- Joined
- Nov 17, 2008
- Messages
- 77
- Reaction score
- 0
I got one well before I interviewed, but after I sent in my residency forms. However, I am recently an NC resident, which may make a difference.
I think we are all just as confused about financial aid as you are, I think I might call the FA office tommorow. As far as housing, I would probably recommend getting something a mile or more away from campus because it will probably be alot cheaper. Its also probably in your best interest to start looking as soon as you are set on UNC.Hello!
I am really confused about financial aid/scholarship money and when that is awarded. Has UNC already made their scholarship offers or does that come with financial aid later on? I thought the scholarships had already been handed out, but then someone else told me differently?....
Also, does anyone know where you're supposed to try and find housing as a UNC grad student?
Thanks for any help!
For those of you who don't know Chapel Hill, the bus system is amazingly well run, efficient, and free. That makes living off campus and within Chapel Hill really easy. I actually live in Durham (about 15-30 minutes away) and work on campus and can easily park and ride into campus. I hope this helps.I think we are all just as confused about financial aid as you are, I think I might call the FA office tommorow. As far as housing, I would probably recommend getting something a mile or more away from campus because it will probably be alot cheaper. Its also probably in your best interest to start looking as soon as you are set on UNC.
I really can't express how annoyed I was to receive a thin envelope notifying me of that nonsense. It was done in poor taste. What is the point of spending 42 cents to notify every single applicant that they are an in-state or out of state student? That becomes quite expensive eventually . . . especially if you are notifying over 1000 applicants. They should only send that letter to people who are offered a spot to UNC.
lol .42 x 1000 = 420$. thats not a lot of money . haha
I called earlier today and was told by the admissions office staff that "it could be possible."
Hello!
I am really confused about financial aid/scholarship money and when that is awarded. Has UNC already made their scholarship offers or does that come with financial aid later on? I thought the scholarships had already been handed out, but then someone else told me differently?....
Also, does anyone know where you're supposed to try and find housing as a UNC grad student?
Thanks for any help!
I would think so...and hope so!I believe they are. If they are going to meet their March 31st/April 1st deadline of notifying everyone they'd almost have to, wouldn't they?
http://dailytarheel.com/news/university/med_school_plans_on_hold-1.1616291
Someone a while back asked about the med school expansion plans-- they published this in the UNC paper this morning. The plans are on hold indefinitely.
From what I understood from the article, due to the recent economic activity (or lack thereof) any plans for the expansion have been put on hiatus.So, does this mean that if the expansion plan had been passed, our class would have been the first to be distributed to other locations for the majority of our clinical rotations? Could that still happen, or am I understanding this wrong. Does anyone understand the expansion well enough to explain it and address what it would mean for us?
Dang...I forgot...ill try to do it tommorow. Sorry.Good question. I was wondering that too. Chubs, any response from the FA office?
I was under the impression that unless you have a dire reason to stay in Chapel hill you can expect to do 20-50% of your rotations away from UNC at places like charlotte, asheville, and wilmington. This is already in effect I think. Can someone confrim this?What this means for us (should be we accepted to UNC), is that our graduating class would not see any effects of the expansion. It did say some students may be shuttled to Charlotte as a "test pilot." Some of the 4th year electives are already located in Charlotte, I think.
Hope this clears things up a little.
Dang...I forgot...ill try to do it tommorow. Sorry.
I was under the impression that unless you have a dire reason to stay in Chapel hill you can expect to do 20-50% of your rotations away from UNC at places like charlotte, asheville, and wilmington. This is already in effect I think. Can someone confrim this?
I believe that they will most likely notify strictly by mail from this point on. Thats what it seems like anyway... here's to OCD with checking the mail...
It would take the stress out, kind of . . . except if you get a thin envelope.
Ok I called the Financial Aid office. Financial aid packages will be going out sometime in April she said and scholarship offers will be made at the same time.Hello!
I am really confused about financial aid/scholarship money and when that is awarded. Has UNC already made their scholarship offers or does that come with financial aid later on? I thought the scholarships had already been handed out, but then someone else told me differently?....
Also, does anyone know where you're supposed to try and find housing as a UNC grad student?
Thanks for any help!
for anybody still reading:
-are there any OOS people who have heard regarding post-interview decision? If so, would you mind either posting or PM'ng me your date of interview and date of decision?
-is anybody else really turned off by the fact that they were told to expect a decision 6-8 weeks after the interview but have been waiting for months on end? I heard back from all the other schools I interviewed at MONTHS ago (one school told me 5 days post-interview). This gives me the impression that either:
a. they are really, unbelievably disorganized and bureaucratic
or b. they've passed me over multiple times already
either of which scenario is not particularly desirable. What do you guys think?
Hey there! I'm feeling the same way. I interviewed Dec. 1st and am starting to really lose hope, especially since it sounds like acceptances are just about done going out. People were talking about the "do not dispair" emails earlier in the cycle but I haven't heard one peep...
