

She is an actor for various companies, artistic associate for Brave Spirits Theatre and associate artistic director for Shakespeare in the Parks: Prince George's County. She is a senior drafter at CNA, LLC.īriana Manente '12 earned an MFA in Acting at Catholic University of America in 2015. Jennifer Roth '13 earned a certificate in CAD/CADD Drafting and/or Design Technology/Technician at the Community College of Baltimore County. He is a freelance production designer in Los Angeles. Samuel Paynter '13 earned a MFA in Filmmaking at the New York Film Academy in 2016. Steve Barnold '13 is a publishing editor for American Psychological Association. She is the Owner of Habitat Woodworks and a middle school math program manager for the Alexandria Seaport Foundation. Nicole Reidinger '13 completed the Summer Publishing Institute at New York University in 2013, and has taken courses in woodworking and furniture design at Corcoran School of Art. She maintains a website where she writes weekly webfiction and hosts popular science articles.
#IWRITER FOR GRADUATE SCHOOL SERIES#
She enjoys creative writing and has self-published a series of three novels. Lydia Martin '13 is a science writing instructor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's MOSTEC Program, a six-month, online science and engineering program for rising high school seniors from across the country. She is now a social media manager for Hourly and an adjunct professor of writing at Saint Mary's College of California. After graduation, she spent some time abroad as freelance writer and English teacher at Busan Global Village in Busan, South Korea. Julia Gardner '14 earned a MAT at SMCM in '15, and a MFA in Creative Writing from Saint Mary's College of California in 2021.

She is a freelance writer for iWriter and interviewer at Interactions Research.

Please let me know in case any clarifications are needed.Megan Schrader '18 relocated to Galway, Ireland. Moreover, graduate school applications are going to be far more important than applying to a summer program, so I should know what to do. It's probably the latter, but given the probabilistic nature of this dilemma, I really don't know what conclusion to draw.

my letter writer for this program) that I have been rejected? Do they already know, in which case I don't have to do anything? Do programs typically inform about acceptance/rejections to letter writers too, or do they only inform the applicants? This is my first time applying to a summer school, so I don't really know how this works.Īlso, given this experience, would it make sense to ask the same professor again to write me a letter for graduate school applications? I don't know what went wrong - (i) if the professor didn't write me a strong enough letter, or (ii) if I really wasn't good enough to get into the program. I requested the aforementioned professor to write me a recommendation letter for the summer school, which they gladly did - but unfortunately, I did not get accepted (the school has about a 14% selection rate). I have taken two courses in this area with the same professor (one of them was a graduate course if it matters). I'm an undergraduate math major (just completed my second year), and I had applied for a summer school (online due to the pandemic) in one of my interest areas.
