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| What Are My Chances? For discussion of application and school selection issues. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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Junior Member
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My plan is to do a special master's degree in physiology and work extremely hard, gain some volunteer experience and plenty of shadowing experience. I have applied to Michigan, CWRU and U-Cincinnati SMP's. Any suggestions on how to improve my chances? Any advice? Will my chances improve with SMP if I do well? Is one of these SMP's better than others? Your help and ideas will be greatly appreciated. Shankara |
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#2 | |
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Are we having fun yet?
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You really don't have enough research to be a good candidate for MD/PhD with only two summer's worth of experience, IMO. The low cGPA is a double whammy. See: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/show...php?p=10563823 and I don't have any insight into how MD/PhD adcomms would consider an SMP GPA. I see your major weakness as sparse clinical experience, maybe low shadowing hours, and no nonmedical community service. If you also don't have teaching or leadership, that leaves even more room for improvement.
__________________
A Cat Herder's Job: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgIE7dYTzzw "In a sense, this is what we do." |
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#3 | |
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Junior Member
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Regarding postbac work in Bio or something, I think it is too risky and I would rather stick with SMP, expensive as it may be. My GPA shows steep upper trend with a perfect GPA two semesters ago, but unfortunately biomed engineering courses are not considered science (which is unfair since they are mostly applied science), so I cannot show a good improvement in sGPA. Thanks again, your comments are very helpful. |
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#4 | |
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Are we having fun yet?
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You can get clinical experience with sick people through the workplace, for class credit, data gathering for a clinical trial, or via volunteerism. It can be gained at a free, family-planning, or private clinic, surgicenter, hospice, hospital, VA, residential home, rehabilitation facility, nursing home, among others. Clinical patient experience is not always gained in a medical environment, eg EMT, battle field medic, home hospice care, physical therapy aide, or special camp environments. In such a case, it's probably a good idea to acquire some experience in a clinical milieu where doctors work, like those listed above, though some feel shadowing might cover this. The advantage of gaining clinical exposure through volunteerism, is that it also is looked on as community service, another unwritten expectation looked for on an application. |
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#5 | |
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Junior Member
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#6 |
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Are we having fun yet?
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Happy to help.
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#7 |
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Junior Member
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#8 |
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Are we having fun yet?
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Sorry, that isn't my area of expertise. But folks in the Postbaccalaureate Programs forum have probably posted on the issue, so you might Search or ask there, unless someone else comes along who can chime in.
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#10 |
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Banned
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 47
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Why do you want to be a doctor? Although you have terrific numbers, you seem to be pretty clueless about the whole process and your decision to apply to med school comes across as rather arbitrary. Assuming this came across in your interviews, you may want to take a moment and consider why you have a passion for medicine specifically. Not a personal attack, but the country doesn't need more doctors who picked the career for all the wrong reasons
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#11 |
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8-16-13-39-42-45
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This is really bad advice. Don't do this.
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#12 |
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Junior Member
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