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Hi everyone,
I’m applying to Carnegie Mellon’s MSCF program and would appreciate some advice.
A bit about my background: I have a strong quantitative and technical foundation, with a master degree in a math-heavy field and around five years of professional experience in finance and technology. While I feel confident about the rest of my application (essays, recommendations, etc.), I’m concerned about how much weight a potentially lower-than-ideal GRE score could carry.
I’ve been working full-time, and due to recent work projects, I only started preparing for the GRE a week ago. I’m scheduled to take the GRE for the first time on November 30, just a day before the Round 1 deadline (December 1), and I’m not very confident that I’ll achieve the MSCF average scores on my first attempt.
Dillema:
Thank you!
I’m applying to Carnegie Mellon’s MSCF program and would appreciate some advice.
A bit about my background: I have a strong quantitative and technical foundation, with a master degree in a math-heavy field and around five years of professional experience in finance and technology. While I feel confident about the rest of my application (essays, recommendations, etc.), I’m concerned about how much weight a potentially lower-than-ideal GRE score could carry.
I’ve been working full-time, and due to recent work projects, I only started preparing for the GRE a week ago. I’m scheduled to take the GRE for the first time on November 30, just a day before the Round 1 deadline (December 1), and I’m not very confident that I’ll achieve the MSCF average scores on my first attempt.
Dillema:
- Should I submit my Round 1 application with a blind and likely not-competitive GRE score?
- Submit for Round 1 but send my GRE results manually only if they meet MSCF expectations, even if it risks missing the two-week grace period post deadline for Round 1?
- Wait for Round 2 with more preparation time and likely a better score?
Thank you!
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