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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 Virginia

Secondary Prompts 2020-2021:

Why are you interested in attending the University of Virginia School of Medicine? What factors will be most important to you in choosing a medical school?
----
How will you contribute to the diversity of your medical school class and the University of Virginia School of Medicine?
----
Describe a situation which you found challenging. How did you manage it?

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Hey all, M4 here. Willing to answer questions and such!

Thanks for offering!

1. In a given week, how many times are you required to attend events (not counting lectures)? With that, I was assuming that lecture attendance is not mandatory, and that they are recorded and posted. Is that the case?

2. Not sure if you are from the area or not, but could you give a comparison to how big Charlottesville is / feels? Some things I've read online said it feels like a really small community, and others not so much. Do you have a lot of friends from outside the medical school? What are the major neighborhoods like and where do people live?

3. Any thoughts on the facilities for the school (preclinical) or affiliated hospitals?

4. In your rotations, how much time do you find yourself dedicating to scutwork for the ancillary staff, compared to actually learning with the attendings? Do you take shelf exams at the end of each rotation or at the end of the year?

5. Research - do most students do bench research, clinical research, or none? Is there a competitive culture around research?

6. Anything you think would be helpful!
 
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2. Charlottesville is very homey!! Everyone is nice and sweet. The medical center is gorgeous and easy to navigate. The best part is either the views from the interstate or the food options right across the street from the campus.

I went to Mary Baldwin Uni in Staunton, Virginia but I volunteered at UVA in the peds unit for about a year.

Good Luck this cycle!!!!
 
Thanks for offering!

1. In a given week, how many times are you required to attend events (not counting lectures)? With that, I was assuming that lecture attendance is not mandatory, and that they are recorded and posted. Is that the case?

2. Not sure if you are from the area or not, but could you give a comparison to how big Charlottesville is / feels? Some things I've read online said it feels like a really small community, and others not so much. Do you have a lot of friends from outside the medical school? What are the major neighborhoods like and where do people live?

3. Any thoughts on the facilities for the school (preclinical) or affiliated hospitals?

4. In your rotations, how much time do you find yourself dedicating to scutwork for the ancillary staff, compared to actually learning with the attendings? Do you take shelf exams at the end of each rotation or at the end of the year?

5. Research - do most students do bench research, clinical research, or none? Is there a competitive culture around research?

6. Anything you think would be helpful!

1. Lectures are usually recorded and can be watched from home, but there are required events, generally 3-5 per week (team based learning sessions, patient presentations, other group activities, clinical development course, lectures on social issues in medicine).

2. Cville is nice. It has the amenities of a bigger place but feels a bit smaller. Tons of good places to eat. It does feel small-ish, but not tiny. I have a few friends outside the med school - lots of people live either along Emmett/29, Jefferson park avenue, or main street near the hospital, all nice areas.

3. preclinical facilities are very nice. Great lecture and study space. The simulation center is amazing, I just wish we used it more (you get in there more for third year). Health sciences library could maybe use an expansion but it serves its purpose well (although it often gets infiltrated by undergrads which can be frustrating for us sometimes especially when we're taking summative tests).

4. Rotations are very resident and attending dependent - some attendings would take us aside directly and teach us while others were more hands off. I will say, learning to put up with scut in general will serve you well as it's generally a key to good clinical evals on core rotations at the majority of med schools (seriously, your residents will love you and sing your praises in evals if you're always available and demonstrate that you're willing to try and make their lives easier), and a lot of residency will be dedicated to it. But, I think the residents/attendings here do a good job of working teaching in wherever they can. There are often didactic lectures as part of core rotations which are usually awesome and contain a lot of good material. Shelfs are done at the end of each rotation, so you do generally take it when it's fresh in your mind.

5. The research culture is pretty chill, the opportunities are available in abundance. My classmate and I have collaborated on several clinical papers and have been able to be very productive. I'd say most students don't do a TON of research, usually just what little they need for residency apps, but for those of us who genuinely like writing and publishing the opportunities are more than we can take on lol. Majority who do research do clinical, but I and others have done basic science as well.

6. Great culture among students here, I would say. The expectation is that you will collaborate with others, including an entire system of google docs for each lecture containing summaries of all the material for each learning objectives, filled out by the students taking turns. People hang out outside school, go out to eat etc. So if you want a good place that isn't overly hyper-competitive to excess, but with a curriculum that will stretch you and make you apply yourself both in preclinical and clinical, this is a good place for you.

Hope that helps - let me know if you want me to go in depth on anything further, sorry these answers were somewhat quick as I'm up pretty early tomorrow haha
 
Thanks for offering!

1. In a given week, how many times are you required to attend events (not counting lectures)? With that, I was assuming that lecture attendance is not mandatory, and that they are recorded and posted. Is that the case?

