Got an II today!! Complete in mid november, and the only date available is late February..yikes
I'm interested in applying to the Maine track this upcoming June--Maine resident, older applicant. It seems like one has to move around quite a bit in the Maine track--2 years in Boston, 1 year in rural Maine, then at a variety of sites in Maine for the 4th year. Is there anyone in the Maine Track who can comment on whether it is possible to balance raising a family and completing the Maine track? I'm a bit worried about my husband being able to find a job in multiple locations between Boston and Maine in the 4 yrs. of med. school and then residency. Do students have to live in Boston for the first two years or has anyone been able to swing living in southern Maine and commuting? Do you know anyone who has kids and is going through the program? Does the student seem miserable or adjusted? Is Tufts (esp. the Maine Track) family-friendly? Love the Maine Track program as it is on paper; wondering if it is manageable for someone with a family. Thanks in advance for anyone who can provide insight on the topic.
No clue.. Based on last years thread it seems like calls will also be made at the beginning of next week. I hope that is the case haha
Nice. Did you get a call too?Accepted! Interviewed 11/7.
Got an II today!! Complete in mid november, and the only date available is late February..yikes
+1Your completion date tells me that I should stop stressing and that I've been silently rejected.![]()
Yea, Dr. Neumeyer called me on Thursday, 12/5.Nice. Did you get a call too?
Your completion date tells me that I should stop stressing and that I've been silently rejected.![]()
+3. Agree with the
+3. Agree with the. There's nothing quite like silence for 5 months to make my first choice school eventually fall to the level of "meh".
Your completion date tells me that I should stop stressing and that I've been silently rejected.![]()
I just emailed the admissions office asking about my status. I'm thinking I'm in the same boat as you guys, but I want them to own up to their choice, and make it official. Until they say "no", I'm just going to assume they're too shy to say "yes".
Congrats!!Just got a call from Dean Neumeyer (I hope not impersonator!). First acceptance!!! 🙂 #Classof2018
Interviewed on 11/19
CA resident, current UCLA student
I just emailed the admissions office asking about my status. I'm thinking I'm in the same boat as you guys, but I want them to own up to their choice, and make it official. Until they say "no", I'm just going to assume they're too shy to say "yes".
^ACCEPTED. Interviewed 11/19
FIRST ONE.
I got the call when I was half asleep and as soon as he introduced himself I started babbling incoherently.
I don't even remember what he said after hahahaha
just got the deferred email, interviewed 11/14. honestly, what are the chances of it turning into an acceptance vs waitlist? thanks..
of those who are accepted, how long after was the website updated with your acceptance, or when did you get an email? Also, what are the next steps? thanks!
just got emailed this morning also!I got the call Monday evening and just got the email today. The only change on the website are the new emails that show up in Communication Status. They say the admission packet was mailed today, and the candidate reply form has to be in by Dec 24. I'm assuming I will have to send in a deposit too.
I'm interested in applying to the Maine track this upcoming June--Maine resident, older applicant. It seems like one has to move around quite a bit in the Maine track--2 years in Boston, 1 year in rural Maine, then at a variety of sites in Maine for the 4th year. Is there anyone in the Maine Track who can comment on whether it is possible to balance raising a family and completing the Maine track? I'm a bit worried about my husband being able to find a job in multiple locations between Boston and Maine in the 4 yrs. of med. school and then residency. Do students have to live in Boston for the first two years or has anyone been able to swing living in southern Maine and commuting? Do you know anyone who has kids and is going through the program? Does the student seem miserable or adjusted? Is Tufts (esp. the Maine Track) family-friendly? Love the Maine Track program as it is on paper; wondering if it is manageable for someone with a family. Thanks in advance for anyone who can provide insight on the topic.
I'm interested in applying to the Maine track this upcoming June--Maine resident, older applicant. It seems like one has to move around quite a bit in the Maine track--2 years in Boston, 1 year in rural Maine, then at a variety of sites in Maine for the 4th year. Is there anyone in the Maine Track who can comment on whether it is possible to balance raising a family and completing the Maine track? I'm a bit worried about my husband being able to find a job in multiple locations between Boston and Maine in the 4 yrs. of med. school and then residency. Do students have to live in Boston for the first two years or has anyone been able to swing living in southern Maine and commuting? Do you know anyone who has kids and is going through the program? Does the student seem miserable or adjusted? Is Tufts (esp. the Maine Track) family-friendly? Love the Maine Track program as it is on paper; wondering if it is manageable for someone with a family. Thanks in advance for anyone who can provide insight on the topic.
Any new interview invites lately? Or does anyone know what dates interviews are into slash when Tufts stop interviewing?
All this waiting is killing me...
I have a question for locals or those who already interviewed: If I land at 7:4oam on the morning of my interview, is that enough time to arrive at Tufts by 9:45? I plan on taking the subway.
The school doesn't seem far and it seems like it'll be an easy/quick ride, but I don't know if there are any variables I am not taking into account.
I won't have any bags with me just my carry on. Hopefully the flight is on time.It should be fine. The variable you need to take into account would be if you have any luggage (assuming you don't), and if the flight will arrive ON TIME. 2 hours from airport to the orange line to Tufts should be enough.
My bad, I was thinking of something else when I said orange line. SL1 should be fine, and you can just walk from South station to Tufts....maybe grab a breakfast at Mcdonalds or a Chinatown bakery 🙂I won't have any bags with me just my carry on. Hopefully the flight is on time.
Do you know if the silver line is an option? Or do I have to take the blue/orange to get there?
Ok, thanks a lot and good luck!My bad, I was thinking of something else when I said orange line. SL1 should be fine, and you can just walk from South station to Tufts....maybe grab a breakfast at Mcdonalds or a Chinatown bakery 🙂
Still hoping for an ii here ....!
I got off my 620am flight, took the silver line to south station, walked, got breakfast, checked into the hostel there, got dressed, and made it to the waiting area, all in under an hour and a half. There might be more traffic and such, but you should be golden timewise if your flight isn't delayed and/or the bus doesn't breakdown.I won't have any bags with me just my carry on. Hopefully the flight is on time.
Do you know if the silver line is an option? Or do I have to take the blue/orange to get there?
I would not count on the silver line, there could be bad traffic and that would ruin everything...ive been stuck on SL1 for 30-45 minutes before. Just take the blue line and then take the reed to downtown crossing or orange to tufts medical.
What are you talking about? The the blue line doesn't even connect to the red, and taking the blue means shuttle + blue + orange. Granted the orange takes you straight to Tufts but the silver line is still the best bet from the airport. Most of the SL1 line isn't even part of the normal traffic. Orange line has been having a lot of cold-related delays lately, too.
2 hours is more than enough unless something truly awful happens that there would have been no way to plan around aside from getting in a day earlier.