primerfish
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I hope the II turns into an A, but it seems to be like you are asking the right questions if you do need to apply and working to address weaknesses. The one that really jumped out at me was the need to have more clinical experience. You recognize that and are trying to address it.Hello all,
I am having a bit of a rough cycle right now (1 IS II, 14 Rs, 0 As, 28 Schools on my list). I want to make sure that I am doing everything I can to be a successful applicant next cycle. Any advice or critique is appreciated.
Stats:
519 MCAT,
4.0 GPA
ECs:
600-ish hours as a math tutor
500 hours researching in oncology lab (no pubs, but a poster presentation)
150 hours shadowing
150 hours volunteering at local homeless shelter
110 hours volunteering in local hospital ICU
Narrative Relevant Hobby: Extracurricular Spanish learning, 200 hours
What I believe I did wrong and what I am doing to work on it:
Not enough substantial and meaningful clinic experience, recently got job as Patient Care Tech at local Hospital
No narrative ties amongst ECs in writing, now volunteering at local homeless shelter clinic and volunteer tutoring (see Writing and Narrative section)
LORs:
1 LOR from Biology Professor
1 LOR from non-science TA
1 LOR from shadowed physician
What I believe I did wrong and what I am doing to work on it:
Rushed LORs, not enough ties to medicine in my LORs, this was a glaring weakness of my application. This year, I am actively building stronger relationships with my professors and managers. I plan to drop the TA LOR, and add 2 more science professor recommendations, along with a narrative-relevant non-science professor reccomendation from my minor (Spanish).
School List:
Too top heavy
What I am doing to work on it:
Applying to more schools and developing a more well-rounded school list
Writing and Narrative:
No strong narrative in my application. In retrospect, this harmed my application significantly.
What I am doing to work on it:
I have significantly rethought my reasons for medicine, and I have found a narrative that personally resonates with me as well as matches with my ECs and hobbies (see ECs). "I want to be a doctor to be an expert advocate for underserved/rural populations through service to the community and research".
I plan to apply again this summer and continue to work as a volunteer and patient care tech in my gap year. Any advice? Anything I'm not seeing? I would love to hear all perspectives.
I am very interested in patient care. The joy I have experience first-hand in the hospital through my interactions with patients and fascination that I have developed with the unique and complex relationship between the healthcare provider and the patient was the heart of my current PS.To serve "the community", as a population, and to do research, you don't need a medical degree. You could do that in public health, public policy, public administration of programs. If you want to see people one at a time, diagnose and treat them and perhaps provide one-on-one services aimed at health promotion and disease prevention (more common in primary care than in the specialties), then become a doctor. Otherwise, consider looking at other careers. If your interest in patient care is not coming through in your application, it could explain why you feel that the cycle has not gone well for you.
Also, best to go with 2 science faculty, one non-science faculty member. The point of the letters is not so much to see how you will be as a doctor as to get the opinion of people who have seen you perform as a student and whether you would be good addition to our classroom (are you curious, well-organized and on-time, engaged, writing and speaking well, etc).
If this is your central narrative, I would think about re-working it. I see a lot of professions where this would be the one-sentence take-away, and "physician" isn't really one of them."I want to be a doctor to be an expert advocate for underserved/rural populations through service to the community and research"
Again, my immediate follow-up is "why a physician over another healthcare provider". NPs, PAs, nurses, and many other healthcare providers would fit this role.I am very interested in patient care. The joy I have experience first-hand in the hospital through my interactions with patients and fascination that I have developed with the unique and complex relationship between the healthcare provider and the patient was the heart of my current PS.
My role as a self-employed math tutor taught me that I like disseminating information and I like to be the person that organizes action.If this is your central narrative, I would think about re-working it. I see a lot of professions where this would be the one-sentence take-away, and "physician" isn't really one of them.
One of the most challenging parts of the entire application is encapsulating why you want to be a doctor: it needs to emphasize what you like about medicine in a way that also indirectly disqualifies other adjacent fields.
Again, my immediate follow-up is "why a physician over another healthcare provider". NPs, PAs, nurses, and many other healthcare providers would fit this role.
