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any 12/17 hear back yet? eeeeeeek
any 12/17 hear back yet? eeeeeeek
exactly my thoughts. oh well, fingers crossed there's still hope!I was the same day and now that a January interview has been accepted, I'm feeling that inevitable rejection coming up in March. Sucks because I absolutely loved Hofstra.
My first acceptance! Just interviewed last week 1/7. LizzyM about 75.
Thank you.Congrats to mlb2358!
Any 12/18 interviewees heard back yet?
Hi all,
So the interview instruction seems to imply that the place is quite difficult to find. It seems to work on Googlemaps, but they said GPS will not take you there. I was wondering if you all had a lot of trouble finding the place?
thanks in advance 🙂
Has there been any movement on the interview hold list?
Yes, they do provide space to put your luggage.Is there a place to store our luggage during the day?
+1Anyone heard back from 1/11 interview? Just curious 😀
I know everyone says this, but just be relaxed. Think less about your canned responses to "Why medicine?" "toughest challenge" and "ethical dilemma" questions, and more about who you are as an individual. In other words, in 5 years, how you want your patients to describe you to others? Smart, motivated, skilled, sure. But also compassionate, approachable, able to relate to others. Make sure these last few qualities shine through.Can anyone comment on the format of the interview? Were the questions mostly behavioral, research related, ethical, etc.? Visiting in a few days and nervous, been rusty with my 1-1s and haven't had one in a few months!
I know everyone says this, but just be relaxed. Think less about your canned responses to "Why medicine?" "toughest challenge" and "ethical dilemma" questions, and more about who you are as an individual. In other words, in 5 years, how you want your patients to describe you to others? Smart, motivated, skilled, sure. But also compassionate, approachable, able to relate to others. Make sure these last few qualities shine through.
Good luck!
Can anyone comment on the format of the interview? Were the questions mostly behavioral, research related, ethical, etc.? Visiting in a few days and nervous, been rusty with my 1-1s and haven't had one in a few months!
Unlike the previous two posters, I had a different experience. But first, let me describe the structure/methodology of Hofstra's interview process.
The interview is structured as such: 1 open-book interview (the interviewer sees your entire application, etc); 1 partially-closed interview (can't see your stats, but can see your activities, PS, and LORs - but im not 100% sure, i might be wrong about the details on this one; what i am more confident about is that he can't see your stats, so no GPA or MCAT). Now, beware, the rest of what I'm going to say is my own analysis, so take it with a grain of salt, but here it goes: To my knowledge, past research has indicated that "unstructured" interviews are not predictive of future performance in medical school, residency, success as a physician, etc. However, structured, behavioral interviews do correlate, somewhat, with future success along the route to becoming a physician. The open-book interview will be relatively unstructured, it's the "traditional" interview format that most schools use and thus, your experience will vary widely from interviewer to interviewer. The partially-closed interview is the structured, behavioral interview that is supposed to provide a more objective representation of the applicant's personality traits/characteristics (remember, the interviewer can't see your GPA or mcat). This is important because your structured, behavioral interviewer will have a list of maybe 5 questions, and each of those questions will be asked with the intent of eliciting SOME type of quality trait that the school is looking for (interpersonal skills, integrity, creativity, etc). I will not provide you with the list of questions I had, as that would be unfair to other applicants who did not have that information prior to their interviews (anyways, someone else did list the 5 questions that they had earlier in this thread, so you can search and find the examples for yourself - if you haven't already). However, I will tell you that it is in your best interest to prepare anecdotes/stories/examples from your life that could demonstrate some personality trait(s) about yourself.
Now, on to my experience.
My open-book, unstructured interview was very pointed; he asked specific questions about my application and he asked me about how many interviews i had at other schools, why i wasn't getting interviews at other schools, and if I thought there were problems with my application. In the moment, I did my best to maintain my composure and spin my answers in a positive way, but it definitely wasn't a "relaxed, conversational" interview. I don't think he had bad intentions, and I'm hoping there were good reasons for the questions he asked, but I'm just providing a bit of a different perspective from the others who responded to you.
My structured, partially-closed interview was super chill. This guy was legit the bomb, and I felt awesome after my interview with him (I have no idea if that's an indication that I performed well, but it IS an indication that the interviewer was experienced and good at making interviewees feel comfortable). Apparently one of my letter writers put my GPA in their letter (indicating that they do have access to your LOR, but aren't supposed to have access to your GPA), so honestly I'm hoping that worked in my favor (gpa is a strong point in my application, and maybe my interviewer subconsciously thought of me more highly because of that). The questions weren't that hard though, and I imagine with any other interviewer, you'll have time to pause and think about your answers for long enough. (The interviews are 45 min each, with about 5 min or so at the end of each one to ask questions, so with 40 minutes/5 questions, you'll have approximately 8 min/question, which is plenty of time)
Oh, another thing, in my unstructured interview, the first question I got asked was: "So, do you have any questions for me?" That threw me off a little; I'm pretty sure it was unique to my interview, but just be prepared for that lol.
I applied here my first cycle. Interesting to see that Hofstra still pulls the good cop/bad cop routine.
I interviewed same day! Guess they are pretty quick, hoping for an answer soon.Accepted today via email!!Interviewed 1/11. Good luck to all those still in the running!
I interviewed same day! Guess they are pretty quick, hoping for an answer soon.
Is it safe to assume that I've been WL or rejected if I interviewed back in December?
Interviewed mid-December and haven't heard, so I'm waiting around for that WL/reject :/Any movement here lately?
Hey, first time poster and long time SDN lurker. I just wanted to give my 2 cents.
I had a similar experience as @ThrowAway999 where my "bad cop" interviewer asked me very fast and abrupt interview questions. And then very strangely began to imply that I should share where else I was interviewing. At one point he even asked why I wasn't getting in touch with professors at other institutions and giving me names of contacts to reach out to. It was incredibly bizarre despite the fact that I thought he otherwise may have had a favorable impression of me.
I have to say, I interviewed in December and still haven't heard back so maybe take this with a grain of salt, but I was not very impressed by the school. It seems that the students match almost exclusively into the LIJ system. I have spoken to physicians (both full time faculty and residents) who have worked there and neither sung the praises of the hospital system as a teaching institution citing unmotivated residents and inexperienced doctors as teachers . Furthermore, while the facilities were bright and shiny, I wasn't so into the fact that lectures aren't recorded (I don't mind mandatory lecture, but I learn better re-watching the material than hearing it one time), the fact that you don't really get to dissect the donor body, or that the curriculum is still being developed. When I spoke to students it seemed that while for the most part it is quite rigorous, there are still some segments that they are sorting out (such as the Musculoskeletal system which was only recently added). When I spoke to someone who used to work at Feinstein who later left for a better research hospital in NYC, he said that the funding was heavily dependent on favoritism of the institution leaders who were rather moody. I'm still considering an MD/PhD so maybe that's more important to me than other applicants in this threat, but still something to consider. Lastly, while they spent about an hour on financial aid, it seems that it's dwindling down with less and less funds each year. I'd rather go to an established state school where I know how much I'm paying and take my chances there. Good luck to everyone on this thread though. I hope y'all get into your dream schools!
To those who have interviewed and not heard back: do you know if there is any benefit to sending an update letter? Has anyone done so?
Yup it will be April 2/3rdIs there a second look day? I'm just trying to figure out if we have to wait for the END of March for decisions, or if we'll get them before then.