Just as the title says- any of you guys apply to 30-35+ schools? I know there are a number of opinions going for and against this. I was wondering because my school list (MD and DO included) seems to be up there now.
Just as the title says- any of you guys apply to 30-35+ schools? I know there are a number of opinions going for and against this. I was wondering because my school list (MD and DO included) seems to be up there now.
I'm applying to ~40 schools. I have FAP and I'm only choosing schools with easy secondaries though. 😀
Aint nobody got money for that!
I know it's allowed, but for those of us who don't fall into the FAP, the expenses are outrageous. I think at lot of the reasons why you need 35-50 schools is because you didn't do your homework. Some applicants didn't pre-research how involved the secondary was, or discover the school's mission statement didn't match, or even look into where the school is located. And it seems that the FAP allows for that, instead of controlling it. Please convince me otherwise. It is, after all, paid for by me and my parents by my taxes and I'm trying to understand.earf said:With the FAP, I only have to pay $34 for each application after the 14 free ones with no secondary fees. The FAP covers every single secondary application cost, whether or not there are more than 14, with the fee waiver.
earf, congrats on getting in, but did you really need to apply to 42 schools? I think that's crazy and, in truth, took advantage of the FAP system. I know it's allowed, but for those of us who don't fall into the FAP, the expenses are outrageous. I think at lot of the reasons why you need 35-50 schools is because you didn't do your homework. Some applicants didn't pre-research how involved the secondary was, or discover the school's mission statement didn't match, or even look into where the school is located. And it seems that the FAP allows for that, instead of controlling it. Please convince me otherwise. It is, after all, paid for by me and my parents by my taxes and I'm trying to understand.
I applied last cycle (2012-2013) and submitted my primary to 50 MD schools without having FAP. Out of the 50, I received and completed 42. The rest I was screened for and never received. While this may seem like an insanely high number, I'm a California resident and knew many friends for whom applying to 30-40 was the norm. I have two weak MCAT scores (both <30) and a low/mediocre GPA so I knew I had to apply super broadly.
Yes it is expensive, but I knew that it would be more expensive to go through two application cycles (apply to 30 schools for two years in a row, cost of plane tickets & hotels, losing out on future wages, etc) to get an acceptance. I took a long time picking my school list based on several criteria: good fit, OOS-friendly, GPA/MCAT scores within accepted ranges, schools that look at the applicants holistically, and location (almost all the CA schools).
I submitted in early June and filled out all my secondaries within the two week window after I got them in July. How did I do this? I did my research and pre-wrote many of my essays. I even combed through the 2011-2012 threads and made an excel sheet with dates of when the previous year's secondaries were sent out, so I could write them in order of which came out earliest. Also I knew 10 of the secondaries had no essays at all.
Was it worth all the work? YES.
I'm matriculating in a month 🙂
Out of all the outrageous things your tax money goes towards, you choose to be concerned about secondary school fees?earf, congrats on getting in, but did you really need to apply to 42 schools? I think that's crazy and, in truth, took advantage of the FAP system. I know it's allowed, but for those of us who don't fall into the FAP, the expenses are outrageous. I think at lot of the reasons why you need 35-50 schools is because you didn't do your homework. Some applicants didn't pre-research how involved the secondary was, or discover the school's mission statement didn't match, or even look into where the school is located. And it seems that the FAP allows for that, instead of controlling it. Please convince me otherwise. It is, after all, paid for by me and my parents by my taxes and I'm trying to understand.
You my friend are a straight up boss (male or female lmao). This is exactly the ideaology I am going by. I have been working from 4 years and what else would I want to spend my money on that is better than my future. YOLO.
I'm applying to ~40 schools. I have FAP and I'm only choosing schools with easy secondaries though. 😀
earf, congrats on getting in, but did you really need to apply to 42 schools? I think that's crazy and, in truth, took advantage of the FAP system. I know it's allowed, but for those of us who don't fall into the FAP, the expenses are outrageous. I think at lot of the reasons why you need 35-50 schools is because you didn't do your homework. Some applicants didn't pre-research how involved the secondary was, or discover the school's mission statement didn't match, or even look into where the school is located. And it seems that the FAP allows for that, instead of controlling it. Please convince me otherwise. It is, after all, paid for by me and my parents by my taxes and I'm trying to understand.
I applied last cycle (2012-2013) and submitted my primary to 50 MD schools without having FAP. Out of the 50, I received and completed 42. The rest I was screened for and never received. While this may seem like an insanely high number, I'm a California resident and knew many friends for whom applying to 30-40 was the norm. I have two weak MCAT scores (both <30) and a low/mediocre GPA so I knew I had to apply super broadly.
Yes it is expensive, but I knew that it would be more expensive to go through two application cycles (apply to 30 schools for two years in a row, cost of plane tickets & hotels, losing out on future wages, etc) to get an acceptance. I took a long time picking my school list based on several criteria: good fit, OOS-friendly, GPA/MCAT scores within accepted ranges, schools that look at the applicants holistically, and location (almost all the CA schools).
I submitted in early June and filled out all my secondaries within the two week window after I got them in July. How did I do this? I did my research and pre-wrote many of my essays. I even combed through the 2011-2012 threads and made an excel sheet with dates of when the previous year's secondaries were sent out, so I could write them in order of which came out earliest. Also I knew 10 of the secondaries had no essays at all.
