2015-2016 Yale University Application Thread

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Why are we all trying to log in? Wouldn't we get an email if we receive an II?

From a logical perspective, absolutely. From a neurotic SDN premed perspective, we all want to furiously refresh the portal as much as possible in the vain hope of intercepting some communications faster than the emails can be sent out.
 
does anyone know how many people get interviewed and admitted?
 
2014/2015 Cycle:

4374 Applied (completed secondaries)
745 Interviewed
284 Accepted
104 Matriculated

Taken from USNWR
Wow, I always heard that schools accept 2-3 times what they need.... but I had no idea this held true even all the way at the top...
1) can anyone confirm this is accurate?
2) if so, can anyone tell me whether this is just yale, or for all the schools we usually consider "top tier"?
 
Wow, I always heard that schools accept 2-3 times what they need.... but I had no idea this held true even all the way at the top...
1) can anyone confirm this is accurate?
2) if so, can anyone tell me whether this is just yale, or for all the schools we usually consider "top tier"?
I can't "confirm" anything but I do remember someone ( @LizzyM perhaps?) saying that top tier schools end up with a significant offers:seats ratio because the students they offer are the types of students likely to have multiple desirable acceptances (e.g. from other top tiers)
 
I can't "confirm" anything but I do remember someone ( @LizzyM perhaps?) saying that top tier schools end up with a significant offers:seats ratio because the students they offer are the types of students likely to have multiple desirable acceptances (e.g. from other top tiers)
Ahhhhh, okay. Thanks. I didn't mean "confirm" negatively, just to clarify. I don't doubt the information, I was just wondering if anyone else has heard similar numbers for top tier schools. Sorry about that if it came off as though I was accusing the information of being spurious.
 
congrats to all of you with the recent II! What was the earliest day available for you guys?
 
@couts It is generally not allowed to post privileged information from a paid subscription source on a public forum such as this. Most forums do not allow it
 
Interview impressions from little old me! (Since no one else seems to be doing it...) Attended interview last week.

Standard setup – 2 interviews, open-file, faculty/faculty or faculty/student. We were told the interviews are 30 min each, but that's BS. Everyone spoke to their interviewers for more than that, to the extent that some people had to wait for 10+ min before the interviewer was done with the other student. 12 people on my day, very top-heavy undergraduate college representation but good mix of URMs. You can have morning/morning (rare) or morning/afternoon or afternoon/afternoon for your interviews. Completely random assignments (we were told this very clearly that they are random) and random times, if you have them all on one side of the day you'll have downtime but if not then you'll be occupied most of the time.

Short morning session with Dean (Director?) Silverman, WHO IS THE BEST ADMISSIONS DEAN YOU'LL MEET. Everybody can LITERALLY go home, lights out, show's over, stop trying to be better than the awesome sauce that is Richard Silverman. If you've never had an accomplished but derpy grandpa, you'll see one in Silverman. He hands out your folders, comments on every single interviewer's style and tells random jokes and stories throughout. Informal Q&A session with him is the highlight of the day. People go on their morning interviews, then back for a fin aid session with lunch. FA was ok, the woman went through more of the application process than the actual breakdown of money being given out. Unit loan is ~28k for 2016-2017, goes up 1000 every year, all need-based. No parental contributions if income <$100k, couldn't be better than that. Lunch was basic sandwich, cookie, chips, water. Then faculty Q&A with some pretty cool person (we had a chair of a big dept) who sells Yale and answers questions. Then tour, afternoon interviews, bye bye.

Like I always say, interviews vary vastly. Giving you my experience won't do you any good unless you are the same exact person as me. So I'll spare you. They were standard, no surprises, know your app, answer the questions, be a person, move on.

Students were very very enthusiastic. Everyone's in love with Yale, the curriculum is fine, very self-directed, Yale values people who will know how to take advantage of the Yale System to do the best they can for medicine, don't come here if you just want to be in private practice (straight quote from faculty/Silverman). 50% students take a 5th year for funded research, dual degrees, extra electives. You could even use the tuition-free year to take random classes all around Yale and structure your own "curriculum" if you have interests that are not fit for a full degree or research. People are collaborative, no grades, no attendance, no tests, no nothing, no AOA, 70% honors in clerkships, 1.5 years of research/electives etc. etc. it's a little ridiculous if you think about it LOL. Real talk – you either thrive on your own motivation and use Yale's resources when you need help or you dig your own grave nice and slowly and wallow in the unstructured environment like a headless salmon finding its way home up the mountain to reproduce.

