Transition to cognitive science from arts...
PlasticDNA
21 Jan 2011
I'm 23 and I just graduated from Berkeley with a B.A. in Legal Studies but I have no long-term interest in law. I originally took the legal studies major to supplement another major in Psychology in hopes of adding perspective to the way the brain works on a social, legal, and linguistic scale and improving my writing skills which I realized needed improvement. The beginning of my junior year, the psychology department denied my application because I only had a 3.1 GPA in the prereqs and a 3.2 was required for a guaranteed acceptance because the major was capped. I decided cognitive science was more interesting because it was more science-specific and included linguistics, philosophy, and computer science. But when I signed up for a computer science course to get started, the professor told the class that no one would pass without taking a different computer science course not mentioned on the cogsci department website, which was already full that semester. By that time I could not have gone back and taken all the classes required for cognitive science without exceeding the university's 130-unit maximum.
So here I am, pretty deep in debt and looking for jobs with a degree I don't really need. I took calculus, a couple biology courses focusing on brain and genetics, psych courses, introduction to cognitive science, a linguistics course, and a logic course but most grad departments require physics, biology, computer science and more upper division experience in the cognitive science/psychology and linguistics areas. I want to eventually get into cog sci grad school but my time and money are running low
How should I go about transitioning toward cognitive science? Should I take courses at a local community college or re-enroll at a 4-year university while I try to get some work experience in the area, somehow? Would it be worth the cost of taking the 10+ classes I still need? I'm confident I can finish them with outstanding grades, but would I be able to get into grad school if those grades came from a community college or a cheap 4-year? Was anyone else in a similar situation before you went into your current field? Do I even still have that option or should I just sack up and settle for what I can get now? Any advice is greatly appreciated.
So here I am, pretty deep in debt and looking for jobs with a degree I don't really need. I took calculus, a couple biology courses focusing on brain and genetics, psych courses, introduction to cognitive science, a linguistics course, and a logic course but most grad departments require physics, biology, computer science and more upper division experience in the cognitive science/psychology and linguistics areas. I want to eventually get into cog sci grad school but my time and money are running low
How should I go about transitioning toward cognitive science? Should I take courses at a local community college or re-enroll at a 4-year university while I try to get some work experience in the area, somehow? Would it be worth the cost of taking the 10+ classes I still need? I'm confident I can finish them with outstanding grades, but would I be able to get into grad school if those grades came from a community college or a cheap 4-year? Was anyone else in a similar situation before you went into your current field? Do I even still have that option or should I just sack up and settle for what I can get now? Any advice is greatly appreciated.
caliban
26 Jan 2011
Yes, if they are outstanding. Much better chance if you get some relevant experience. Can you use you legal studies background to work as a patient or carer advocate, or in an advice centre for mentally handicapped, or even in animal welfare to get some practical handle on the issues? You could even strike up a research collaboration from such a position, paving your way.I'm confident I can finish them with outstanding grades, but would I be able to get into grad school if those grades came from a community college or a cheap 4-year?
If you want to go for a long term re-schooling the advice is often similar: if you get very comfortable in a job it will be very hard to get back into full time education unless you have a supportive spouse.


