- Joined
- Jun 12, 2016
- Messages
- 38
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- 21
Hi all, I've been lurking on SDN for about 5 years (most heavily during the grad application process). Anyway, I got into a great PhD program and have now arrived at the internship process. 
Something that troubles me, and that I want to get your opinion on, is the prevalence of inflating hours on the APPIC application. Some of the more competitive/intense people in my cohort talk about "stretching" hours as if it's a normal part of the hours-counting process (e.g., counting unsupervised, paid hours in a student life-type job as intervention hours). They imply that anyone NOT doing this is putting themselves at a disadvantage.
I know that I tend to be a pretty naive person -- how common of a practice is this? Have directors noticed increasing numbers of hours over the years (especially perhaps in light of the match crisis)? I am concerned that as hour-counts continue to artificially rise, the "average" will increase -- only leading to a greater pressure to "inflate" in order to be competitive.
Thoughts?
Something that troubles me, and that I want to get your opinion on, is the prevalence of inflating hours on the APPIC application. Some of the more competitive/intense people in my cohort talk about "stretching" hours as if it's a normal part of the hours-counting process (e.g., counting unsupervised, paid hours in a student life-type job as intervention hours). They imply that anyone NOT doing this is putting themselves at a disadvantage.
I know that I tend to be a pretty naive person -- how common of a practice is this? Have directors noticed increasing numbers of hours over the years (especially perhaps in light of the match crisis)? I am concerned that as hour-counts continue to artificially rise, the "average" will increase -- only leading to a greater pressure to "inflate" in order to be competitive.
Thoughts?