Thursday, September 13, 2012

Our new application is up and running

Our new application is now online.

Why a new application?

SAIS is a global institution with a foothold on three continents; in fact it is the only graduate program of its kind. It is natural that our three campuses -- Bologna, DC and Nanjing -- should use a common application.

To achieve such convergence, we had to make some changes to the application. A word on those later. But first, what remains the same?

- An applicant can start the application, save it, close it down and come back later to edit it and flesh it out. This gives candidates more time to tie up loose ends and to fine-tune the dossier. We hope the flexibility encourages candidates to start their applications early. As we wrote in a recent post, the early bird ...

- Almost all documents can be submitted online. These include the statement of purpose and analytical essay. Referees can upload their letters of reference -- which remain confidential to the applicant -- to the site. Standardized test scores can be sent directly from the testing institution to SAIS. The only documents which have to be sent via post are undergraduate transcripts.

So, what is new?

- The new deadline for applications for all candidates who want to study at SAIS Bologna is January 7, 2013.

- Candidates who want to pursue the two-year M.A. at SAIS are given three choices when asked to select a campus:

  • Washington
  • Bologna
  • I am open to either campus for my 1st year

With respect to one's chances for admission, there is no statistical advantage in choosing one answer or the other. Applicants' choices of campus help guide our work in admissions. In the case of candidates who are undecided, more work needs to be done to establish which campus would be the best choice; uncertainty at the application stage is not necessarily a problem.

- The test codes that determine where TOEFL, GRE and GMAT results are sent have been standardized across SAIS's three campuses. Here are the codes:

TOEFL - 5610-0000
GRE - 5610-0000
GMAT - KGB-GX-99

- We have standardized the wording of the explanation of who needs to take an English competency test as part of the application process. It now reads:

You must submit an English competency score if (1) English is not your native language and (2) you do not hold an undergraduate degree from an accredited institution in a country where English is an official language and where English is the language of instruction.

Please note that candidates who are not native English speakers and who did not do their undergraduate work in an English-speaking country must take one of the competency tests. So if your undergraduate studies were in English and the institution was in a country where English is not an official language, you must  take an English competency exam.

If you are in that category, then our advice is to go out, take one of the competency tests and sweep away any uncertainties.

- Consistent with the increasingly widespread practice in academic admissions, we have added a section on candidates' disciplinary history. Candidates are given a chance to explain any disciplinary issues they have faced in the past. Here is the introduction to the section:

Johns Hopkins SAIS receives applications from a diverse pool of candidates. The following questions ensure we have the clearest possible understanding of each candidate's background. Your answers will be kept confidential.

We realize that candidates put a great deal of effort into their applications and they will have many questions. That is why Amina and I stand ready to answer your questions. You can reach us:

  • By email at admissions@jhubc.it
  • By phone at +39 051 29 17 811
  • By Skype at jhubc.admissions

Nelson Graves


Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Next information session: Tuesday, Sept 18


Our next monthly online information session is set for:

Tuesday, September 18 at 4 pm Italy time (1400 GMT).

These sessions give prospective applicants a chance to learn more about us and to ask any questions they like. We're happy to discuss our academic program, living in Bologna, financial aid, career opportunities, application procedures -- whatever participants want to discuss.

To participate, all you need is an Internet connection, plus a phone line to make a local or toll-free call for the audio portion of the session.

For details on how to connect to the  session, click here. Please read them very carefully.

In next week's session we'll focus on standardized tests: the English competency exams, the GRE and the GMAT.

If you have any questions about the session, feel free to write to admissions@jhubc.it or call us at +39 051 29 17 847.

We'll be holding these sessions each month, at different times to accommodate different time zones. Here is our schedule looking ahead and the proposed themes:

October 24 at noon Italy time (1000 GMT) - letters of recommendation
November 28 at 5 pm Italy time (1600 GMT) - statement of purpose
December 19 at noon Italy time (1100 GMT) - analytical essay

We will send reminders of these sessions via email and also on this Journal.

Nelson Graves

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

First impressions: La vita è bella

Born in the United States to an Australian mother and Scottish father, Ian Muir is a triple citizen. He grew up in Washington, DC and Paris, and graduated in 2006 from Trinity College Dublin with a degree in chemistry. Ian spent the last five years working in the energy and climate change field, first as a consultant in Paris and DC and more recently as a Junior Fellow at the German Marshall Fund and with an education-focused nonprofit he co-founded with friends.

Ian will be concentrating on Energy, Resources and Environment at SAIS.

