

I'm trying to decide whether to apply to this school. I've heard that there's no chance for people from the suburbs around Chicago. however, i know that their mission statement is to train dr's who give back to rural communities. what if you grew up in a rural community but now live in an affluent one? how can you make that known to SIU in the primary? and how do they evaluate whether you'll go into rural medicine or not (i mean, at this point in my life i don't want to make such a big decision and i can really see myself going either way). thanks and gl to everyone!

There is consideration given to that. While most of our class is from downstate, there are a few northerners here as well. If you come from a rural part north of I-80 state that on the secondary somewhere.I'm trying to decide whether to apply to this school. I've heard that there's no chance for people from the suburbs around Chicago. however, i know that their mission statement is to train dr's who give back to rural communities. what if you grew up in a rural community but now live in an affluent one? how can you make that known to SIU in the primary? and how do they evaluate whether you'll go into rural medicine or not (i mean, at this point in my life i don't want to make such a big decision and i can really see myself going either way). thanks and gl to everyone!
Does anyone know when secondaries for SIU go out? This is my primary choice and I'm ready to get started.
What is there screening process like? I know they give preference to southern and central Illinois residents and I'm from chicagoland. But I do have experience volunteering in champaign since i go to school down there and also a volunteer abroad trip in a third world country. My stats are also very low (3.3 and 25) and im retaking the mcat. Do you think they'll wait till my second mcat comes in to make a decision on whether or not to send me a secondary?
thanks
Has anyone ever had any success here that lives north of I-80? I wanted to apply here, but I opted not to since I am a Chicago guy.
They have. However, I am sure other things set them apart. It's a tough call. Luckily, they will screen you out early if they are not interested so it only costs one ~$30 AMCAS school fee.
They will wait until your new MCAT comes in before screening you for a secondary. You will get an email with something like "AMCAS received, waiting for MCAT scores."
Something like 1/3 or 1/4 of applicants get a secondary but after that screen most of those applicants are granted an interview.
Has anyone ever had any success here that lives north of I-80? I wanted to apply here, but I opted not to since I am a Chicago guy.
And then i realized I was an idiot and thought I had indicated I was retaking the mcat on july 28 on amcas, but for some reason it never saved. Should I call them and tell them that? or will they see it and put me on hold? I would hate to be rejected pre-secondary b/c of a stupid mistake. especially for an instate school.
I would contact them back right after making the change in the amcas system just to be on the safe side. It never hurts to make the extra effort.
I'm in the incoming class this year. We have a few people from northern IL in our class. When I talked to some of them they either were strong applicants or had life experiences in places other than big city life. If you have attended undergrad or spent a lot of time in central/southern IL than I would apply and focus your essays on your experiences.
If you are from Chicago, have always lived in Chicago and plan to stay in Chicago when done with your training then it would be a tough application.
I wish the accepted a broader range of applicants. I feel like there is no point in applying here because I live in the burbs and to go school in the city.
The school exists to educate physicians who will ultimately practice in central or southern Illinois. The best way to ensure this is to accept students with strong ties to that area. It works. UIC-Peoria actually started as the Peoria School of Medicine to education downstate physicians, but once they affiliated with UIC and started accepting students from all over the country, a very low percentage of applicants stayed to practice.
Anyway, if you did plan to practice in central/southern IL then maybe you could apply and state that somewhere in your application. However, choosing to attend college in Chicago doesn't make it seem like you would have any reason to practice downstate. This is no different from the University of Mississippi not accepting OOS residents. Illinois just happens to be a large state with a diverse population that either clusters around Chicago or lives farther out. Also keep in mind that UIC is the largest medical school in the country, with multiple campuses and a 300 student entering class. So IL residents still have a very solid chance at another state school. SIU is just 72 students per class. Rush and Loyola also happen to have a very high percentage of IL residents per class. Try to see the big picture and not get discouraged.
I wish the accepted a broader range of applicants. I feel like there is no point in applying here because I live in the burbs and to go school in the city.
Not if you don't meet their behavioral sciences requirement 😛
Won't be applying until next year, but as a resident of the suburbs who did my undergrad down in Central IL, I would like to work in that area when I'm older, and I would not mind attending SIU.
How would one go about showing that they would want to live/work in a rural area when they are from the suburbs? I prefer the rural life over the suburban life, and I am only back up in the suburbs for financial reasons. I'm afraid they wouldn't take my application seriously if I applied there since I have lived up north my whole life.
when you get the prompts you'll have an opportunity to explain yourself. aka prompt #1 was something like "why should we admit you". That'd be a good place to start
Thank you, red10. Another question. I've heard that roughly 25% of applicants get secondary applications. Typically speaking, who gets the secondaries? It is mostly people from Central/Southern IL?
Sorry for sounding like that neurotic, paranoid premed lol. I would really like to avoid the city if I can, so I plan on applying to as many rural med schools as possible (both MD and DO). So I would really like to maximize my chances as much as possible, and not be discriminsted against based on my residence.
I have no idea what the percentage is. Maybe my beloved Caesar will know for certain. Chances are people from central/southern illinois get most secondaries because that's who they're trying to admit...
Did you mention any interest in rural health in your personal statement?
Just got an e-mail with the secondary! I'm kind of surprised, because I'm from Cook County and I had thought that they sent secondaries to around 1/3 of the applicants, so I had kind of assumed I would be weeded out! Anyone else?
Anyone know when they start sending out interview invites/rejections?
How do you guys that are already at SIU like the first year at Carbondale? I've walked through Lindegren hall a few times and it seems like everything is pretty condensed. Do you basically live in Lindegren or are any classes in Lawson or the life science buildings?
so I was verified on the 5th of July. Still have not received a secondary. Does that mean I probably will not? Has anyone received a thanks but no thanks reply?