It seems like you've hit the mark on why you want to go into healthcare, but I'm not certain you're hitting the mark on why you want to be a physician, specifically.
ReadMy role as a self-employed math tutor taught me that I like disseminating information and I like to be the person that organizes action.
In my role as a researcher in an oncology lab, I liked the feeling of pushing boundaries of knowledge and therefore I knew that I wanted to be a premier expert in whatever field I go into.
My clinical experience showed me that I enjoyed working in a healthcare setting in the service of patients, and that I was fascinated by the provider-patient relationship.
Thus, I thought— what position can give me all of these things? Who is the premier biological expert and team-leader in a healthcare setting in a patient-facing role?
The physician.
Gonna be honest, my immediate response to this is "I'm not sure this person has a realistic understanding of what a physician does".My role as a self-employed math tutor taught me that I like disseminating information and I like to be the person that organizes action.
In my role as a researcher in an oncology lab, I liked the feeling of pushing boundaries of knowledge and therefore I knew that I wanted to be a premier expert in whatever field I go into.
My clinical experience showed me that I enjoyed working in a healthcare setting in the service of patients, and that I was fascinated by the provider-patient relationship.
Thus, I thought— what position can give me all of these things? Who is the premier biological expert and team-leader in a healthcare setting in a patient-facing role?
The physician.
@eigen You did a better job with this critique than my first reaction: "Bless your heart...". 🙂Gonna be honest, my immediate response to this is "I'm not sure this person has a realistic understanding of what a physician does". ...
Probably not in the same role, but I don't understand why I can't have both in my career. I see them as an extension of one another-- advocacy for the patient in different forms. I discuss in my new, rewritten PS an anecdote about meeting the subject of my lymphoma research in person-- a little girl from an underserved rural community. I discuss how, through this experience, I came to understand how these two seemingly different career objectives (research and serving rural, underserved communities) align more than I previously thought.Gonna be honest, my immediate response to this is "I'm not sure this person has a realistic understanding of what a physician does".
You want to work in rural, underserved communities. But doing cutting edge research is also important to you? Those are two hard things to get in the same job.
I think this comment is leading us towards an unhelpful place. Can I get some advice or help instead of "my sweet summer child"? Maybe some guidance instead of tut-tutting at me?@eigen You did a better job with this critique than my first reaction: "Bless your heart...". 🙂
Hopefully, there will be an A after your II.School List:
Too top heavy
What I am doing to work on it:
Applying to more schools and developing a more well-rounded school list
Writing and Narrative:
No strong narrative in my application. In retrospect, this harmed my application significantly.
What I am doing to work on it:
I have significantly rethought my reasons for medicine, and I have found a narrative that personally resonates with me as well as matches with my ECs and hobbies (see ECs). "I want to be a doctor to be an expert advocate for underserved/rural populations through service to the community and research".
I gave you an article to read. What are your thoughts? We have pointed out your answer seems naive given what physicians currently do and experience. Your answer will be met with similar derision from many admissions faculty and screeners.I think this comment is leading us towards an unhelpful place. Can I get some advice or help instead of "my sweet summer child"? Maybe some guidance instead of tut-tutting at me?
thank you, fingers crossed.Hopefully, there will be an A after your II.
Good advice. This cycle, I got the director of the premed major at my university to make suggestions about my PS— they gave me suggestions and then the thumbs up. But I think I definitely need a good second opinion as well. I have been developing some strong relationships with some people adjacent to my alma mater med school— maybe they can give me their 2 cents.However, in case you reapply... your stats are great, but maybe your school list isn't. Getting a well chosen school list is essential. You need to make the list fit your mission. You say you found a narrative that matches your application. I hope this doesn't mean you have crafted a mission that gets you into med school (I suspect that a large proportion of applicants do this).
Get someone who's qualified to critique your new PS and secondaries. You may not be the best judge of your own writing.
