Hi Everyone! I'm a 2019-2020 applicant who applied once and was accepted by Keck for delayed matriculation into the class ya'll are applying for now (MD c/o 2025). I will be starting med school at Keck in August of 2021, so hopefully I'll see some of you next year! If anyone has specific questions, please feel free to message me privately.
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My biggest pieces of advice for the secondary are as follows:
- BE GENUINE AND HONEST, BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY YOURSELF! These secondary questions are structured such that they give adcomm insight into how you think and who you are as a PERSON, not a pre-med student. Dean Arias is so refreshingly aware of how try hard pre-meds are and she conveys this very strongly during the opening conversation you have with her on interview day. Try your best not to be a hard pre-med and just be genuine and talk about yourself like you would talk to a friend if they asked you these questions (obviously with formal writing and correct punctuation and grammar).
- FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS. If the prompts say 3-5 sentences, use 3-5 sentences to answer the question. Their secondary app portal does not strictly limit character counts or anything (it will not cut off your responses like other portals do if you go over), but Dean Arias is a huge proponent of following directions lol. You'll see what I'm talking about on the interview day. She specifically says to not send thank you emails or update letters, so I imagine that she would get pretty peeved when people don't follow specifically laid out instructions.
- TURN IT IN ASAP!!! Keck has the fastest turn around time I've experienced in terms of how long it takes them to get back to you and tell you whether you've been invited to interview or not. It all turned out for the best in retrospect, but I made the mistake last year of turning my app in later than normal. I turned my secondary for Keck in mid-September and they gave me an interview invitation 4 days later. However, the only days that were available were for the end of January. When I looked back at last year's Keck SDN thread recently, I realized that all the applicants who interviewed past mid-January were placed on the alternate list. Basically, my theory is that by mid-January, they had already over accepted for the class I was applying for, even though they were still conducting interviews. I also think they had meant to accept a lot of us, but people weren't letting go of their spots because of COVID, which is why they have accepted quite a few of us from last cycle for the Keck MD c/o 2025. I know of at least 4 other people who were given this offer. Part of me wonders if I had submitted my secondary app earlier and interviewed earlier, whether I would have been accepted for the class I applied for, but it all worked out so I'm not complaining. I would just strongly suggest you turn in the secondary ASAP.
For those of you who have advanced to the interview stage: You will have two, one hour, one-on-one traditional interviews: one faculty and one student interviewer. The interview is closed file. Your interviewers will know nothing about you aside from your name and what you look like from your picture. What's nice though is that they try to pair you up with interviewers who have similar interests to you or come from a similar background, based on your application. Obviously they start off with the "tell me about yourself" or "tell me about your path to medicine", but after that the conversation pretty much flows naturally. They do have required questions they have to ask you during the interview, but I was honestly not surprised by any of the questions they threw at me and had thought about an answer to all of the questions I was asked while I was prepping for this interview. After your interview, your interviewers will write a one page reflection on their interview experience with you which will be submitted to adcomm and then your entire file will be reviewed with this feedback for a final decision. They got back to me two weeks after I interviewed.
Tips for Prepping for the Interview:
- CHECK THE SDN KECK INTERVIEW FEEDBACK FOR QUESTIONS THAT HAVE BEEN ASKED IN THE PAST! The interview feedback for Keck on SDN was SO accurate. I practiced what I would say for as many of the questions on this page that I could. I practiced saying them out loud and having a general idea of what I would say for each question without totally memorizing word-for-word what I would say. As a result, I was prepared for EVERY SINGLE QUESTION I was asked during my actual interview. Not being surprised by any of the questions I was asked definitely reduced some of my stress during the interview.
- PRACTICE SAYING YOUR RESPONSE TO "TELL ME ABOUT YOURSELF" OUT LOUD, MULTIPLE TIMES! Personally, my story is long and I needed to be more concise so that I wasn't rambling and potentially boring the interviewer with the long spiel about myself so writing down what I wanted to say and memorizing the points I wanted to hit for this question really helped me do well on this initial question.
- DON'T MEMORIZE YOUR INTERVIEW RESPONSES! While you want to come across as polished and put together, Dean Arias specifically said that the most chilling feedback she could get from an interviewer is "rehearsed responses". Although you need to practice saying things out loud for conciseness and clarity, you should NOT memorize any response word-for-word and the delivery should come across well-spoken but also very natural.
Post Interview:
- DON'T SEND A THANK YOU EMAIL OR UPDATE LETTER. Seriously, Dean Arias hates these and specifically instructs you not to do it.
- On or after 4/30, you can send a waitlist letter of intent, which I did and that was the only communication I had with them after the interview. What's nice is that Keck screens so hard for their interviews that, unless you did extremely poorly in the interview, you will either be accepted or placed on the waitlist post-interview. Very rarely do they reject you post-interview without putting you on the waitlist first. After you're on the waitlist, it's not ranked and I'm not sure how they select people from it, but I know your interview plays a huge part in the decision to either accept you or reject you post-interview.
Best of luck to everyone! I hope some of you found this helpful! Please feel free to message me for more specific questions. I don't claim to be an expert or anything, but I am more than happy to share my experience and help you out in any way I can!