andriarose wrote:
Anyone else going to be in grad school this fall?
Have you asked for any special help?
If so, what?
I'll be doing the MA Sonic Arts program at Queen's University Belfast.
I've requested a few things:
1. It would help if I could choose my seat in class.
2. I'd like written instructions for assignments.
3. I need extra support when working in groups.
4. I would like to have a mentor of sorts to meet with who can help with any problems and keep me on track with my work.
I felt like if I didn't seek help I wouldn't make it through. I know a lot of you get through school without disclosing your ASD, but I have based these requests on serious problems I had during my undergrad years (during which I did *not* disclose). I feel these requests would help me work up to my true potential.
Is there anything you would recommended adding (or getting rid of)?
This is largely going to depend on your department, but I will tell you how my department would likely address your requests.
1. We were able to select our own seats in every class, subject to getting to class before someone else grabs the seat.
2. Every professor I have had has provided written instructions to some degree or another. Some provide assignment sheets, while others prefer to describe assignments on the syllabus.
3. We don't do much in the way of group work, so this would not be an issue. I'm not sure whether it would be in your field.
4. Everyone has a mentor, and while an original mentor is assigned, that's typically just a formality until each student selects a mentor with whom he or she feels comfortable.
Remember that graduate school is NOT a harder version of college. It is qualitatively different. Before, you were a consumer of knowledge, learning what others have told you. In graduate school, you are taught to produce that knowledge with the expectation that you will be capable of functioning as a future colleague to your professors. Of course, our department focuses on research and producing future faculty, and some programs do not emphasize this to the same degree. Regardless, you will typically be accorded a higher degree of respect from faculty as a future colleague and will be placed under a similarly greater burden of expectation in performance and professionalism.