- Joined
- Mar 28, 2010
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To anyone who has already interviewed, do they have a space set aside to put your luggage during the interview?
Yes, they keep it in a locked room.
To anyone who has already interviewed, do they have a space set aside to put your luggage during the interview?
Got my interview invite here this morning, so excited 🙂
when were you complete? thanks
Anybody know if Temple's receptive to LOI's?
Does anyone know a place to store a bag while I interview?
Thanks a bunch.
I am an OOS interviewing at Temple next week. Does anyone know how long it takes to gain residency in PA for tuition purposes? I know some schools will give you in-state tuition after a semester, which would pan out to about a $5k penalty for OOS students.
They told us on interview day that OOS pays OOS tuition all 4 years no matter what.
Hmm... I thought I heard 3 years mentioned during the financial aid presentation?
Hmm... I thought I heard 3 years mentioned during the financial aid presentation?
Withdrew my interview here. Hope one of you can use it.
umm thank you ... but what made you do that? just too many interviews/money or something about the school?
I've got infectious mono and I don't feel well enough to travel next week. Also money and number of interviews factor into my desicon. The school seems great though so its unfortunate I had to withdraw.
I've got infectious mono and I don't feel well enough to travel next week. Also money and number of interviews factor into my desicon. The school seems great though so its unfortunate I had to withdraw.
Wow, isn't that fairly unusual? Most state schools will let you gain residency after a year of attending the school.No it's all four. She said you can't gain PA residency if you're only there for the purposes of going to school.
Hello Everyone,
I just got back from the whole interview experience. (I am typing this at a nearby hotel actually.) Keep in mind, this is just my personal account with a lot of bias. The interview experience was excellent. They really are informative and explain more than just what the website has to offer. We even got to go into the anatomy lab with all the cadavers and gain a sense of the room you will be practicing your first year dissections in. My interviewers were extremely friendly, and I have nothing negative to really say once you enter the admissions building.
What I really want to focus on is more the environment that the school and its medical center is based in. There is a huge amount of history and culture in Philly. I stayed here one day before my interview and spent a couple hours to look around. I been to Philly once before many years ago, but this time I spent more time reading all the historical references in the Independence Historical Park and ate at a few restaurants in downtown. Be prepared to be surrounded by many African Americans. I grew up in really a suburban middle class community in California, and I have never seen so many African Americans concentrated in one location. The culture here surrounding civil rights and a lot of sociocultural implications associated with poverty and racial disparity can really be felt here.
There will be people who swear and talk loudly to themselves in the middle of the subway. Right after I finished my interview and made my way back to the subway station on the Broad Street line, I was waiting to cross the intersection to go Southbound back to my hotel in Downtown Philly. A kid threw an open water bottle at me behind my back and was laughing at me. I then hear the sound one makes when they are about to unleash a huge wad of saliva at you. I quickly turned around and looked the boy in the eye. He hesitated for a bit and even muttered under his breath "What you looking at?" I guess it's a lot harder to spit at someone if you see someone looking at you and recognizing that you are a person and not some animal. I suppose he felt like I did not belong in this area with my formal business attire, shiny shoes, and being yellow-skinned instead of dark-skinned. It could even be possible that it's just some silly antics that happens with any kid, but I would like to speculate and say that it's much more than that. It may be something really deeply rooted throughout history and a part of African American culture regarding racial discrimination. In any case, everything I learned in history textbooks really came alive that day. I realized if I really want to go here and work with this population, I will probably have to get past this tall cultural barrier and help them realize that I really just care about them. That's just my two cents. Oh yeah, in case anyone was wondering...I'm perfectly okay. I'm a little shaken, but I was honestly worried more about my suit to see if it was ruined. Fortunately, it was just some water and should dry soon.
On a side note, the subway system really needs some renovating. I wasted so much money on it because I went into the wrong station. There is a Southbound train and a Northbound train on the Broad Street line. You have to make sure you are on the side going in the right direction, because once you enter on one side you won't get your money back. I lost 20 bucks because I got no change and didn't want to go back and discuss with the ticket exchanger guy what happened. Instead I just jammed my $20 bill into the machine and got back like 10 tokens (which are basically one-way tickets on the subway). Since I don't know feel like holding onto these tokens for a long period of time (through the airport back home and back into Philly for perhaps a future interview), I just handed it to some kid who looked like he needed them more than I do.
Whether or not I get accepted here, this was definitely a memorable experience.
LOL! i'm taking a cab... or will probably go in a hoodie and jeans as well 😀
Go in Blackface.
You have to honestly be kidding me. Are you serious? It makes me incredibly sad to see these types of posts on SDN. Who ARE you?
+1 Starting with forthefuture's unnecessary recap of his adventure in a poor neighborhood, this thread's racism has escalated. Really disappointing.
You have to honestly be kidding me. Are you serious? It makes me incredibly sad to see these types of posts on SDN. Who ARE you?
I know. I just don't even know where to begin.
"Some poor black people laughed at me on the bus. If anyone is worried, don't be, I am okay from the experience. I gave a poor guy my tokens and I still want to work with black people after this horrible experience in the city."
Do you guys realize how you sound? I am hoping Temple adcoms actively view this thread and figure out who you guys are. This tone of this whole thread scares me.
I feel like Randall in Clerks II, I seriously did not think my comment was racist. The gravity of the reaction is kind of shocking to me actually.
Okay dude, there comes a time where you should just STOP TALKING.