It wasn’t simply a matter of hurtfulness, it was a matter of irrelevance. I am capable of taking constructive criticism, in whatever form it may take, but that did not contain any new or valuable information. I am trying to get the most out of this thread from all of the wonderful and helpful experts, and I am trying to keep the discussion on topic.In the future, you're going to get really tough love in all the unlikely places. So, get your armor on. The other posters aren't being cruel. Your colleagues have no time to beat around the bush. If they are falsely nice, they're doing you no favors.
edit:[not gonna doxx myself on accident]I guess the thing we are trying to reconcile is how one does rural medicine and research, which tends to be focused in urban settings. It is hard to serve as a physician in a rural setting 4 hours from the nearest academic medical center and do research, too. Maybe you are picturing something different when you say "rural"?? or different when you say "research"?
Sometimes you get what you pay for.It wasn’t simply a matter of hurtfulness, it was a matter of irrelevance. I am capable of taking constructive criticism, in whatever form it may take, but that did not contain any new or valuable information. I am trying to get the most out of this thread from all of the wonderful and helpful experts, and I am trying to keep the discussion on topic.
Tough love implies that there is a rose beneath the thorns— something I could take away. The comment was a needless, patronizing scoff at my naivety without providing a modicum of value.
From my perspective, it feels like you're not listening to or engaging with people taking the time to give you more substantive critiques, and brushing them off as 'but I'm fine, really', or arguing that they're wrong.It wasn’t simply a matter of hurtfulness, it was a matter of irrelevance. I am capable of taking constructive criticism, in whatever form it may take, but that did not contain any new or valuable information. I am trying to get the most out of this thread from all of the wonderful and helpful experts, and I am trying to keep the discussion on topic.
I'm having a hard time interpreting what you mean here, especially given that your context seems to be research that requires a major medical center.Probably not in the same role, but I don't understand why I can't have both in my career. I see them as an extension of one another-- advocacy for the patient in different forms. I discuss in my new, rewritten PS an anecdote about meeting the subject of my lymphoma research in person-- a little girl from an underserved rural community. I discuss how, through this experience, I came to understand how these two seemingly different career objectives (research and serving rural, underserved communities) align more than I previously thought.
How exactly are you going to do this if you're working in, say Jonesville, AR or Kalispell, MT?In my role as a researcher in an oncology lab, I liked the feeling of pushing boundaries of knowledge and therefore I knew that I wanted to be a premier expert in whatever field I go into.
I am listening. I am agreeing with a lot of what y’all are saying, and contextualizing and explaining my thoughts where necessary. I tried to communicate my gratitude in my response in my response to Angler, but it must not have been effectively communicated on my end. I never said I was right, I was literally just explaining what I was planning to do and what I have done, and allowing you guys to bounce of your thoughts off of that. A sounding board of sorts.From my perspective, it feels like you're not listening to or engaging with people taking the time to give you more substantive critiques, and brushing them off as 'but I'm fine, really', or arguing that they're wrong.
One of the big characteristics that is now a core competency is Commitment to Learning and Improvement. You are going to get feedback that is going to be harsh, but believe it or not, we are being helpful. Better you get this feedback to point out how your message lands on the experts here than in an adcom deliberation where you can't defend yourself. You will be similarly tested by many in your future medical training, so will you be ready?My ideas are rough and imperfect, some of them completely wrong. I am still organizing my thoughts, and I appreciate the help. If I thought my ideas were “fine”, like you suggest, I wouldn’t have made a post about it in the first place.
Perspective: you seem very high maintenance.I would love to hear all perspectives.
You were the one who started making accusations, largely by blowing a comment not even made to you way, way out of proportion.Can we just talk to each other like people please? The accusations are not necessary.
Got it, guess I'll stop responding since I apparently don't meet the bar for "being very helpful", likely because I'm not telling you what you want to hear. Just like apparently @Mr.Smile12 doesn't even make the list, despite sharing both links and some pretty insightful thoughts with you, not to mention asking questions that we need answers to to help you... that you proceeded to ignore.I’m just bouncing ideas off of the experts. LizzyM and Angler, for example, have been very helpful here. You have brought up some good food for thought for me too.