It's roughly a 40% acceptance rate post-interview, they give out detailed admissions stats as well as where graduates went for residency and what their thesis topics were. Huge medical center/university at your disposal, lots of research funding, community service in New Haven, very flexible to tailor med school for what you envision it to be and want your education to be about. No BS busy work at all, no one shuts up about how great Yale is. Small class size great for faculty relationships (like popping into the office of the neuro chair if you feel like it kind of interaction). Potential downside I'm thinking is that incest would be impossible so if you're planning on doing that then forget it lololol

I'm sold. Can't say it's my top choice since I haven't visited many places yet, but it's well up on the top of my list and will likely stay there.

P.S. #Silverman4Prez
 
Interview impressions from little old me! (Since no one else seems to be doing it...) Attended interview last week.

Standard setup – 2 interviews, open-file, faculty/faculty or faculty/student. We were told the interviews are 30 min each, but that's BS. Everyone spoke to their interviewers for more than that, to the extent that some people had to wait for 10+ min before the interviewer was done with the other student. 12 people on my day, very top-heavy undergraduate college representation but good mix of URMs. You can have morning/morning (rare) or morning/afternoon or afternoon/afternoon for your interviews. Completely random assignments (we were told this very clearly that they are random) and random times, if you have them all on one side of the day you'll have downtime but if not then you'll be occupied most of the time.

Short morning session with Dean (Director?) Silverman, WHO IS THE BEST ADMISSIONS DEAN YOU'LL MEET. Everybody can LITERALLY go home, lights out, show's over, stop trying to be better than the awesome sauce that is Richard Silverman. If you've never had an accomplished but derpy grandpa, you'll see one in Silverman. He hands out your folders, comments on every single interviewer's style and tells random jokes and stories throughout. Informal Q&A session with him is the highlight of the day. People go on their morning interviews, then back for a fin aid session with lunch. FA was ok, the woman went through more of the application process than the actual breakdown of money being given out. Unit loan is ~28k for 2016-2017, goes up 1000 every year, all need-based. No parental contributions if income <$100k, couldn't be better than that. Lunch was basic sandwich, cookie, chips, water. Then faculty Q&A with some pretty cool person (we had a chair of a big dept) who sells Yale and answers questions. Then tour, afternoon interviews, bye bye.

Like I always say, interviews vary vastly. Giving you my experience won't do you any good unless you are the same exact person as me. So I'll spare you. They were standard, no surprises, know your app, answer the questions, be a person, move on.

Students were very very enthusiastic. Everyone's in love with Yale, the curriculum is fine, very self-directed, Yale values people who will know how to take advantage of the Yale System to do the best they can for medicine, don't come here if you just want to be in private practice (straight quote from faculty/Silverman). 50% students take a 5th year for funded research, dual degrees, extra electives. You could even use the tuition-free year to take random classes all around Yale and structure your own "curriculum" if you have interests that are not fit for a full degree or research. People are collaborative, no grades, no attendance, no tests, no nothing, no AOA, 70% honors in clerkships, 1.5 years of research/electives etc. etc. it's a little ridiculous if you think about it LOL. Real talk – you either thrive on your own motivation and use Yale's resources when you need help or you dig your own grave nice and slowly and wallow in the unstructured environment like a headless salmon finding its way home up the mountain to reproduce.

It's roughly a 40% acceptance rate post-interview, they give out detailed admissions stats as well as where graduates went for residency and what their thesis topics were. Huge medical center/university at your disposal, lots of research funding, community service in New Haven, very flexible to tailor med school for what you envision it to be and want your education to be about. No BS busy work at all, no one shuts up about how great Yale is. Small class size great for faculty relationships (like popping into the office of the neuro chair if you feel like it kind of interaction). Potential downside I'm thinking is that incest would be impossible so if you're planning on doing that then forget it lololol

I'm sold. Can't say it's my top choice since I haven't visited many places yet, but it's well up on the top of my list and will likely stay there.

P.S. #Silverman4Prez

Great review. Glad you enjoyed Yale. Welcome to the Mr.Silverman Fan Club.

Allow me to clarify one thing--it's relevant to gauge the level of structure provided by Yale System.

It's true that there are no grades and no ranking, but THERE WILL BE TESTS.