I've noticed a lot of the comments in this thread (even before today's series of comments) have discussed Temple's neighborhood, but theres been no mention of the sort in the Jefferson thread. Does anyone know if theres some huge disparity between the two areas even though they're only 4 miles apart?
Edit: Sorry to derail the conversation, but it didn't sound like it was going in a good direction anyhow.
Jefferson's in downtown Philly. The huge disparity is not unlike a lot of other cities, some of which have their Park Avenues only a couple blocks from their Comptons. 4 miles is actually a pretty long distance considering you're talking about an urban location.
But there is never a reason to be racist like that.
Okay dude, there comes a time where you should just STOP TALKING.
I've noticed a lot of the comments in this thread (even before today's series of comments) have discussed Temple's neighborhood, but theres been no mention of the sort in the Jefferson thread. Does anyone know if theres some huge disparity between the two areas even though they're only 4 miles apart?
Edit: Sorry to derail the conversation, but it didn't sound like it was going in a good direction anyhow.
Hello Everyone,
I just got back from the whole interview experience. (I am typing this at a nearby hotel actually.) Keep in mind, this is just my personal account with a lot of bias. The interview experience was excellent. They really are informative and explain more than just what the website has to offer. We even got to go into the anatomy lab with all the cadavers and gain a sense of the room you will be practicing your first year dissections in. My interviewers were extremely friendly, and I have nothing negative to really say once you enter the admissions building.
What I really want to focus on is more the environment that the school and its medical center is based in. There is a huge amount of history and culture in Philly. I stayed here one day before my interview and spent a couple hours to look around. I been to Philly once before many years ago, but this time I spent more time reading all the historical references in the Independence Historical Park and ate at a few restaurants in downtown. Be prepared to be surrounded by many African Americans. I grew up in really a suburban middle class community in California, and I have never seen so many African Americans concentrated in one location. The culture here surrounding civil rights and a lot of sociocultural implications associated with poverty and racial disparity can really be felt here.
There will be people who swear and talk loudly to themselves in the middle of the subway. Right after I finished my interview and made my way back to the subway station on the Broad Street line, I was waiting to cross the intersection to go Southbound back to my hotel in Downtown Philly. A kid threw an open water bottle at me behind my back and was laughing at me. I then hear the sound one makes when they are about to unleash a huge wad of saliva at you. I quickly turned around and looked the boy in the eye. He hesitated for a bit and even muttered under his breath "What you looking at?" I guess it's a lot harder to spit at someone if you see someone looking at you and recognizing that you are a person and not some animal. I suppose he felt like I did not belong in this area with my formal business attire, shiny shoes, and being yellow-skinned instead of dark-skinned. It could even be possible that it's just some silly antics that happens with any kid, but I would like to speculate and say that it's much more than that. It may be something really deeply rooted throughout history and a part of African American culture regarding racial discrimination. In any case, everything I learned in history textbooks really came alive that day. I realized if I really want to go here and work with this population, I will probably have to get past this tall cultural barrier and help them realize that I really just care about them. That's just my two cents. Oh yeah, in case anyone was wondering...I'm perfectly okay. I'm a little shaken, but I was honestly worried more about my suit to see if it was ruined. Fortunately, it was just some water and should dry soon.
On a side note, the subway system really needs some renovating. I wasted so much money on it because I went into the wrong station. There is a Southbound train and a Northbound train on the Broad Street line. You have to make sure you are on the side going in the right direction, because once you enter on one side you won't get your money back. I lost 20 bucks because I got no change and didn't want to go back and discuss with the ticket exchanger guy what happened. Instead I just jammed my $20 bill into the machine and got back like 10 tokens (which are basically one-way tickets on the subway). Since I don't know feel like holding onto these tokens for a long period of time (through the airport back home and back into Philly for perhaps a future interview), I just handed it to some kid who looked like he needed them more than I do.
Whether or not I get accepted here, this was definitely a memorable experience.
I think that you're putting a generalization out there about North Philly that just isn't always true (yes it sometimes is...) and it is being unfair to them. Yes, there is crime and violence and lots of it, and yes, they will make you feel uncomfortable and put you in strange situations, but if you're dressed in interview attire, they probably did that to you because you were in interview attire.
I am also from a small town in the middle of PA, and this environment was a shock for me too, but you absolutely cannot make generalizations about this population. You know nothing about them, where they came from, or what their current situations are like. Honestly, if you did, your jaw would drop with the amount of honesty they will tell you if you ask and the amount of intelligence they convey. While a lot of North Philly is undereducated to an extreme, there are lots and lots of people who understand you and understand their own situations and understand why these cycles continue for generations. There are these exceptions, good and bad, in every population and North Philly is absolutely no different in that way, so please do not chalk this one up to race. It is certainly a factor, but there are other things surrounding that.
Maybe I am just being defensive and biased about it, but it is really hard to say these things about these people when you're spent a total of six hours in their neighborhood.
Also please remember this is a public forum. If you are accepted and decide to come to Temple, you will be associated with Temple and representing our student body, alumni, faculty and physicians from day one. Everything you say and do, professionally, academically, and publicly will be reflected on Temple whether you like it or not. (And if you do join us, I guarantee this will not be the last time you hear this spiele)
But there is never a reason to be racist like that.
It's one thing to say you felt uncomfortable in the neighborhood. It's another to say "brace yourselves guys, there are lots of black people in Philly." And to top off this racially insensitive rambling about his experience at Temple, someone goes
and makes a Blackface comment and doesn't understand why that's racist? I'm sorry, but it makes you guys look like idiots.