2. Not sure if you are from the area or not, but could you give a comparison to how big Charlottesville is / feels? Some things I've read online said it feels like a really small community, and others not so much. Do you have a lot of friends from outside the medical school? What are the major neighborhoods like and where do people live?

3. Any thoughts on the facilities for the school (preclinical) or affiliated hospitals?

4. In your rotations, how much time do you find yourself dedicating to scutwork for the ancillary staff, compared to actually learning with the attendings? Do you take shelf exams at the end of each rotation or at the end of the year?

5. Research - do most students do bench research, clinical research, or none? Is there a competitive culture around research?

6. Anything you think would be helpful!

2. I went here for a conference in 2017; loved the campus. The Skyline Drive is a must as well, but I wouldn't include this as a reason for why you are applying for UVA 🙂
 
[mention]UNMedGa [/mention] How many weeks/months of rotations away from Charlottesville during third year are required? And how is the housing situation handled on these aways?
 
[mention]UNMedGa [/mention] How many weeks/months of rotations away from Charlottesville during third year are required? And how is the housing situation handled on these aways?

it varies as it’s random where you get assigned. Generally speaking not including Inova when that starts, there’s a 4 week family med rotation and 3 week ambulatory internal medicine rotation built in that usually require you to go to a randomly assigned mentor somewhere in the state. All housing is provided and meals paid for when this is the case. These are the only rotations where the majority of students will leave Charlottesville. In addition, Peds has a Richmond option for 2-4 students per rotation block (also provides food and housing). There were Fairfax rotations in peds and obgyn but I imagine those are going away with 1/4 of the class being there full time now. Surgery has a 3 week Salem rotation for 3 students per block as well and everything is provided there too.

if you are married and/or have children, you can submit forms to the deans in advance to try to be placed in and around cville. People are usually accommodated in this scenario
 
prompts same as last year?
Yup, same as last year!


Why are you interested in attending the University of Virginia School of Medicine? What factors will be most important to you in choosing a medical school?
----
How will you contribute to the diversity of your medical school class and the University of Virginia School of Medicine?
----
Describe a situation which you found challenging. How did you manage it?

@TheDataKing
 
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Submitted and complete 12:34 this morning! Hopefully that's a lucky number
 
i noticed that there is an option to upload a resume in the "documents" section. Do you guys think it's worth it to upload one even though I already submitted the AMCAS primary app?
 
i noticed that there is an option to upload a resume in the "documents" section. Do you guys think it's worth it to upload one even though I already submitted the AMCAS primary app?

my pre med advisor said not to upload resumes unless you feel like it’s really adding something to the application that you haven’t already said
 
Does this secondary allow for an optional text box for IAs or allow for updates after submission? To make a long story short, I have pre-written all my secondaries but still waiting for my primary to be reviewed (hopefully in a few more days!), but when I submitted my primary I indicated I had no IAs because what I thought were not violations actually were. After talking to a few admissions departments I have learned my best bet is to 1)email the admissions office and dean of admissions, 2) explain in the optional text box why I did not report it on my primary, and 3)update my application with the details if allowed.

Therefore, does this secondary have an optional text box or allow for resubmission where I would have the opportunity to explain this situation?
 
Should I respond with "Yes" to their question "Have you ever been convicted of any crime, felony or misdemeanor?" if I have received a speeding ticket? I can't tell if they intended "felony or misdemeanor" to be an appositive further describing "crime" (implying that I should only answer "Yes" if I have been convicted of a felony or misdemeanor), or if "crime, felony or misdemeanor" is a list that doesn't use the Oxford comma.

If the speeding ticket counted as a misdemeanor, then yes. They will ask about it if it appears on your background check and you said no, less because they care you got a traffic ticket and more because they want you to be honest. If it's nowhere to be seen on your background check and isn't a misdemeanor then no.
 
Does this secondary allow for an optional text box for IAs or allow for updates after submission? To make a long story short, I have pre-written all my secondaries but still waiting for my primary to be reviewed (hopefully in a few more days!), but when I submitted my primary I indicated I had no IAs because what I thought were not violations actually were. After talking to a few admissions departments I have learned my best bet is to 1)email the admissions office and dean of admissions, 2) explain in the optional text box why I did not report it on my primary, and 3)update my application with the details if allowed.

Therefore, does this secondary have an optional text box or allow for resubmission where I would have the opportunity to explain this situation?

I'd email the admissions office and ask them to forward it to Dr. Densmore
 
I'd email the admissions office and ask them to forward it to Dr. Densmore
Thank you! I already received an email back from them. If anyone is in the same boat all they ask is that you send them an email with the update once you receive or after you submit your secondary! They just attach it to your file!
 
Please tag a pre-allo moderator when the secondary prompt is posted.

