seems like Harvard is fine with NSA. Hypothetically, let's say Sewanee doesn't work out for whatever reason and I attend NSA. If I get excellent grades, take several years of Greek & Latin, and get excellent GRE scores, would Classics PhD programs seriously look negatively at my application because I attend a religious school?