I intend, in the somewhat near future, to engage preparing my graduate school applications for next year. I have worked hard to secure a solid application as far as coursework, grades, recommendations, etc., etc., though the statement of my research plan is very important to me (and, as a friend of mine who is on an admissions committee at a top school has informed me, it is far more important than most students believe it to be).
However, I find myself at an impasse; I have research interests which lie at the intersection of a broad array of wider mathematical disciplines (algebraic geometry, algebraic topology, a bit of number theory, representation theory, categorical algebra, and even model theory--I always try utilizing my mathematical toolkit in assessing problems in mathematical physics, as well).
If I just go on in my application listing these disciplines, I won't be taken seriously. Though if I am too particular, I risk appearing too specialized for the research being conducted at school X (and I am broadly interested, though this can be a boon if not taken too far).
So rather than expressing my interests (and potential interests) in the following way:
--algebraic geometry --algebraic topology --arithmetic geometry/algebraic number theory --n-categories/topoi --representation theory --etc., etc.
I would like say something like --motivic cohomology, etale homotopy, Hodge theory, stacks, D-modules (algebraic geometry/topology) --braided monoids and algebras (representation theory, category theory) --model-theoretic proofs of Mordell-Lang and geometric stability theory (model theory/arithmetic geometry) --n-categories, higher constructions with topoi (this ties in with my interest in etale homotopy).
What would be a good strategy here? I don't want to seem unfocused or naive, but I don't want to leave out any of the many things in which I have some degree of interest? (Many of the subjects listed here are things which I have actively pursued outside of the classroom to some degree, some of them at an advanced level--e.g., motivic cohomology and etale homotopy).
Columbia, Chicago, Michigan, Penn, Rutgers, Purdue, SUNY Stony Brook, Toronto (Masters), UBC (Masters), ALGANT (EU Masters), UMass Amherst, Notre Dame, Utah, CUNY, Oregon, Arizona, Michigan State, LSU, UConn, Albany, and a few others.
I feel as though my chances are decent; I have a lot of advanced research, good grades in graduate-level coursework, and a high subject score. However, I did do poorly in some elementary courses (calculus) when I was young and immature, though I hope that my GRE will remedy this.
– lambdafunctor Jun 06 '10 at 06:18