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- Medical Student
Gosh I'd enjoy the Super Bowl so much more if
1. The Seahawks were in it
and/or
2. I knew where in the US I'm going to be living next year
:'(
Any Broncos or Panthers fans here?
Why didn't you email or submit through the schools' portals?Just mailed out 6 LOIs
starting to become close with these post office ladies
Received my first acceptance at AZCOM! So excited!
Received my first acceptance at AZCOM! So excited!
38y.o., non trad (2 kids, 1 cat), I'm Canadian* so I'm considered international student for USA - meaning no Federal loans for me. Will be looking into some private loans. $320K is debt is no joke, but I'm not afraid at all. Really looking forward to start of the M1 year.
507 mcat (took exam in September, 22nd, 2015), was complete late in November, thought I stand no chance, but still applied.
*Note: immigrated to Canada in 2009 at age 31, started life from scratch, decided to go medicine, had to study and work at the same time. It was really, really hard, to the point that I started questioning myself and all the decisions I made (in 2012 my father died), it was a tough time, but I guess it all was worth it.
If an old immigrant with kids can do it - anyone can! Never give up and pursue your goals! Good luck to everyone still on the road.
Why didn't you email or submit through the schools' portals?
Gotcha. I seem to remember from the experts - can't remember which Goro, LizzyM, etc - but they said that if the school had a preferred method, you should stick to that. Otherwise it can be seen as annoying or not following directions. I did the same thing with letters last year and I can't say it hurt or helped, so if it bares fruit for you, let us know which schools! GL!I do that too!
I have sent hand-signed letters just for visibility because there is no guarantee that they are going to see them if you just upload it to the portal or email it in
Ugh, I did that beast a week or so ago. I'm worried because 1/4 ~ to a 1/3 ~ of our income is mine and it's misleading because it won't be there come April, thus completely inaccurate for financial aid purposes of the 16' year. We'll have to do change of circumstances, but it still sucks.
If at one point you had a bunch of alerts and didn't click the one for this thread, it will stop alerting you that there are new messages, because you missed one alert. It has happened to me a few times. If you go to the page with all your watched threads you can see if you accidentally missed a notification. Now that you came on here it should start notifying you again.Hey first time back here in a long time because I stopped getting the popup notification that there is a new post... Anyone know why the little red number showing an alert doesn't always appear? I still have this thread marked as watched...
Or a very thin pancake truck.I'm a little tired of how emotionally exhausting this process is
Should I just open a taco truck instead?
OR A TRUCK SPECIALIZING IN ICE CREAM SANDWICHES
Here is what you do.
hey man on your LOI what do you generally write? I have to sent out a couple of them as well.Just mailed out 6 LOIs
starting to become close with these post office ladies
hey man on your LOI what do you generally write? I have to sent out a couple of them as well.
Not to downplay scribing, but that seems like an underutilization of your skills... I'm honesty not sure what I should do either though.any recommendations on where to work in a reapplicant year?
Specs: undergrad BME, graduate BME, graduate MSBS. I've done a lot of work in biomechanics and therapy, should I just be a research coordinator? I was thinking about full-time scribing, but I don't know if I would be able to support myself on that
Were you not working this year?any recommendations on where to work in a reapplicant year?
Specs: undergrad BME, graduate BME, graduate MSBS. I've done a lot of work in biomechanics and therapy, should I just be a research coordinator? I was thinking about full-time scribing, but I don't know if I would be able to support myself on that
Not to downplay scribing, but that seems like an underutilization of your skills... I'm honesty not sure what I should do either though.
Were you not working this year?
Yeah - I'm afraid that an adcom would look at it in a negative way
I am finishing an SMP and have been doing research. I was working up until this program started last June, doing global health work - not high level policy, actually working on health education and nutrition programs in the developing world, but I don't know if that's "clinical enough"
I can't imagine scribing being looked at negatively. Neutrally, maybe, in the sense that it's not going to make or break your application. But I think it's generally considered a positive learning experience. I scribed for a year in the ED at a level 1 trauma center and learned a ton. With that said, it's definitely grunt work a lot of the time and it can be pretty low-paying. I could basically only handle it for a year before I moved on to a much cushier job (better hours, better pay) in clinical research.Yeah - I'm afraid that an adcom would look at it in a negative way
I can't imagine scribing being looked at negatively. Neutrally, maybe, in the sense that it's not going to make or break your application. But I think it's generally considered a positive learning experience. I scribed for a year in the ED at a level 1 trauma center and learned a ton. With that said, it's definitely grunt work a lot of the time and it can be pretty low-paying. I could basically only handle it for a year before I moved on to a much cushier job (better hours, better pay) in clinical research.
you can continue doing something in the field that you're at right now (if it pays) and scribe part time to get clinical experience. Or if you need a full time job and you really enjoy research apply to different research institutions like memorial sloan kettering, NYU, weill cornell (assuming you're in the NYC area) but where ever you are you can find research positions. you can even post ads on craigslist to tutor general sciences.
I can't imagine scribing being looked at negatively. Neutrally, maybe, in the sense that it's not going to make or break your application. But I think it's generally considered a positive learning experience. I scribed for a year in the ED at a level 1 trauma center and learned a ton. With that said, it's definitely grunt work a lot of the time and it can be pretty low-paying. I could basically only handle it for a year before I moved on to a much cushier job (better hours, better pay) in clinical research.
No joke. I will be ending my scribe experience on my third year evaluation. It gets old because, at least for me, I've been yearning to get more hands on. Although, I will say, you see something new everyday. Today we had a patient that the neurologist thought had neuromyelitis optica (never heard of this in my life), but turned out to be a rapidly progressing MS. Cool stuff (but sad for the patient obviously...)
however, the taco truck is still on the table.
So I interviewed at one of my top choices last week and was totally blown away by my visit. The school just felt like the right place for me. At the end of the day the dean of admissions pulled me into his office and told me he thought I would be a good fit, thanked me for coming to visit, and said he hoped he had sufficiently sold me on the school. I know my 1 on 1 interview went quite well but I do not know how my other panel interview went (the dean said he hadn't gotten feedback from the panel).
I might get an answer next week. I have my fingers crossed so hard for this one. I think it might be the one! I'm just hoping the dean didn't get my hopes up... I can't handle more heartbreak in this process, hah.
I hope it will work out for you 🙂So I interviewed at one of my top choices last week and was totally blown away by my visit. The school just felt like the right place for me. At the end of the day the dean of admissions pulled me into his office and told me he thought I would be a good fit, thanked me for coming to visit, and said he hoped he had sufficiently sold me on the school. I know my 1 on 1 interview went quite well but I do not know how my other panel interview went (the dean said he hadn't gotten feedback from the panel).
I might get an answer next week. I have my fingers crossed so hard for this one. I think it might be the one! I'm just hoping the dean didn't get my hopes up... I can't handle more heartbreak in this process, hah.
So I interviewed at one of my top choices last week and was totally blown away by my visit. The school just felt like the right place for me. At the end of the day the dean of admissions pulled me into his office and told me he thought I would be a good fit, thanked me for coming to visit, and said he hoped he had sufficiently sold me on the school. I know my 1 on 1 interview went quite well but I do not know how my other panel interview went (the dean said he hadn't gotten feedback from the panel).
I might get an answer next week. I have my fingers crossed so hard for this one. I think it might be the one! I'm just hoping the dean didn't get my hopes up... I can't handle more heartbreak in this process, hah.
FAFSA processed in 24 hours. Very impressive. Unlike med school admissions offices.
FAFSA processed in 24 hours. Very impressive. Unlike med school admissions offices.