When did you interview?
this is my understanding as well, but I guess all of yall should know by the end of this month.From what I understand, it is a pretty bureaucratic system. There are subcommittees within the admissions committee. The adcom person you interview with then presents you to their subcommittee, and they decide when to present you to the committee. It is a bit weird that there is a decision about when you are presented and it's not just in the order you interviewed. When they do present you, they can accept, reject, or throw you back in the pool to be presented again. It's not particularly efficient, but at this point, I guess no news is good news.
The admissions process is random at times, and schools are looking for different things. I would wager that way more than 160 32+s IS students apply to UNC, so they cant accept them all.i also agree with an earlier post about unc's criteria being "off" and discrepant from other school's selection criteria. I do not know if they are looking for an intelligent student, student who overly does extra work, requiring post-graduate, or what? I mean most applicants I feel are well-rounded. It is ridiculous to expect quality hands-on experience when you can only do so much as an undergrad student. This will happen in medical school. This is the whole point of going to medical school. So, I feel volunteer and hands-on experience is very much overrated. schools are constantly turning down >32-33 applicants and with >3.7 GPA who DO have extracurricular activities and adequate experience that is "encouraged".
I mean I am not going to go to Africa or somewhere else where medicine is scarce to give assistance just so that I can put it on my resume. I will do it if I sincerely want to do that. Also, same goes with post-bacc and graduate work. From what I have learned about this process, medical schools are like an "elite" club. You can only join if you are liked by people who are already in that club. Your "likeness" matters more than your abilities and full potential. This probably explains why people prefer certain doctors due to their abilities. Anyone can be compassionate or pretend to be compassionate. We all are born with people's skills.
Anyways, I know I will be going to medical school next year. Good luck to everyone who is waiting (I am waiting on unc). This process really stinks, especially with unc's ultra-slow admissions process.
i also agree with an earlier post about unc's criteria being "off" and discrepant from other school's selection criteria. I do not know if they are looking for an intelligent student, student who overly does extra work, requiring post-graduate, or what? I mean most applicants I feel are well-rounded. It is ridiculous to expect quality hands-on experience when you can only do so much as an undergrad student. This will happen in medical school. This is the whole point of going to medical school. So, I feel volunteer and hands-on experience is very much overrated. schools are constantly turning down >32-33 applicants and with >3.7 GPA who DO have extracurricular activities and adequate experience that is "encouraged".
I mean I am not going to go to Africa or somewhere else where medicine is scarce to give assistance just so that I can put it on my resume. I will do it if I sincerely want to do that. Also, same goes with post-bacc and graduate work. From what I have learned about this process, medical schools are like an "elite" club. You can only join if you are liked by people who are already in that club. Your "likeness" matters more than your abilities and full potential. This probably explains why people prefer certain doctors due to their abilities. Anyone can be compassionate or pretend to be compassionate. We all are born with people's skills.
Anyways, I know I will be going to medical school next year. Good luck to everyone who is waiting (I am waiting on unc). This process really stinks, especially with unc's ultra-slow admissions process.
i also agree with an earlier post about unc's criteria being "off" and discrepant from other school's selection criteria. I do not know if they are looking for an intelligent student, student who overly does extra work, requiring post-graduate, or what? I mean most applicants I feel are well-rounded. It is ridiculous to expect quality hands-on experience when you can only do so much as an undergrad student. This will happen in medical school. This is the whole point of going to medical school. So, I feel volunteer and hands-on experience is very much overrated. schools are constantly turning down >32-33 applicants and with >3.7 GPA who DO have extracurricular activities and adequate experience that is "encouraged".
I mean I am not going to go to Africa or somewhere else where medicine is scarce to give assistance just so that I can put it on my resume. I will do it if I sincerely want to do that. Also, same goes with post-bacc and graduate work. From what I have learned about this process, medical schools are like an "elite" club. You can only join if you are liked by people who are already in that club. Your "likeness" matters more than your abilities and full potential. This probably explains why people prefer certain doctors due to their abilities. Anyone can be compassionate or pretend to be compassionate. We all are born with people's skills.
Anyways, I know I will be going to medical school next year. Good luck to everyone who is waiting (I am waiting on unc). This process really stinks, especially with unc's ultra-slow admissions process.
I concur wholeheartedly. I get tired of people thinking that all you have to do is check a certain number of boxes and you are in. It is much more like joining a country club. Thanks for keeping it real.
Guys, where's the Doctor's sense of compassion??
If you did not get accepted, you should feel happy for those who did get accepted. Wish them good luck and give them all your blessings. Post something like "even though I did not get an acceptance from UNC, I am not a bit jealous of those who did, in fact, I sincerely and wholeheartedly feel happy for my more fortunate peers and wish them the best of luck."
If you get in, you should humbly say that you were very fortunate and wish the best of luck for those who are still trying to get in. Don't act all cocky and stuff and say you're tired of those who might be feeling bitter because of their rejections.
🙄 Doctors... hope you guys enjoy taking your hypocrite's oath!
The admissions process is random at times, and schools are looking for different things. I would wager that way more than 160 32+s IS students apply to UNC, so they cant accept them all.
The admissions process is random at times, and schools are looking for different things. I would wager that way more than 160 32+s IS students apply to UNC, so they cant accept them all.