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II, can't wait to visit Hawaii!
II yesterday as well! It's my first, and as an international student, I'm beyond ecstatic!!!
No I am not Canadian. Hope you enjoy Hawaii! The flight is so expensive, but that's the last thing I am worried about now since my interviewers gave me separate months for their availability....Ugh.Canadian as well? I just booked my flight yesterday!
Uh oh, are you interviewing with either Dr. Caldwell or Kyla? Yeah its hard to schedule interviews relatively close together to make it lighter on the wallet in terms of time missed from school/work and hotel costs especially when the student has rotations all day and the doctor is busy with his practice. I'm sure if you explain your situation they may be able to figure something out. Good luck!No I am not Canadian. Hope you enjoy Hawaii! The flight is so expensive, but that's the last thing I am worried about now since my interviewers gave me separate months for their availability....Ugh.
No I am not Canadian. Hope you enjoy Hawaii! The flight is so expensive, but that's the last thing I am worried about now since my interviewers gave me separate months for their availability....Ugh.
Yes I had Kyla. But I now have a new interviewer who can do a September interview so everything finally works out!Uh oh, are you interviewing with either Dr. Caldwell or Kyla? Yeah its hard to schedule interviews relatively close together to make it lighter on the wallet in terms of time missed from school/work and hotel costs especially when the student has rotations all day and the doctor is busy with his practice. I'm sure if you explain your situation they may be able to figure something out. Good luck!
Yea I totally understand the pain of scheduling these interviews. I am lucky to have one very flexible interviewer so I eventually have them within 2 days from each other. It truly wasn't easy and involved a lot of emailing!That's really a bummer. I got all three of my interviews scheduled within 4 days of one another. Good luck trying to make things work out!
Hey to all of you who have recieved interviews, do you have strong ties to Hawaii? I am on the fence about whether to apply or not as I am international
And I dont have any ties to Hawaii
I am international too, and have no ties or whatsoever to Hawaii. But I still got an II so that's still hope!Hey to all of you who have recieved interviews, do you have strong ties to Hawaii? I am on the fence about whether to apply or not as I am international
And I dont have any ties to Hawaii
I am international too, and have no ties or whatsoever to Hawaii. But I still got an II so that's still hope!
I just had my interviews this past week. Boy the weather was so nice in Hawaii!!🙂Oh congrats! yeah maybe I will apply then. When is your interview?
MS 1 here awaiting your questions!Any Hawaii medical students here that can answer a few questions? 🙂
MS 1 here awaiting your questions!
MS 1 here awaiting your questions!
Let me think about your first question for a bit and I will get back to you soon!Yes!! What are your favorite and least favorite aspects of the program at JABSOM? And what area of oahu/honolulu do you recommend? are you from HI/oahu?
As an OSS applicant I think I could help you. Have you already received an II? If so, the interviews appeared to be vital in the OSS applicants admission. All three of mine went well, were very relaxed and allowed me the opportunity to represent myself in a manner I wanted to be represented. They all went long (although I have heard from others who were accepted that theirs were very short), but it was not an uncomfortably long interview. We were just enjoying our conversations (talking story). I feel the interviewers' recommendations are what ensured my acceptance when the admissions committee ranked me.Thanks!
What do you think helped OOS students get in?
As an OSS applicant I think I could help you. Have you already received an II? If so, the interviews appeared to be vital in the OSS applicants admission. All three of mine went well, were very relaxed and allowed me the opportunity to represent myself in a manner I wanted to be represented. They all went long (although I have heard from others who were accepted that theirs were very short), but it was not an uncomfortably long interview. We were just enjoying our conversations (talking story). I feel the interviewers' recommendations are what ensured my acceptance when the admissions committee ranked me.
A user from the 2012-2013 thread posted this previously regarding the point system:
Do you know how they award points for your mcat?
Yes!! What are your favorite and least favorite aspects of the program at JABSOM? And what area of oahu/honolulu do you recommend? are you from HI/oahu?
thank you, really nice of you to reply. No II for me yet, I guess my chances aren't great since my stats are pretty low. I was just wondering, given how few OOS people are interviewed and accepted, if there are some specific things they all share that the school is looking for. Like, say, multiculturalism, experience with health disparities, etc.? Have you noticed any patterns?
Thanks! I am just concerned since lots of schools say they are non rolling, but decisions are actually made on a timely basis. People always say the earlier the better lolIt doesn't matter. The adcom ranks you and then once everyone has interviewed, they send out acceptances to those who have the highest ranking later on next year.
Thank you for the info. I'm currently scheduling interviews and really excited about JABSOM. I do have a question: For the clinical rotations, do they offer an anesthesia rotation? I'm not dead-set, but am highly interested in the specialty and couldn't find any definitive answers in my searches.I'm not a JABSOM student anymore, but graduated a few years ago and also did residency in Hawaii. Some things may have changed, but I think for the most part are still pretty similar.
