Am I lacking in extracurriculars?

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TheConfused

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I'm currently a sophomore, I take a longer time to study than other people to get the same grade so I don't have a lot of free time.

As of right now for extracurriculars, I am involved in a research position where by the time I graduate, I will have 3 years of research experience/lab experience as well as a chance of a publication/presentation on my application.

I am also pledging a volunteering/service fraternity where I will try my best to get a leadership position.

And that's it, that's all I have time to do with my schedule. Is that enough for extracurriculars? I could do some volunteering at a hospital over summer, although I would prefer to get a full time job to get work experience and some spending money.
 
I'm currently a sophomore, I take a longer time to study than other people to get the same grade so I don't have a lot of free time.

As of right now for extracurriculars, I am involved in a research position where by the time I graduate, I will have 3 years of research experience/lab experience as well as a chance of a publication/presentation on my application.

I am also pledging a volunteering/service fraternity where I will try my best to get a leadership position.

And that's it, that's all I have time to do with my schedule. Is that enough for extracurriculars? I could do some volunteering at a hospital over summer, although I would prefer to get a full time job to get work experience and some spending money.

Don't worry too much. You don't need THAT much to get accepted into DO school. Just get the right grades and MCAT and you'll get accepted somewhere. Worry about those first, as they get your foot in through the door.
 
My student interviewers would eat you alive!

This not the application of a person who dearly wants to be a physician. It is the application of someone who wants to be a doctor as long as it is convenient.


Here's the deal: You need to show AdComs that you know what you're getting into, and show off your altruistic, humanism side. We need to know that you're going to like being around sick or injured people for the next 40 years.

Here's another way of looking at it: would you buy a new car without test driving it? Buy a new suit or dress without trying it on??

We're also not looking for merely for good medical students, we're looking for people who will make good doctors, and 4.0 GPA robots are a dime-a-dozen.

I've seen plenty of posts here from high GPA/high MCAT candidates who were rejected because they had little patient contact experience.

Not all volunteering needs to be in a hospital. Think hospice, Planned Parenthood, nursing homes, rehab facilities, crisis hotlines, camps for sick children, or clinics.

Service need not be "unique". If you can alleviate suffering in your community through service to the poor, homeless, illiterate, fatherless, etc, you are meeting an otherwise unmet need and learning more about the lives of the people (or types of people) who will someday be your patients. Check out your local houses of worship for volunteer opportunities.

Examples include: Habitat for Humanity, Ronald McDonald House, Humane Society, crisis hotlines, soup kitchen, food pantry, homeless or women’s shelter, after-school tutoring for students or coaching a sport in a poor school district, teaching ESL to adults at a community center, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, or Meals on Wheels.

Some types of volunteer activities are more appealing than others. Volunteering in a nice suburban hospital is all very well and good and all, but doesn't show that you're willing to dig in and get your hands dirty in the same way that working with the developmentally disabled (or homeless, the dying, or Alzheimers or mentally ill or elderly or ESL or domestic, rural impoverished) does. The uncomfortable situations are the ones that really demonstrate your altruism and get you 'brownie points'. Plus, they frankly teach you more -- they develop your compassion and humanity in ways comfortable situations can't.


What are you going to say when asked how you know you are suited for a life of caring for the sick and suffering? “That you just know”? Imagine how that will go over!


This is also worrisome. med school will be a LOT harder than anything you're dealing with now. We expect people to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. Seek out your school's learning or education center for help with learning strategies and time mgt skills STAT.


"I take a longer time to study than other people to get the same grade so I don't have a lot of free time."


I'm currently a sophomore, I take a longer time to study than other people to get the same grade so I don't have a lot of free time.

As of right now for extracurriculars, I am involved in a research position where by the time I graduate, I will have 3 years of research experience/lab experience as well as a chance of a publication/presentation on my application.

I am also pledging a volunteering/service fraternity where I will try my best to get a leadership position.

And that's it, that's all I have time to do with my schedule. Is that enough for extracurriculars? I could do some volunteering at a hospital over summer, although I would prefer to get a full time job to get work experience and some spending money.
 
If I would have known what I do now I would have just worked part time and focused more on my grades to get into the "super high gpa category". Interviewers weren't super impressed by me working full-time in the hospital through undergrad.
 
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If you want a job, be a scribe. You get paid (albeit not much) and get AMAZING hospital experience. Warning: it is NOT an easy job and can be a big time committment, but so would be any other job that you would make decent money at. I highly recommend scribing to anyone looking for realistic medical-world experience.
 
I'm currently a sophomore, I take a longer time to study than other people to get the same grade so I don't have a lot of free time.

As of right now for extracurriculars, I am involved in a research position where by the time I graduate, I will have 3 years of research experience/lab experience as well as a chance of a publication/presentation on my application.

I am also pledging a volunteering/service fraternity where I will try my best to get a leadership position.

And that's it, that's all I have time to do with my schedule. Is that enough for extracurriculars? I could do some volunteering at a hospital over summer, although I would prefer to get a full time job to get work experience and some spending money.

You need clinical experience/exposure. They will ask you why you want to be a doctor and you need activities that involve being around sick people or doctors to demonstrate your interest in the field.

I doubt your coursework is so heavy that you can't squeeze in some clinical hours if you really wanted to.
 
I feel like you need shadowing (like 20-50 hours) and volunteer work (like a hospital or clinic, even if it is just a few hours a week). Also, the research aspect of your application is great and a leadership position would be very good. If you do get a job, try to get something medically related like a scribe or CNA or something to hit two birds with one stone (clinical experience and a job for extra cash because applying to med school is expensive). If you do not have time for this stuff now, you may want to consider a gap year to strengthen your ECs or take less classes each semester and just graduate a semester or two later. However, this is just one person's opinion
 
I'll try my best to get a scribe position at my local hospital or I can just volunteer if I need to.
 
Trust me you don't want your first time seeing a patient to be in medical school.
 
Goro suggested hospice- I work in hospice currently and am working full time while taking more classes to get my GPA up.

Hospice is what made me really commit to my med school dream. Being around the terminally ill and even seeing our patients die first hand is an experience that I can go on and on for hours about. If you want to get exposure that way, try calling the local hospice agencies in your area (use Medicare dot gov and look them up via zip code) and ask to speak to their volunteer coordinator... Most agencies are always looking for more volunteers.
 
Goro suggested hospice- I work in hospice currently and am working full time while taking more classes to get my GPA up.

Hospice is what made me really commit to my med school dream. Being around the terminally ill and even seeing our patients die first hand is an experience that I can go on and on for hours about. If you want to get exposure that way, try calling the local hospice agencies in your area (use Medicare dot gov and look them up via zip code) and ask to speak to their volunteer coordinator... Most agencies are always looking for more volunteers.

I second this, I did in home hospice and care unit volunteering through hospice. Great experience, learned a lot from the patients and nurses/docs. Highly recommend, I also volunteered in a hospital but that patient interaction was not even close to what I got to experience at hospice.

OP if you are looking for a job to earn money I worked all 4 years throughout college in the customer service industry part time. It improved my social skills tremendously! Plus it helped with the ladies .
 
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