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So I was thinking about it today and I'm not sure if anyone can answer this for sure besides ADCOM members.
When applicants are invited to an interview, are they all pretty much on an even playing ground for acceptance? So after reaching the interview level, do adcoms pretty much look past the AMCAS/secondaries?
Here's where my question stems from: Can applicants who have amazing stats (GPA/MCAT) do poorer during interviews and still have an equal chance of getting in as an applicant with mediocre stats and an amazing interview? Or does the interview mean everything once you reach that level?
(ignore borderline applicants where an interview can push them over the edge)
So I was thinking about it today and I'm not sure if anyone can answer this for sure besides ADCOM members.
When applicants are invited to an interview, are they all pretty much on an even playing ground for acceptance? So after reaching the interview level, do adcoms pretty much look past the AMCAS/secondaries?
Here's where my question stems from: Can applicants who have amazing stats (GPA/MCAT) do poorer during interviews and still have an equal chance of getting in as an applicant with mediocre stats and an amazing interview? Or does the interview mean everything once you reach that level?
(ignore borderline applicants where an interview can push them over the edge)
I know a girl who had a 34+ mcat, 3.8 gpa, stellar activities, but a very large size. She applied three years in a row to so many schools to no avail. Every time she was either told that the applicant pool was unusually strong this season, or she had a poor interview. This type of situation is so sad. I don't know why I'm ranting about this seeing as how it doesn't have much to do with the topic, but I feel so bad for her.
This is actually something that I've been wondering about. I've been told that weight discrimination does NOT occur in the medical school admissions process. But when I think about the stereotypes given to fat people (lazy, unmotivated, lacking self-control) I start to wonder... Especially when you consider the percentage of the population that is overweight I feel like I should see a few more chubby med students in that shiny catalog. Is it just that the percentage of pre-meds who are overweight are much less, because they are generally more health-conscious? Does anyone have some real information about this? Med students - how many overweight people are in your class??
I call BS, if you're being serious. I don't know this girl, but I'm going to make a prediction. She had a major (non-weight) related red flag (bad LOR, poor interview performance) on her application, but assumed that her rejection was based on weight. Instead of addressing the issue, she blamed it on the weight and didn't do anything to improve her application.
Probably not a big surprise, given how obesity is more likely to plague low-income and minority segments of the population, who are less likely to even enter the admissions process.To be honest, I've never really seen too many "big" med students either.
She told me she got interviews the first time around. The second time, she got none to the ones she had already applied to.
It's good, don't get me wrong, but unless you're an antisocial nut you're pretty much on equal footing with everyone else.
Good advice here. I get the impression that lots of folks on SDN seem to think that a large chunk of applicants are going to be extremely shy introverts or wacky social misfits. This percentage is actually quite tiny.The point of the interview is NOT to weed out antisocial nuts or crazies, despite the fact that uninformed premeds repeat that suggestion on SDN each year -- it is the battle cry of the folks who are good on paper and don't want to face the facts that all that can crash and burn in one hour of face time.
As to being on equal footing, I think the number of schools that level the playing field once you interview is definitely a minority. Every school I interviewed at but one still took your stats into account when making final decisions.
That person can't be serious right? I don't think adcom would discriminate based on the fact that she's "big" (whatever that's supposed to mean)I call BS, if you're being serious. I don't know this girl, but I'm going to make a prediction. She had a major (non-weight) related red flag (bad LOR, poor interview performance) on her application, but assumed that her rejection was based on weight. Instead of addressing the issue, she blamed it on the weight and didn't do anything to improve her application.
Does anyone know of a specific school that has actually told applicants. "Congrats - now you're in the interview and you're all on even ground - this next hour is EVERYTHING - don't screw it up."I have to be honest I'd be pretty surprised if very many schools used that kind of system. But seriously -can anyone name a specific school that definitely does that?
I noticed this myself several weeks ago after observing a bunch of med students at the hospital. For various reasons, I've been in relatively close proximity to med and dental students for the last ten years or so. Out of all of them, there were 2 fat ones I can think of. Two out of hundreds. Conscious or unconscious adcom discrimination, it got me back in the gym before my interviews start.To be honest, I've never really seen too many "big" med students either.
well i heard of a scoring board
you get points for the strength of your app and points for your interview, they sum it up and choose those with high scores, at least i know that's how they do it in dental
So your PI prefers an applicant w/ mediocore stats who interviews well to one w/ great stas that interviews just as well because the former exceeded expectations?I don't know if this really answers the questions, but my PI, who was on the admission committee for several years interviewing applicants at his previous school (a top medical school) told me interviews are definitely a deal-breaker (at least for him...or at that school)
If he was interviewing someone who excelled on paper, he wouldn't be impressed if the applicant interviewed well because in a way, that person was "expected" to interview well when he/she walked into the door (so of course, it woudl really backfire if he/she interviewed poorly)
On the other hand, what really, really impressed him (and he got all excited talking about this) was when someone who didn't do so well on paper had an outstanding interview...now that someone, in my PI's own words, would be a true star...and he would pick that person any day over the good paper applicant.
Again, that's just my PI's two cents, and I'm not too sure if this answers the OP's question 😎
So your PI prefers an applicant w/ mediocore stats who interviews well to one w/ great stas that interviews just as well because the former exceeded expectations?
Lots of places have the interviewer give the interview a score, but the issue is how it is weighted. Quite a few committees give more weight to the interview than any other factor, where the other factors have already been used to determine who gets interviewed.
