OK, so I'm a total lurker here, but I feel like somebody's gotta represent those of us with less than stellar stats that made it in.
🙂
28 yr old female @ time of application, CA resident, raised in Michigan, second time applicant (Rejected from UCDavis and Michigan State last year)
Applied: UCDavis, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Kansas, Iowa, Washington, Minnesota, and Ohio State
Interviewed: Ohio, UCDavis
Rejected without interview: Michigan State, Wisconsin, Kansas, Iowa, Washington, Minnesota
Rejected AFTER interview: Ohio State (that stung a little)
Accepted: UCDavis (my #1)
Attending: UCDavis (this may be an obvious statement
🙂 )
UG degree: History, with a minor in psychology, from a small liberal arts school in Michigan, circa 2002.
Overall GPA: 3.5ish
Science GPA: 2.9 at last calculation - I may have just passed the 3.0 mark after I aced my micro class, but I'm not sure. And frankly, now I don't care.
🙂
GRE: 1330 ( 660 V / 670 Q), 5.5 Writing
Veterinary Experience:
Approximately 12,000 hrs (nope, that's not a typo... I have been working for a loooooooooooong time)
-a small animal general practice (2 years)
-a small animal surgical practice (2 years)
-a small animal oncology practice (1.5 years)
-a small animal medicine/oncology practice (1 year)
At all of the above jobs I've been doing technician work. Started off with basic stuff like restraint & blood draws, then on to IV catheters & anesthesia, dentals, surgical assisting, and then at the specialty surgical place I got to do some cool stuff, like scrubbing in and assisting with orthopedic stuff like TPLO surgeries (once a total hip replacement! scary and cool), arthroscopy, etc. It was fun but not really my thing - anesthesia's either boring or scaring the pants off me. I worked at an oncology practice while I was doing a postbacc program in southern california (fight on!) and got pretty bad grades... mostly because of lack of preparation and the fact that I hated everything about LA aside from my job.
🙂 It was a completely awesome experience, I got to do a ton of stuff besides just chemo like bone marrow aspirates (still scary every time!!) and tru-cut biopsies. Anyway, escaped LA at the first possible opportunity and moved back up to northern cal, went to work for the medicine practice as an internal medicine/oncology nurse, which is what I'm still doing. I do a lot of chemo, assisting in ultrasounds & endoscopy, xrays, blood draws, catheters, and heavy client communication. I love it. I'm super stoked about the clinical stuff in school and can't wait to really get my hands dirty. Uhmm, I talk too much about things I'm excited about. Obviously.
🙂
Oh, and I also volunteered for the Marine Mammal Center for about 2 years, one night a week, on the animal care crew.
Other employment experience is almost nil unless you count jobs in college, which included: a safety administrator for a large auto manufacturer, a writing tutor, and a sales clerk at a boutique sex toy store (seriously - I can talk to anybody about anything because of that last one)
Honors/Awards/Extracurriculars:
-started a LGBT organization at my tiny midwestern school
-Dean's list a bunch of times, magna cum laude for my BA
LORs:
-the CEO/medical director of the oncology practice I worked for
-the doctor I work with now, oncologist/internist - I haven't read it, but I know his letter was amazing
-the surgeon I primarily worked with (who almost forgot to submit it by the deadline.....

)
I think my personal statement and LORs were a big factor in getting an interview, and I prepared hard for my UCD interview- and it went very well. They asked fair but hard questions - pretty specific to my experience. (Ie, what chemo protocol for k9 mast cell tumor dz?) So basically - for anyone out there who is wondering - it's not a death sentence to get a C. (Or 3 C's, for that matter!)
🙄 Anybody that wants to read my personal statement, send me a message and I'll forward it your way.