Thanks for valuable info Premedchelli and Squall. Does anyone know if people who are accepted/rejected/waitlisted get a phone call, letter, or email?
Thanks for valuable info Premedchelli and Squall. Does anyone know if people who are accepted/rejected/waitlisted get a phone call, letter, or email?
So I interviewed back in December (I'm OOS) and I received a letter soon after that said my application was placed on hold. It seems like that happens to a lot of OOS applicants. Does anyone know when or how I might get a status update, or should I just be patient and check the mail?
Thanks!
They sent me a hold letter a month after I interviewed. I thought that was pretty soon after considering I interviewed right before the holidays....maybe not?
My letter said that my application was on hold but still under very active consideration.
These forums sound like Sex and the City applying to medical school...analyzing every encounter...each word being scrutinized for any hidden meaning.
I will be so happy when it all ends 🙂
so this year were all acceptances called on the phone?
Hey guys,
This morning I received an email called "2010-2011 UMB New Student Message" regarding general financial aid information for new students. Is this an automatic message for everyone who interviewed and filled out the FAFSA?
I interviewed in mid March and have yet to hear back from the school regarding their decision.
you might have to turn in your SS# or other stuff to them before they can move on.
The email wasn't asking for anything. It even said not to respond to it. It contained links to general financial aid info and a newsletter.
It seems like just a general letter that would be sent to all people who completed the FAFSA stuff, and I normally wouldn't think much of it, but the phrase "new student" and such throws me a little bit. It also says that the staff at the fin. aid office "wishes me a successful academic year at UMB." It's obviously a blanket email, though (not personalized at all for me specifically).
To follow up on my previous question, I just got my acceptance letter in the mail today. I didn't receive a call from Dr. Foxwell, though. Maybe it has something to do with me being OOS?
The moral of the story is that the financial aid office is on top of things, apparently--I got the fin. aid email before I even knew I was in![]()
What happened to those on hold last year? And does that put you on the end of the waitlist if you are waitlisted cuz they couldn't decide till later?
jussst wondering.
Last year people on hold were told their wait list status around May 15th via a letter from Dr. Foxwell. I'm not sure what you mean by the bottom of the waitlist, everyone on the waitlist is there because they couldn't decide till later lol ...in the case of UMaryland, hold pretty much = waitlist from what I gather.
ok so heres what i mean by bottom of the waitlist.
Lets say John Doe gets on the waitlist in September and Jane Doe gets a hold notice. Then on May 15th Jane is notified that she is waitlisted. I figured Jane would be lower than John cuz she was notified later. So thats what I was thinking.
Dunno how the situation of waitlisting works with UMD though so thats pretty much what I'm asking - if you are on hold and THEN waitlisted does that mean you are lower in the waitlist cuz you are notified of being waitlisted later?
But you (joshg) just said they tell you where you are in the waitlist in May so I'mhoping
that ppl on hold still have a chance of being in the top portion of the waitlist
can anyone verify any of this?
ok so heres what i mean by bottom of the waitlist.
Lets say John Doe gets on the waitlist in September and Jane Doe gets a hold notice. Then on May 15th Jane is notified that she is waitlisted. I figured Jane would be lower than John cuz she was notified later. So thats what I was thinking.
Dunno how the situation of waitlisting works with UMD though so thats pretty much what I'm asking - if you are on hold and THEN waitlisted does that mean you are lower in the waitlist cuz you are notified of being waitlisted later?
But you (joshg) just said they tell you where you are in the waitlist in May so I'mhoping
that ppl on hold still have a chance of being in the top portion of the waitlist
can anyone verify any of this?
No one who interviewed at Maryland has been placed on the waitlist yet. Everyone who's interviewed has either been accepted or placed on hold (I'm 99% sure no one gets rejected post interview unless they were really REALLY bad). But people on hold generally get rereviewed after the interview season is over (so around now) and since the class is usually full at this time they are all placed on the waitlist (though I have heard of a few getting accepted after being placed on post interview hold but they were the minority). I have heard that waitlist at maryland is prioritized by GPA and MCAT but I think I just read that on a thread on sdn so I really don't know for sure.