We asked Ian, who arrived for SAIS Bologna pre-term later than most as he attended pre-term in DC, to share his first impressions with us.

I may have spent the last five years at an international consultancy based in Washington, DC, but SAIS and the Bologna Center had already started feeling like old friends, even family.

My former office was at one point home to some 20 SAIS graduates who regaled me with tales of their bolognese experience, which they commonly referred to as the “best nine months of my life.” Living vicariously on these years of first-hand reports of this historical and beautiful city, I arrived in Bologna with nothing but the highest of expectations. Despite this grand failure of moderation on my part, I’ve faced disappointment only while learning that word’s Italian equivalent from my Neapolitan teacher, who, yes, has a penchant for wild gesticulation. (Hint: the word in Italian is nearly the same as in English.)
Ian Muir
Rambling on endlessly about my newfound love for la vita quotidiana in Bologna would be easy, but I had better segue into the real reason I’m attending the SAIS Bologna Center: academics and community.

As one of the few students able to attend pre-term in DC, I arrived in Italy with an already strong sense of SAIS’s academic rigor and its keen focus on relationship-building.

Back Stateside, my Intermediate Microeconomics pre-term course could only be described as a tour-de-force, particularly for someone with scant background in economics. After the first class, I quickly realized that my original intention of “easing” back into academia was perhaps wishful thinking.

The course, taught by a former SAIS Bologna grad, was a personal boot camp, guaranteed to tune me up for some serious transfers of knowledge. It was just what the doctor ordered -- and introduction to what I expect to be two years of advanced learning of the highest degree.

In tandem with the academic side, I am already sensing the importance of SAIS’s approach to community building -- the bringing together of talented students from every corner of the world. Invitations to lunch events, guest lectures and happy hours are helping me and my classmates become fast friends. It is exciting to imagine the quality of discussion that our diverse backgrounds and experiences will lead to over the next couple of years.

Attending DC pre-term meant I had to fly to Europe soon after sitting my microeconomics exam, arriving in Italy just in time for the welcome ceremony at the beginning of Bologna pre-term. In DC, SAIS owns a series of imperious structures along the busy Massachusetts Avenue thoroughfare; here in Bologna students and faculty congregate in an attractive building sitting quaintly on a quiet side street. Despite the normal high-tech security measures, the atmosphere at the Center is uncommonly warm, with students and faculty alike livening up “Giulio’s Bar” at nearly all hours.

Ian's homework spot
Having gotten some economics out of the way in DC, I was able to reward myself with four weeks of “Intensive Italian” classes in Bologna. And when they call it intensive, they are not kidding!

My already multilingual classmates and I have been spending five hours a day, five days a week, interacting non-stop with a rotating roster of wonderfully energetic Italian ladies. Honestly I doubt there’s a better, faster way to learn a new language. Except perhaps "sur l’oreiller", as my French colleagues would suggest. Fortunately, I know that at SAIS I can expect much of the same rigor and passion from all my future professors.

Since settling into my new apartment on Monday, my days have become increasingly routine. "Routine" might have a negative connotation for some. But if your routine is anything like mine, you’d understand otherwise.

A morning stroll through Piazza Maggiore, under the arches and down winding, bustling side streets to via Belmeloro. A delicious cappuccino and brioche. Two hours of banter in Italian with some of the brightest, motivated people you could ever expect to meet. Time for a caffè macchiato. More Italian banter. Lunch surrounded by chatty classmates, friendly faculty and curious bolognesi. Two final hours of Italian. Soon there’s talk of l’aperitivo, the little pizzeria just off the piazza, and most certainly a drop of vino rosso.  Oh and yes -- there is that homework to do. Perhaps it can wait until domani.

Even the spot for doing my homework is not exactly the worst in the world.

La vita è bella!

Friday, September 7, 2012

Bet you can't solve this puzzle

Any chess players out there?

Last year Marijn Willem Otte, then a student at SAIS Bologna, responded to a call from our Admissions Office for photos, magnets and mementos with a chess problem, pictured here.

The problem has remained on our bulletin board, and no one has yet solved the problem. Marijn put the solution to the problem in an envelope, which has remained sealed ever since.

Here's the challenge: A game begins with 1.e4 and ends in the fifth move with knight takes rook mate.

"With only five moves deep, the solution is simple, elegant and stunning," Marijn said. "Some of the greatest chess minds of the century could not solve it, yet there have been cases of amateurs solving it overnight."

For some amusing anecdotes about the puzzle, including one about a stumped Garry Kasparov, click here.

