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下面是一所学校的Guide Line:
In view of the relatively poor quality of the study plan we received in
the past years, the department decides to offer more concrete guidelines
to help applicants writing their study plans.
The intention is to tell applicants what the department is looking for
in the study plans, and how the applicants can best distinguish themselves
during the admission process.
Of course these guidelines are only recommendatory. Applicants are welcome
to use their imagination whenever/wherever possible.
The study plan serves three purposes. First, it shows how well applicants
can express their ideas in plain English. This requires well-organized
thinking skills as well as clear writing. Second, the study plan is supposed
to show how much thought the applicants have given to the particular fields
in which they want to study. For example, if an applicant wants to study
Neural Networks, exactly how much they know about Neural Network and why
do they think they are capable of doing research in this field should
be clearly explained in the study plan. The third purpose of a study plan
is to provide students with lesser grade an opportunity to present their
intellectual accomplishments other than academic records. For research
projects that require extensive hands-on capabilities, practical problem-solving
skills will play as much important roles as course grades.
To help the applicants write down the types of information that will interest
the admission committee most, we prepare a list of specific questions
that the applicants may consider to answer in their study plans. Again,
answering these questions is not mandatory. They are suggested here to
reduce the possibility of wasted efforts on the part of applicants.
[1] What is the most significant achievement you've ever accomplished
so far? This could be a class project, a piece of artifact you built,
or a research, and it doesn't have to be related to our program.
[2] Is there any specific field you want to work on? Please be as specific
as you can. Try to explain how your academic background prepares you to
do research in this (these) field(s).
[3] If you have any previous research experiences, please explain them
in terms of your roles in the projects, your own contributions, and most
importantly the process of deriving the solutions/algorithms you developed,
if any.
[4] In case your course grade is not particularly distinguished, why do
you think you still have what it takes to do graduate study in our department?
Last suggestion: the applicants are advised to take writing the study
plan as serious as they possibly can. Think of it as doing the homework
for getting into graduate schools. The more efforts you spent on it, the
better chances you have to be admitted into topnotch graduate programs.
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