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TheDataKing

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Please tag a pre-allo moderator when the secondary prompt is posted.

Good luck to everyone applying!

Interview Feedback: University of Florida

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1. If you are not a full-time student during this application cycle, in particular at any time between September 2020 and May 2021, please detail your current and planned activities below. (250-500 words)

2A. (500 Words) The medical profession is frequently described as being both a science and an art. One could summarize this by saying that patients must “be well cared for” (science) but they must also “feel well cared for” (art). We work to teach our students not only the scientific principles of medicine, but also the core values of medicine, often called “professionalism”. Toward this end we keep patients at the center of our education and often reflect on their stories with our students.
  • The exciting advances in our understanding of the biological basis for disease have led to the emergence of a host of targeted therapies and amazing technologies improving the duration and quality of our patients’ lives. The better a physician knows his/her patient, the better decisions they will make together as they approach important healthcare related questions. This so-called shared decision-making model is one key feature of patient centered care. Practicing the art of medicine in this way yields a physician patient relationship (PPR) that is both therapeutic and mutually enriching. However, many of these same technologies have the unintended consequence of separating us from our patients, both literally and figuratively. In addition, the industrialization of medicine and use of electronic health records have led to a decrease in the time physicians spend with their patients further eroding the strength of the PPR.

    At the UFCOM, we have many strategies to equip our students to preserve their own humanity and that of their patients. One of the most important is the ability to make connections with and get to know their patients. Frequently such connections are the first time students taste the joy of medical practice. A second grows from cultivating a grateful heart by attending to the many blessings in our lives rather than focusing on what is wrong. There is now a strong scientific basis for the importance of gratitude (https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/how_gratitude_changes_you_and_your_brain) but the ancients knew this from experience. For example, when mounting a legal defense for a friend, Cicero observed, “while I wish to be adorned with every virtue, yet there is nothing which I can esteem more highly than the being and appearing grateful. For this one virtue is not only the greatest, but is also the parent of all the other virtues.” A third is dedicated time to reflect individually and with colleagues upon one’s developing understanding of the profession.

    Here are two such reflective essays from UFCOM students during their third year internal medicine clerkship which you should read carefully. One student sees each connection to a patient as like the individual brush strokes of an artist and the other sees gratitude in a patient with an incurable illness and is moved to gratitude in her own life. Reflect on both essays and then choose one and describe how the student grew from the experience. Then explain what you learned as a result of your reflection and how the lesson(s) will influence your future patient physician relationships.
    Edit: https://apply.med.ufl.edu/applicant/application/ufcom_essays_2021.pdf
2B. (500 words)The profession of medicine has always had an explicit contract with society about our expertise and competence but it also includes an important affirmation. Namely, that we will subordinate self-interest to patient interest when the needs of our patients require us to do so. This does not mean we do not take care of ourselves and one another, but it does mean we willingly take on risks to ourselves that many others would not. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought this commitment to light as many medical professionals are laboring on the front lines caring for the sick despite the potential dangers. When we consider medical practice and hence, medical education, one could ask what sorts of virtues or character traits equip young medical professionals for such a noble calling. Many come to mind including courage, compassion, intellectual honesty and integrity. But recently attention has been given to the ability to stay with a task or course even when one is tired, discouraged and the work is daunting and laborious. Terms such as “resilience”, “endurance”, “perseverance”, “determination” or “grit” describe this character trait. Dr. Angela Duckworth has explored this in detail in her book “Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance” (Angela Duckworth).

However, great concern has been raised by the 2018 book, The Coddling of the American Mind (The Coddling of the American Mind). In it, Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff, argue that modern trends in parenting, higher education and society are undermining development of these traits making them rarer and hence all the more important as we choose the future physicians for our society.

Below are a series of quotes related to this subject. Please read them, reflect on them and tell us about the places in your own life you have shown grit and perseverance.

“Do the things that interest you and do them with all your heart. Don't be concerned about whether people are watching you or criticizing you. The chances are that they aren't paying any attention to you. It's your attention to yourself that is so stultifying. But you have to disregard yourself as completely as possible. If you fail the first time then you'll just have to try harder the second time. After all, there's no real reason why you should fail. Just stop thinking about yourself.” -Eleanor Roosevelt, You Learn by Living: Eleven Keys for a More Fulfilling Life

“As soon as possible, experts hungrily seek feedback on how they did. Necessarily, much of that feedback is negative. This means that experts are more interested in what they did wrong—so they can fix it—than what they did right. The active processing of this feedback is as essential as its immediacy.” -Angela Duckworth, Grit

“...grit grows as we figure out our life philosophy, learn to dust ourselves off after rejection and disappointment, and learn to tell the difference between low-level goals that should be abandoned quickly and higher-level goals that demand more tenacity. The maturation story is that we develop the capacity for long-term passion and perseverance as we get older.” -Angela Duckworth, Grit: Passion, Perseverance, and the Science of Success


3. Optional: If you think there is any additional information that would help the admissions committee in its review of your application, including any disruptions in your academic/volunteer/work/personal life related to COVID-19, please use the space below. (750 words)

@TheDataKing
 
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How many examples are you guys going to use for 2B?
 