Good luck to everyone applying!

Interview Feedback: University of Virginia

Secondary Prompts 2020-2021:

Why are you interested in attending the University of Virginia School of Medicine? What factors will be most important to you in choosing a medical school?
----
How will you contribute to the diversity of your medical school class and the University of Virginia School of Medicine?
----
Describe a situation which you found challenging. How did you manage it?
Character limits?
 
@UNMedGa can you talk a bit about the Muholland Society? I came across it on your school's website, but I'm unsure what exactly it is/does. Is it basically a student government? Do you think it promotes cohesiveness among the students?
 
@UNMedGa can you talk a bit about the Muholland Society? I came across it on your school's website, but I'm unsure what exactly it is/does. Is it basically a student government? Do you think it promotes cohesiveness among the students?

Yep, it's pretty much the student government. It's a multifaceted organization that oversees student efforts in wellness, influencing the curriculum, interfacing with faculty, improvement initiatives on various fronts, organizing social activities, etc. Students can get involved with it starting first year. I do think it promotes cohesiveness - UVA has a very collaborative culture and I think the Mulholland society does help that.
 
Has anyone submitted a secondary over the word limit? I was able to save an essay >350 words in their secondary portal... is this normal lol?
 
Has anyone submitted a secondary over the word limit? I was able to save an essay >350 words in their secondary portal... is this normal lol?

I've never actually heard that, and it would likely be entirely dependent on the reviewer whether they care about that or not... that said, do so at your own risk haha
 
Has anyone heard anything as far as II yet?
I just submitted my secondary and was complete today.
Best of luck everyone!
 
How many letters of rec did you all submit? I thought their language was kind of vague:

"The School of Medicine prefers a premedical advisor evaluation, or if this service is not available, a minimum of two letters, preferably from science professors or the equivalent. You may also have individual letters sent to AMCAS in addition to a premed advising evaluation. While there is no limit to the number of letters you may submit, please keep in mind that it is better to have a few meaningful letters from individuals who know you well than to have a larger number of superficial letters of recommendation."

I don't have a premed committee -- so I should send 2 science professors, and then like am I able to send more from non-science faculty / ECs too? Looks we CAN but I guess I'm just curious how many others submitted.
 
How many letters of rec did you all submit? I thought their language was kind of vague:

"The School of Medicine prefers a premedical advisor evaluation, or if this service is not available, a minimum of two letters, preferably from science professors or the equivalent. You may also have individual letters sent to AMCAS in addition to a premed advising evaluation. While there is no limit to the number of letters you may submit, please keep in mind that it is better to have a few meaningful letters from individuals who know you well than to have a larger number of superficial letters of recommendation."

I don't have a premed committee -- so I should send 2 science professors, and then like am I able to send more from non-science faculty / ECs too? Looks we CAN but I guess I'm just curious how many others submitted.
I sent in 4 (2 science, 2 physicians)
 
any idea how UVA establishes VA residency? I've lived in VA my whole life and just moved to a different state for my gap year. I anticipate filing 2021 taxes in my new state, but will that revoke my VA residency? I changed my address on my tax form, but I could change it back and pay taxes for both states.... the rules come out of the Code of VA, but its super confusing
 
any idea how UVA establishes VA residency? I've lived in VA my whole life and just moved to a different state for my gap year. I anticipate filing 2021 taxes in my new state, but will that revoke my VA residency? I changed my address on my tax form, but I could change it back and pay taxes for both states.... the rules come out of the Code of VA, but its super confusing

You're required to live in Virginia for over a year as a non-student (i.e. working a job). Med students can't establish residency. If you maintain your home address as the permanent that may be fine. The UVA financial aid office is very helpful with this sort of question if you reach out to them
 
Has anyone not yet received a secondary from UVA? I thought they didn't screen secondaries but I haven't received anything yet (I checked my spam mail in case). Should I email/call them to ask?
 
Hey! Does anyone (maybe @UNMedGa ) have any data on if UVA ever offers tuition-differential for OOS? Or any other merit for that matter? Obviously that kind of stuff is never guaranteed, but it's something I'm favoring my list toward because my parental data vs actual ability is tricky :/
 
Hey! Does anyone (maybe @UNMedGa ) have any data on if UVA ever offers tuition-differential for OOS? Or any other merit for that matter? Obviously that kind of stuff is never guaranteed, but it's something I'm favoring my list toward because my parental data vs actual ability is tricky :/

They do offer need-based aid, I've gotten it every year (but I'm the oldest of several kids most of whom are going to college). They do offer some merit scholarships, but in talking with my classmates over the years I've learned those sometimes function as diversity type awards so they're a bit more rarely given
 
looks like they're sending II's....at least one person has received one, per the tracker
 
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