Pros:
- PBL lends itself to lots of independence and free time ("self-directed learning time")
- Beautiful facility right next to the ocean
- Extremely nice and approachable faculty
- Diverse patient population for clinical years
- Enormous amount of time to study for Step 1 (at least when I was there) --> In addition to a strong curriculum I think this is part of why we've surpassed the national mean for several years (8 years I think?)
- 1st two years are pass/fail which makes for a non-competitive and collegial environment with your fellow MS's
Cons:
- PBL can be a double edged sword if you prefer traditional lectures --> there is about 2 didactic sessions per week for a few hours, but PBL is truly the crux of the curriculum
- Parking sucks for 3rd and 4th year --> No parking at hospital (you need to find street parking or pay)
- No "university hospital" --> Uses community hospitals such as Tripler, Queens, Kuakini for their teaching hospitals, which can be good and bad
- Not a tremendously academic institution --> Varies between specialty, but in general less research opportunities than big academic institutions (although there's an NCI designated cancer center right next door now)
Living on Oahu:
As you know many of the people who matriculate to JABSOM are from Hawaii so a lot of them live with their parents. Some of these students will drive quite far from places like Mililani or Hawaii Kai, but I probably wouldn't recommend that as traffic can be pretty bad from some of these places (particularly from the west side of the island). As ChemicallyUnstable mentioned Kakaako is probably the closest place to live, but this area has went through gentrification and now can be quite pricey with its new high rises. I personally lived in Makiki, which is relatively close 10-15 min drive from the school and convenient to the medical centers in your 3rd and 4th years. Waikiki is also not too far away if you want something with a little night life and more shops. Downtown is also close.
Where are you from?
I'm from Hawaii, but not Oahu.
Hopefully this helps.
Thank you for the info. I'm currently scheduling interviews and really excited about JABSOM. I do have a question: For the clinical rotations, do they offer an anesthesia rotation? I'm not dead-set, but am highly interested in the specialty and couldn't find any definitive answers in my searches.
Thanks! I am just concerned since lots of schools say they are non rolling, but decisions are actually made on a timely basis. People always say the earlier the better lol
thank you, really nice of you to reply. No II for me yet, I guess my chances aren't great since my stats are pretty low. I was just wondering, given how few OOS people are interviewed and accepted, if there are some specific things they all share that the school is looking for. Like, say, multiculturalism, experience with health disparities, etc.? Have you noticed any patterns?
I'm not a JABSOM student anymore, but graduated a few years ago and also did residency in Hawaii. Some things may have changed, but I think for the most part are still pretty similar.
Pros:
- PBL lends itself to lots of independence and free time ("self-directed learning time")
- Beautiful facility right next to the ocean
- Extremely nice and approachable faculty
- Diverse patient population for clinical years
- Enormous amount of time to study for Step 1 (at least when I was there) --> In addition to a strong curriculum I think this is part of why we've surpassed the national mean for several years (8 years I think?)
- 1st two years are pass/fail which makes for a non-competitive and collegial environment with your fellow MS's
Cons:
- PBL can be a double edged sword if you prefer traditional lectures --> there is about 2 didactic sessions per week for a few hours, but PBL is truly the crux of the curriculum
- Parking sucks for 3rd and 4th year --> No parking at hospital (you need to find street parking or pay)
- No "university hospital" --> Uses community hospitals such as Tripler, Queens, Kuakini for their teaching hospitals, which can be good and bad
- Not a tremendously academic institution --> Varies between specialty, but in general less research opportunities than big academic institutions (although there's an NCI designated cancer center right next door now)
- Learning issues can be time consuming --> some people get carried away with this and make super detailed LI's
Living on Oahu:
As you know many of the people who matriculate to JABSOM are from Hawaii so a lot of them live with their parents. Some of these students will drive quite far from places like Mililani or Hawaii Kai, but I probably wouldn't recommend that as traffic can be pretty bad from some of these places (particularly from the west side of the island). As ChemicallyUnstable mentioned Kakaako is probably the closest place to live, but this area has went through gentrification and now can be quite pricey with its new high rises. I personally lived in Makiki, which is relatively close 10-15 min drive from the school and convenient to the medical centers in your 3rd and 4th years. Waikiki is also not too far away if you want something with a little night life and more shops. Downtown is also close.
Where are you from?
I'm from Hawaii, but not Oahu.
Hopefully this helps.
Congrats! You must be an exceptional applicant to get accepted this early!ACCEPTED! OOS, LizzyM 77, last interview 9/29, acceptance email 11/14. No significant previous ties to Hawaii or other Pacific Islands, but strongly considering staying in Hawaii after medical school.
Congrats! Are you thinking of accepting?OOS applicant. Accepted yesterday. Interviewed here at the end of December😉
Congrats.OOS applicant. Accepted yesterday. Interviewed here at the end of December😉
Congrats.
This is just an observation, but two OOS applicants received early invitations so far. Considering that only applicants who have above an 8/10 rating from the adcom receive those invites, those are great achievements. I wonder though, with only a total of 9 OOS slots available this year, how many will be left to hand out in March?
Just a thought that crossed mind. Good luck everyone. "May the odds be ever in your favor"...especially this March and April.