How are you guys incorporating the reflection of the quotes in 2B? Like address the quotes first then go into the times where you showed resilience/grit or spread it throughout?
 
That meme where the guy is putting on clown makeup comes to mind....when I think about the hours I poured my soul into last year's prompts...this is why procrastination can be a good thing sometimes...
 
That meme where the guy is putting on clown makeup comes to mind....when I think about the hours I poured my soul into last year's prompts...this is why procrastination can be a good thing sometimes...
I'm gonna be honest, since I haven't gotten the secondary yet myself, I just briefly glanced over the prompts posted above and didn't read them fully. Your comment is what made me realize the prompts have changed since previous years, lol. Procrastination for the win.
 
I'm gonna be honest, since I haven't gotten the secondary yet myself, I just briefly glanced over the prompts posted above and didn't read them fully. Your comment is what made me realize the prompts have changed since previous years, lol. Procrastination for the win.
I guess I don't regret it though, it actually made me reflect on one of the deepest moments I've had shadowing that I've never talked or written about, so it was actually good. UF definitely takes the cake in providing inspirational prompts.
 
I guess I don't regret it though, it actually made me reflect on one of the deepest moments I've had shadowing that I've never talked or written about, so it was actually good. UF definitely takes the cake in providing inspirational prompts.
definitely not a bad thing! and yes, I love that they go with these deeper prompts rather than your typical Why Us or diversity essays
 
how long did it take to receive the secondary? Just submitted yesterday to all my FL schools so trying to calm my nerves haha
 
where can we find the reflections for 2A? Can someone post them?
I am currently awaiting a secondary
 
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Just to be clear, when they say reflect, they want us to discuss our reflection, right? So for 2B, we would discuss our reflection and then go into a few times in our lives we showed grit?
 
following. & thank god I didn't prewrite for UF lol
have many people gotten secondaries from here??
 
Anyone else having difficulty uploading their picture?
 
Yeah, I just gave up and emailed them asking if I could send it through an email or something.
Yeah, I looked through old threads and could not find an answer either. I just did the same thing as you.
 
Are you guys writing your entire answer for 2A based on only one of the reflections?
 
Are you guys writing your entire answer for 2A based on only one of the reflections?
Yeah I only did one. However, the wording did kind of make it seem like I was supposed to reflect on both but only describe one student.
 
Yeah I only did one. However, the wording did kind of make it seem like I was supposed to reflect on both but only describe one student.
Yea that's what I'm confused by. I'm not sure if they want to write out our initial reflection of both of them
 
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How long did it take you guys to recieve a secondary after you submitted your primary? I submitted the primary on 7/16 to UF (already verified)(after getting my MCAT scores). I've checked my spam and isn't there either.
 
How long did it take you guys to recieve a secondary after you submitted your primary? I submitted the primary on 7/16 (after getting my MCAT scores). I've checked my spam and isn't there either.
i submitted my primary on may 28th and still haven't gotten one lol
 
i submitted my primary on may 28th and still haven't gotten one lol
Haha edited my OP but i meant my app was sent to UF on 7/16; I was already verified, just waiting on my MCAT score. I'm IS if that helps with anything and definitely do not think I could have gotten screened out lol.
 
I submitted 7/15 after being verified, am IS and haven't received a secondary :/ maybe they are just taking longer this year?
 
Just emailed them about the photo. They are working on it and will not be moving forward with the application process until it is “fixed for all affected”
 
Is VITA supposed to be in place of the normal interview or is it supposed to be part of the secondary?
Not sure, AAMC just released the list of schools using VITA, but note that is up to the schools discretion how they will use it. I haven't seen any info from UF's end about how they will use it. Ik UF really likes seeing its applicants in-person so maybe it will use VITA more of a supplemental information in addition to its in person interview, but this is just a guess from my end.
 
Not sure, AAMC just released the list of schools using VITA, but note that is up to the schools discretion how they will use it. I haven't seen any info from UF's end about how they will use it. Ik UF really likes seeing its applicants in-person so maybe it will use VITA more of a supplemental information in addition to its in person interview, but this is just a guess from my end.
can you link the list? jk i finally found it lol Medical Schools Participating in the AAMC Video Interview Tool for Admissions
 
Is VITA supposed to be in place of the normal interview or is it supposed to be part of the secondary?
AAMC said it is supplemental, think of it as a tertiary step between your secondary and interview invite. If they like what they see they will invite you to interview
 
@ any reapplicants out there:
Is our UF ID supposed to be unchanged? I'm still waiting on login info from the Graduate & Professional Admission to view my UF ID, but my secondary app is already completed and I was wondering if I can just go ahead and use last year's ID to submit
 
IS received, but I was wondering how many activities are you guys putting for the professional app?

edit: one more question, I know for USF residency it had us declare ourselves as independents, I'm assuming the same for UF if it says graduate and professional students?
 
So are you guys listing yourself as dependent or independent?
 
In their email, they mentioned the photo issue, are you guys going to wait for them to fix it or submit now?
 
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