Great on paper but average in person is thus a recipe for the waitlist.
I noticed this myself several weeks ago after observing a bunch of med students at the hospital. For various reasons, I've been in relatively close proximity to med and dental students for the last ten years or so. Out of all of them, there were 2 fat ones I can think of. Two out of hundreds. Conscious or unconscious adcom discrimination, it got me back in the gym before my interviews start.
i'm an average on paper, slightly above average in person type of guy, and it seems like those ingredients bake into a waitlist as well.
There could be a less-discriminative reason for this too. From what I've seen and read over the past two years....Given the lifestyle of medical students, and how poor they are, and the fact that at least in 3rd and 4th year they are on their feet a LOT, it's probably rather difficult for a medical student to stay fat or get fat in the first place due to the fact you need to be able to afford a surplus of food before you can get overweight off eating said surplus.
The later years of med school folks will frequently lose weight. It has nothing to do with the cost of food (at some places, there are plenty of free meals), and everything to do with the fact that you will be running around after residents all day, and will simply not have time for many, many meals. Eg. If a surgery starts at 11:00am and goes 6 hours, no lunch for you. String a couple of surgeries back to back and you are lucky if you get more than a power bar for dinner.
And I think you miss my sarcasim. And this thread is riduculous, of course a 40/4.0 and a 30/3.5 are not going to be considered equal when going into the interview. And I love how people assume that everyone w/ great stats is a boring nerd in personI think you miss the point of schools selecting people to interview. Once you have made that cut nobody is "mediocre" anymore -- they are all potentially admissible. There will always be a range of stats, no matter where you decide to make the cut, but the issue is whether you make that matter anymore. Given that playing field, I think a LOT of adcoms want to therafter pick people who are personable over people who look good on paper. This is not unexpected given that the practice of medicine is more of a service industry than a science. In med school you will, in fact meet a ton of people who fit the example the prior poster described -- ok on paper but very dynamic in real life. This matters.
I don't know about CA, but around here fast food is a lot cheaper than healthy alternatives. Ramen noodles go 10 for a dollar and the McDonald's $1 menu is pretty extensive....you need to be able to afford a surplus of food before you can get overweight off eating...
This is true in CA as well 🙂 Depends where you get your ramen and what kind it is, though; can range from 10 cents to $2. Yes, I am a ramen connoisseur.I don't know about CA, but around here fast food is a lot cheaper than healthy alternatives. Ramen noodles go 10 for a dollar and the McDonald's $1 menu is pretty extensive.
I don't know about CA, but around here fast food is a lot cheaper than healthy alternatives. Ramen noodles go 10 for a dollar and the McDonald's $1 menu is pretty extensive.
I don't know about CA, but around here fast food is a lot cheaper than healthy alternatives.
... this thread is riduculous, of course a 40/4.0 and a 30/3.5 are not going to be considered equal when going into the interview.
Depends on the person and situation, of course. That kind of lifestyle (infrequent eating, little time to plan/cook meals, little time for exercise) can be a recipe for weight GAIN. My two friends who are through with the process both admit that they were unhealthiest and most overweight during this time.
So I was thinking about it today and I'm not sure if anyone can answer this for sure besides ADCOM members.
When applicants are invited to an interview, are they all pretty much on an even playing ground for acceptance? So after reaching the interview level, do adcoms pretty much look past the AMCAS/secondaries?
Here's where my question stems from: Can applicants who have amazing stats (GPA/MCAT) do poorer during interviews and still have an equal chance of getting in as an applicant with mediocre stats and an amazing interview? Or does the interview mean everything once you reach that level?
(ignore borderline applicants where an interview can push them over the edge)
You idiot, I never said that the person w/ higher stats would always get in. Obviously that's not the case. What I did say is that the person with higher stats has an ADVANTAGE, which should be obvious to any ***** with half a brain.You say "of course", yet I could point to quite a few examples where the latter person got the spot and the former didn't. Talk to a few adcom members and you may get a very different sense of the process than you seem ot have. The importance of the interview is not to be taken lightly. Practice and prepare.
I think it depends on luck and on school...
the whole interview process seems like luck on who you get..
I have a friend who got into med school w/ mcat 22 ; gpa; 3.6ish.. early decision!! and this friend says its b/c of her interview where she got a 4th year med student... definitely lucky!!
Thank you, Law2DocI think you miss the point of schools selecting people to interview. Once you have made that cut nobody is "mediocre" anymore -- they are all potentially admissible. There will always be a range of stats, no matter where you decide to make the cut, but the issue is whether you make that matter anymore. Given that playing field, I think a LOT of adcoms want to therafter pick people who are personable over people who look good on paper. This is not unexpected given that the practice of medicine is more of a service industry than a science. In med school you will, in fact meet a ton of people who fit the example the prior poster described -- ok on paper but very dynamic in real life. This matters.
There could be a less-discriminative reason for this too. From what I've seen and read over the past two years....Given the lifestyle of medical students, and how poor they are, and the fact that at least in 3rd and 4th year they are on their feet a LOT, it's probably rather difficult for a medical student to stay fat or get fat in the first place due to the fact you need to be able to afford a surplus of food before you can get overweight off eating said surplus.
HeheheheThis is true in CA as well 🙂 Depends where you get your ramen and what kind it is, though; can range from 10 cents to $2. Yes, I am a ramen connoisseur.