Marijn, who is studying at SAIS DC this year, has a distinguished record in chess. He is a FIDE Master with two international master performances; he participated twice in the world university student chess championship.

Think you have the answer? Send it to admissions@jhubc.it and if you're the first, you win a SAIS Bologna tee shirt.

Nelson Graves








Thursday, September 6, 2012

And here's the winner of our photo contest

She runs marathons and speaks Mandarin. She graduated from Skidmore College magna cum laude with honors. She practices Krav Maga.

Meet the winner of our photo contest: Megan Rhodes.

Here is the picture that drew the most votes:

A picture might be worth a thousand words but it rarely tells the whole story. The photo captures Megan, an MIPP candidate at SAIS Bologna this year, running a half marathon on, yes, the Great Wall of China. She finished top of her age group and was the first American across the line.

"The race was mostly run in a surrounding village, replete with adorable children giving you high fives and giddily chirping 'Hello!' in English," she said. "There was a small goat path, and we formed a single line to use a rope to get off the wall."

Megan ran the Beijing marathon in 2010 and has also run the 42.2-km race in San Diego and New Hampshire. To train for the Beijing run, because of heavy air pollution Megan trained mostly on a treadmill, including a 3-1/2 hour run on the machine. Ouch.

Never one to shun a challenge, here is Megan bungee jumping at the Long Qing gorges outside Beijing, where she lived for 5 years before coming to Bologna last month:

What is Megan's mystery prize? A free lunch with Amina and me in a Bologna restaurant. (Please don't say second prize is two free lunches with us.)

The contest involved photographs by incoming students that were included in this slideshow.

Here are the runners-up, all students at SAIS Bologna this year:

by David Gorgani
by Leslie Yun
by Marwa Abdou

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Meeting our faculty: Prof. Taddei

Filippo Taddei is the new full-time junior economist at SAIS Bologna, succeeding Çiğdem Akin, who is teaching at SAIS DC now.

Prof. Taddei will be teaching two courses that most students take while at SAIS. Worth getting to know!

Have a look at his latest work, published in the Journal of International Economics: "International capital flows and credit market imperfections: A tale of two frictions".

-------------------------------

What courses are you teaching?
Macroeconomics and International Monetary Theory

Your degrees?
Ph.D, M.Phil and M.A. from Columbia University; Laurea, University of Bologna

Where have you taught?
I have taught at a few places. I started at the School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) at Columbia University, where I worked for two years. Then I moved to the Collegio Carlo Alberto in Torino, a new research center established in 2005, where I taught Macro and International Economics for 5 years.

How long have you been teaching at SAIS Bologna?
I taught International Monetary Theory last year, but my real start is this term.

A link to a recent publication by you?
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1535575/2imperfections.pdf

Anything special about SAIS Bologna?
Like many of our students, I'm new to the place, but so far it's all very interesting.

Anything special about Bologna?
It's a good representation of Italy. It has a lot of potential, but it's not clear whether it will take full advantage of it.

Your favorite book?
It's an Italian novel by Calvino: "Il cavaliere inesistente" ("The Nonexistent Knight").

Hobby?
Soccer. Definitely soccer.

A quote?
"Intelligence is one of the most overrated virtues in human history."



Tuesday, September 4, 2012

What is unique about SAIS?

What makes SAIS different?

That's a question we want every prospective applicant to ask. And you should expect an answer.

There are lots of excellent graduate programs in international relations. Some will suit candidates better than others. It's important if you're checking out universities to find out what makes them tick, how they are similar and how they differ.

We have taken a stab at defining what differentiates SAIS in a 20-page brochure that you can see here.

Here is what we think makes SAIS unique:
  • A permanent foothold on three continents with campuses in Bologna, Washington and Nanjing
  • Interdisciplinary depth and solid training in economics
  • An intimate, supportive and diverse learning community
As SAIS Dean Vali Nasr put it: "SAIS is unique in that its academic mission straddles the boundaries of intellectual discourse and the professional world."

The brochure will give you a taste of SAIS's academic options and requirements, its different degrees, the dual-degree possibilities, the breadth of our faculty's expertise, student life and the many types of careers that graduates choose.

Some of our readers may recognize the woman in the blue blouse on the cover of the brochure. It is Chidiogo Akunyili, a SAIS Bologna graduate who was featured in this post as well as this video.

After she graduated from SAIS in May, Chidiogo joined strategy consultants Roland Berger and is currently on assignment in Nigeria.

Nelson Graves

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