i'm kind of taking a risk with the minority question... i'm talking about what may come off as a trivial situation that taught me important lessons. it has to do with baseball. i'm kind of worried that they'll just laugh at me.
would publications and poster presentations be considered "academic honors"?
I didn't think they did so I didn't include mine in that section,
I figured they would see them on the AMCAS application
crap, I submitted an app for a different school where I listed those as honors as well.
I'm sure it's not a big deal. No worries.
Just got the confirmation email that they received my secondary, not sure if that means i'm complete yet though, i suppose it only means they received the hard-copy?
Dear ksmi117:
We have received your secondary application. You will be notified if any items are needed to complete your application. We will send an e-mail when your application is complete and ready for review by the Committee on Admission.
Thank you.
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Office of Admission
Yup, that's the one
Ugh, I'm having some difficulty with this adversity question. The only things that come to mind are being a minority or woman (slew of possibilities here), athlete (breaking a body part but eventually competing), or experiencing an illness/death (mom battles with cancer).
Well, none of these apply to me. For those privledged, white males out there, what are some of your ideas?
haha ok last question (I promise!) - My school's career center doesn't write a pre-medical committee letter or anythign, but they collect our LORs and submit them in a packet to AMCAS. Do I still mark down "committee letter" on the app?
What type of experiences are they looking for in the adversity question? Does a situation regarding an ethical dilemma count as an adversity question?
If we are still continuing an activity do we just put the date we started and leave the end date blank?
."List any academic honors or awards you have received since entering college?"
Is that only academics for both honors and awards or can it be other related awards.
I feel like I don't have a real academic honors... but I don't think I have a shot at getting in there anyway. What kind of awards do people mention here?
Scholarships count?
.
yes, i'd think that scholarships count.
What about honors that are outside academia for like organizations?
What about honors that are outside academia for like organizations?
If they are related to academics at all, yes. If not, no. It says academic honors.
"Have you ever discontinued attendance at or been dismissed from any school or college?"
Does this apply if you transferred schools?
I'm assuming No...
(I completed every semester, nothing shady)
Dear JHU,
Please send me a "your application is complete... woo hoo!" email this week. I submitted 24 days ago. Pretty please.
Sincerely,
ksmi117
P.S. Please accept me too.
i'm kind of taking a risk with the minority question... i'm talking about what may come off as a trivial situation that taught me important lessons. it has to do with baseball. i'm kind of worried that they'll just laugh at me.
In your defense, you are answering an incredibly bizarre question.
I'm talking about the time all my friends wanted a plain pizza, but I wanted onions on mine. It was a tough situation, I could've starved to death, but because of my intelligence and quick-thinking we ordered onions on HALF the pizza, and the other half plain. Everyone got what they wanted, and it turned out OK! This ingenuity is actually the kind of trait physicians need.
I am soooooo in this school.
This is the type of response I gave them when I applied to JHU undergrad (anyone remember the "what would you do with $10?" question?). and I got in. I wonder if the med school has the same mentality as the undergrad...
All of us at Hopkins sit and chit-chat about the crappy $10 essays we wrote and we are here. I think they only use that essay to weed out people so if you something semi-sensible then you would be ok.
I hope BerlinDude was sarcastic when he mentioned the pizza essay, if not, I would be curious to find out if they actually liked it.
Haha, OK, I'm not an idiot - it was a joke. Besides, Johns Hopkins is a school I might actually have a shot at, I'm not going to blow it on a pizza essay (as hilarious as that would be).All of us at Hopkins sit and chit-chat about the crappy $10 essays we wrote and we are here. I think they only use that essay to weed out people so if you something semi-sensible then you would be ok.
I hope BerlinDude was sarcastic when he mentioned the pizza essay, if not, I would be curious to find out if they actually liked it.
Haha, OK, I'm not an idiot - it was a joke. Besides, Johns Hopkins is a school I might actually have a shot at, I'm not going to blow it on a pizza essay (as hilarious as that would be).