Was it worth all the work? YES.
I'm matriculating in a month 🙂
Every year at my undergrad there are at least a couple people applying to 30-40 schools. Secondaries ask the same questions over, and over, and over, and over again so you can recycle the same 5 essays. Most are wrapped up with secondaries before school starts in the fall
you my friend are a straight up boss (male or female lmao). This is exactly the ideaology i am going by. I have been working from 4 years and what else would i want to spend my money on that is better than my future. Yolo.
Actually earf, I'm not at all upset. I'm just trying to understand the thinking. In case you didn't understand, I'm trying to figure out why anyone would apply to so many schools (free or otherwise). I really appreciate reading all you did to tailor your list, but still why so many? I notice many profiles show applicants don't complete the application and wasn't sure why not. Isn't that wasted money? Couldn't you have determined which ones would be a good match BEFORE you applied? One thing I'm learning is just how difficult it must be a CA resident. Whoa! So many strong candidates and not enough spots. I mean it's bad everywhere, but CA must be the worst. (TX is the best.)
Actually earf, I'm not at all upset. I'm just trying to understand the thinking. In case you didn't understand, I'm trying to figure out why anyone would apply to so many schools (free or otherwise).
I had a 34 and a 3.89 cum when I applied and was okay with 20. You can see my mdapps if you wanna see how I fared. There are a lot of other factors, but for me 20 was plenty.Applied to 30 exactly. I probably didn't need to apply to that many but wanted to be safe rather than sorry. 3.9+ gpa and 33 MCAT. Has anyone else applied to this many with stats similar to mine? I want to know if I should fill out all my secondaries.
Because screening yourself from medical school is dumb.
There's a big difference between withdrawing from less desirable schools after you've had an acceptance in hand, and not getting into any medical schools because you didn't apply broadly enough.
People with competitive in-state schools, weak stats or ECs, late application submissions, etc. benefit from applying to more schools. If you have the money and time to handle all of the secondaries (especially how most of the secondaries can be prewritten), then there is no downside to applying to that many.
I applied last cycle (2012-2013) and submitted my primary to 50 MD schools without having FAP. Out of the 50, I received and completed 42. The rest I was screened for and never received. While this may seem like an insanely high number, I'm a California resident and knew many friends for whom applying to 30-40 was the norm. I have two weak MCAT scores (both <30) and a low/mediocre GPA so I knew I had to apply super broadly.
Yes it is expensive, but I knew that it would be more expensive to go through two application cycles (apply to 30 schools for two years in a row, cost of plane tickets & hotels, losing out on future wages, etc) to get an acceptance. I took a long time picking my school list based on several criteria: good fit, OOS-friendly, GPA/MCAT scores within accepted ranges, schools that look at the applicants holistically, and location (almost all the CA schools).
I submitted in early June and filled out all my secondaries within the two week window after I got them in July. How did I do this? I did my research and pre-wrote many of my essays. I even combed through the 2011-2012 threads and made an excel sheet with dates of when the previous year's secondaries were sent out, so I could write them in order of which came out earliest. Also I knew 10 of the secondaries had no essays at all.
Was it worth all the work? YES.
I'm matriculating in a month 🙂
👍👍👍 This is exactly my philosophy, and exactly what I'm doing. 42 MD, 3 DO, 4 in the UK
I just hope I'm as successful 🙂
Congrats!🙂
Love this! Congrats on the acceptance(s)!
I'm applying to 37 schools- 27 MD and 10 DO. It's $$ but I've saved up a bunch over the last year working two jobs. I have also done a lot of organizing in Excel, and I recommend it if you're applying to tons of schools. It may seem a little excessive, but it's helped me know how much money I need for this process and save it up, as well as organize dates like SelinaKyle said.
Does sending Letter of interest to ridiculously popular schools like Boston University, NYU, Georgetown, and Columbia (which receive ~10,000 applications?) work as well?
Also applying to 33 schoolsApplied to 33 school, low MCAT/ high GPA, CA resident....my friend with almost the same stats ended up accepted totally different schools from where i'm heading, so you never know what happen if you limit yourself to 10 less schools
I'm applying to 3 schools. In-state only. This thread terrifies me.
Just as the title says- any of you guys apply to 30-35+ schools? I know there are a number of opinions going for and against this. I was wondering because my school list (MD and DO included) seems to be up there now.
Just as the title says- any of you guys apply to 30-35+ schools? I know there are a number of opinions going for and against this. I was wondering because my school list (MD and DO included) seems to be up there now.
I have a question to add to this, maybe qualified enough for its own thread. For those who had applied to 30+ schools, how many interviews were you typically offered and how many did you actually go to? That is what I am worried about. Especially with the FAP, which I fortunately qualified for, the primary app and secondaries are not that big of a deal in costs, but flying to to schools is a huge cost on money and time.
I also realize that many premeds decline interviews at some schools after having already received an acceptance at some schools, which makes sense if that school they would much rather attend. Although having the problem of having 10+ interviews is a good problem to have, it would be good to know what I am getting myself into.
On a side note I will have a much better idea if I even qualify for one interview once my MCAT score arrives on Tuesday... 😕