As a YSM student, you will have to pass a qualifier at the end of every master course, which happens every 1.5 months or so. You would be asked to take it at home at any random 4 hours of your choice in the span of a week through laptop or mobile devices. It's pretty intense for many, but I would say that the stress has been mostly self-inflicted: med students are often overachievers and perfectionists. Tests are taken anonymously using randomly assigned secret code that is not known to the faculty or the administration. As long as you pass, no one will know how you did.

Other tests are available for self-assessment and for teaching purposes:
Short quiz (5-7 question) on most weeks reflecting the content of the past week.
Team based learning sessions have self and team readiness assessments at the beginning of every class. (Histology and some cell biology are taught in TBL format)
Midterm self assessment test.
 
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Twas complete july 17th and JUST got my II Monday. Really, this idea that they go in order of received is really not true, in my opinion from personal experience.

thank you for posting that -- that is good to hear 🙂
 
does Yale do student hosting?
Yes. There is a list somewhere when you get an II and you can always just find someone else through those students even if they themselves are not able to host you
 
Yes. There is a list somewhere when you get an II and you can always just find someone else through those students even if they themselves are not able to host you
I <3 avgn
 
The email says the interview day will end by 5:30 PM - for those who have already interviewed, was this accurate? Did you get out much earlier?
 
The email says the interview day will end by 5:30 PM - for those who have already interviewed, was this accurate? Did you get out much earlier?
I was done at 2:45 but I had 2 morning interviews so that was more of an exception
 
How many people does Yale interview? Feeling nervous since I haven't heard back yet
 
Any feedback on hotels that y'all stayed at for the interview? I'm currently scheduled for the Premiere hotel and stories of bed begs are scaring me...
 
Any feedback on hotels that y'all stayed at for the interview? I'm currently scheduled for the Premiere hotel and stories of bed begs are scaring me...
I stayed at Premiere and didn't have any problems. It wasn't anything great but it got the job done for a night of sleep. Also comes with dinner and bfast.
 
I have an interview here coming up and I'm super scared for it! Anyone who had an interview here already want to shed some light on their experience? (Thanks @avgn for your write-up!)
 
I have an interview here coming up and I'm super scared for it! Anyone who had an interview here already want to shed some light on their experience? (Thanks @avgn for your write-up!)
Very relaxed interviews to be honest, probably my most chill set of interviews for a school so far. People are really excited about Yale in general and it seems like a great place to be. The med center is very dense, don't have to go that far to get anywhere. The educational facilities were fine, wish they were shinier and newer like other places. I get that Yale is old and everything but the thing is that most of the teaching rooms were old in a not-Ivy sort of way (i.e. very tired, 1960s designs, etc). A small point, but it never hurts to study in an inspiring space
 
image.jpeg
 
This is the Med library, the other libraries may even be a little nicer. They are definitely bigger. Google sterling library at Yale, it's a favorite of mine. And there's always the brain room to study in too if you're into that sort of thing.

Agreed the classrooms are not like this but they aren't bad.
 
Literally as I was posting above I thought "someone's going to mention to the library" and yes agreed, the library was historic in a pleasing way. the parts of Harkness we saw, tho, def weren't.
Yeah harkness isn't the best. Would def recommend living somewhere else if you come here. Community is nice in the dorms but there are much better places to live around the same area.
 
Literally as I was posting above I thought "someone's going to mention to the library" and yes agreed, the library was historic in a pleasing way. the parts of Harkness we saw, tho, def weren't.
Then don't study in Harkness? Most of it is dorms and offices, not exactly the place to study so I don't get why not liking Harkness detracts from liking YSM
Unless by Harkness you mean the rest of the main med school building (technically Sterling Hall of Medicine)?
 
Does anyone know if Yale interviews international students separately? Trying to determine if all hope is lost 😛
 
Does anyone know if Yale interviews international students separately? Trying to determine if all hope is lost 😛
last year they sent out interview invitations into January, so not all hope is lost. Yale is slower than a lot of schools b/c of the non-rolling admissions. no idea about international students though.
 
Does anyone know if Yale interviews international students separately? Trying to determine if all hope is lost 😛
Yup, second what others are saying. Yale is slower than most because of their non-rolling. They even tell you that you can pick any date you want and it has no effect on your application.
 
can someone help clarify about the "Yale system"? Is it so loose in structure that students don't know what to do? It's the only thing that concerns me about this program.
 
can someone help clarify about the "Yale system"? Is it so loose in structure that students don't know what to do? It's the only thing that concerns me about this program.
I don't remember the link, but on their website there is a very thorough link that goes through it.
 
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