What's funny is that every time I get one of these essays, I immediately realize my own situations are totally inappropriate and I write something else completely different. After all, the AdComs don't actually like minority positions, they just want you to write about being in the minority superficially.
I thought about that, but then I think you seem really disagreeable. Unless you say that you gave up and went with the majority, after which you seem lazy and unprincipled. What's more, if you're in the minority and others disagree, you're implying that either you are incredibly stupid not to agree with the group or everyone else is stupid not to agree with you.I wrote about one of several decisions made within the student organization I founded where I was in the minority. I think it came off very well actually, and actually enjoyed writing that essay...
I thought about that, but then I think you seem really disagreeable. Unless you say that you gave up and went with the majority, after which you seem lazy and unprincipled. What's more, if you're in the minority and others disagree, you're implying that either you are incredibly stupid not to agree with the group or everyone else is stupid not to agree with you.
I'm not sure how to pull off that scenario.
I don't think it shows any of those things. The whole point of a democracy is so that you get a wide range of viewpoints. The government might as well just be one person if everyone agrees all the time. I think it shows strength in your beliefs. You are not saying that you are in the minority every time just that you have found yourself in the minority before. Honestly, if you haven't, you are probably too scared to voice your opinion or you have never worked in any kind of organization where there are debates on by-laws.
Sure, you voice your opinion. Others might agree with you, but usually people won't go from the majority to the minority. Then you can go with the flow or you can insist on your point and have a lengthy and pointless argument. I don't think either scenario says anything positive about you.
Ugh, I'm having some difficulty with this adversity question. The only things that come to mind are being a minority or woman (slew of possibilities here), athlete (breaking a body part but eventually competing), or experiencing an illness/death (mom battles with cancer).
Well, none of these apply to me. For those privledged, white males out there, what are some of your ideas?
It says if applicable. For me, anything I wrote would be such a pathetic reach that I left it blank. I'm guessing they don't want to hear about videogames or high school sports. White, upper middle class male from a physician family. I'm the overdog. I saw several people who left it blank in last year's thread got interviews. I doubt this essay carries tremendous weight compared to other aspects of the application (MCAT, GPA, LOR, PS) . I guess I'm taking a risk though--we'll see how it works out.
Okay so extreme example, you are in a fraternity and the majority of your chapter is for hazing the pledges. Do you voice your opinion and fight this, or do you sit around and watch it happen. Seems like standing up to those people says something big about you. Sitting there and watching people get hazed is the wrong choice.
More realistic example, you are a member of the residential hall association at your school. The majority of people here want to not give non-voting members speaking privileges even though they pay for all of the programs that RHA puts on. Basically, the majority is telling the people in the halls that they can't suggest where their own money should go. Standing up to this is important, and it helps to show that you care about others opinions and want to listen.
Basically, you are right sometimes. If it is some generic example like you don't like some motion passed about parking lot procedures, it is pretty pointless to have an hour long debate. It probably won't affect anyone much and won't really have any negative effect, but some things are worth fighting for, and I think that is what this type of essay can show. Where do your principles lie on some of these issues and how strong are they.
hey guys,
for the essay question on the areas of medicine that interests you, do you think they are asking for a career path (like academic medicine, private practice) or a specific area of medicine (like cardiology or pediatrics)
Thanks!
bump, I'm wondering this too...
I thought about that, but then I think you seem really disagreeable. Unless you say that you gave up and went with the majority, after which you seem lazy and unprincipled. What's more, if you're in the minority and others disagree, you're implying that either you are incredibly stupid not to agree with the group or everyone else is stupid not to agree with you.
I'm not sure how to pull off that scenario.
I wrote about this, and then said how I eventually went with the majority. I played it off as not being lazy/unprincipled, but as being open-minded, recognizing and being able to accept when my idea isn't necessarily the best one (it was still a good idea though). there's nothing wrong with that.
Does JHU have an email for questions/correspondence? I looked everywhere and I can't find it. And they don't answer their phone.