So to summarize the waitlist has not been made yet.
still awaiting verification about my waitlist question - does UMD rank according to GPA and MCAT?
thankss
My thoughts on the ABCDF grading scale is this - when I heard this on the interview day I was completely turned off. But when you think about it, I have an acceptance at a H/HP/P/LP/F school which is essentially the same. Also, it seems that there is no curve at MD, whereas at many of the H/HP/P/LP/F schools, or at least what I know of, there is a grading scale that, for example, says only 10% get honors. I think thats worse. The students at the interview seemed fine with it - but does anyone know how they really feel? Also at any true P/F schools (which is not an option for me as far as I know right, and there are very few of them) the students were telling me the most important thing to them is P/F and if they could give us one piece of advice it would be to go to a P/F school.
As far as the daily schedule goes - we were told at interview that there are only lectures in the morning, one afternoon there is a lab, and four afternoons off. However, we were never told what exactly constitutes the morning - 9-12 or 8-2 is very different.
Wow LucidSplash, thanks for the wealth of information, just what I was looking for.
As far as the schedule goes, I'm guessing your 8-12 days are MWF but what happens on Tuesday and Thursday? Like most other PBL schools you do about 2 cases per week in small group and have a faculty proctor?
For those interested in the schedule like me I found the following through MedScope:
http://medweb1.umaryland.edu/medscope.net/schedule.aspx?1
http://medscope.umaryland.edu/main/schedules/10-11ms1_calendar.html
For the clinical experience, admittedly it's just a question I've heard I should ask of any school I'm considering. Aside from patient histories and basic clinical skills some of my other favorite schools had a type of shadowing experience where students get to sample various specialties?
I know that UMD requires that you purchase their own computer. Does anyone know what type of computer it is?
You purchase the laptops through the school, money gets taken out of your loan, grant...
it's in their website
Uh, no. This is your M-F schedule. Maryland is not a PBL school. Small groups will almost always augment the lecture material, not replace it. Small groups are not uniformly formatted - it will depend on the academic block (class) and the section. Sometimes it will be questions, sometimes clinical correlates, sometimes presentations, sometimes lab, occasionally cases. The persons leading the small groups will also vary - sometimes academic (non-clinical) faculty, sometimes clinical faculty, frequently residents/fellows (especially in 2nd year).
I know all pre-meds are told to ask this question and I certainly did when applying. What I'm saying is IMHO it is a stupid question. IMHO, beyond learning to do a proper H&P, "Clinical Experience" during MSI&II is largely meaningless and a waste of time. Its a buzz phrase that all pre-meds ask about and thus all medical schools have some sort of answer for it. But really, until you've learned the basic language of medicine and physiology, its a dog and pony show with preceptors as the ringmaster and patients as the "attractions." Again, this is all strictly my opinion. Not to mention, all these "clinical experiences" are generally only with primary care which is a pretty limited view of medicine.
OSA can set you up with a mentor if you want one and you have a specialty in mind - then you can meet with your mentor every so often and spend some time in the hospital with them if that's what you want. There's no formal shadowing experiences to sample the various specialties - but you can set that up on your own if you just show interest. Some of my classmates did that I think. But IMHO, this is only really useful in the specialties you do not experience 3rd year because its almost impossible to get a real idea of how you'd enjoy a specialty until you've spent time actually "doing it" - insomuch as you can as an MSIII. Otherwise, the core 3rd year rotations - Surgery, Internal Medicine, OB/Gyn, Peds, Neurology, Family Medicine, Psychiatry - are your best bet for "sampling" those specialties (and their associated sub-specialties).
would you recommend not shadowing any doctors then? or do residencies still look for that kinda stuff?