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Haha, do people have favorite insects? I think my favorite insect is any insect that is not in my house.
rosy maple moth
Haha, do people have favorite insects? I think my favorite insect is any insect that is not in my house.
Moths are supreme beings 😍
Looking back it was my fav interview, just a hot seat in the moment lolThese are really great questions that I wish happened at more interviews. completely agree that it would be stressful
One is always wise to know which hill you want to die on. I face the same dilemmas as a faculty member in dealing with Deans and Committee ChairsS'pose I'll say something else then lol
There are principles that I care about, and there are battles I don't care to fight.
When I tell people at work I am going to medical school they ask if I am going to be an optometrist or an ophthalmologist (as if those are the only options lol)... so I guess you could also include ODs in "medical school"
It only gets better - I found one DO poster in the Radiology forums joke about being confused for “an X-Ray tech in a chiropractor’s office.”
I know that this has happened to other people, but my interviewer asked how many other interviews I had. I reluctantly said 4 and then he made me tell him which schools exactly I've interviewed at. He then wrote the names of the schools on his piece of paper and asked me how many acceptances I have. I didn't know whether it was better to be truthful or to fudge my numbers a little bit. 🙁
And then we’d get rejected.... 🙁This would piss me off... and I'm an interviewer! I would turn it around and ask, "how will this information be used to determine whether I'm admitted here?"
Those questions should be out of bounds!
Bees, humans, flowers, horse.assuming all other species will go instinct and you have the ability to save some, which would you choose and why...
Horse to carry stuff and provide transportation and provide food during times of scarcity.
And then we’d get rejected.... 🙁
Could it be possible that they’re just trying to make conversation? I don’t think it’s too unusual to ask someone how their cycle is going. I agree that the information shouldn’t be held against them one way or the other. I understand why the question might be a little uncomfortable, but I think it’d be best to just answer it and move on.Rejecting someone for answering (or not answering) where they've interviewed and where they've been admitted is like asking if you are a witch. If you say "yes" you should be burned at the stake. If you say "no" clearly you are a lying witch and should be burned at the stake unless you drown first (witches float, everyone else drowns when thrown in a well).
If you have no other interviews or offers, clearly you are not a desirable candidate unless the school really wants to fill a seat in which case they can be sure you'll say yes. Ergo you are good for the waitlist. If you have other offers, you don't need this school's offer and they can reject you without feeling bad about it. Again, I'd like to know how they are using that information. I hope someone who doesn't really care whether or not they get admitted at a specific school will challenge an interviewer who asks this asinine question.
Hopefully an SDNer tries this out before dropping interviews.Rejecting someone for answering (or not answering) where they've interviewed and where they've been admitted is like asking if you are a witch. If you say "yes" you should be burned at the stake. If you say "no" clearly you are a lying witch and should be burned at the stake unless you drown first (witches float, everyone else drowns when thrown in a well).
If you have no other interviews or offers, clearly you are not a desirable candidate unless the school really wants to fill a seat in which case they can be sure you'll say yes. Ergo you are good for the waitlist. If you have other offers, you don't need this school's offer and they can reject you without feeling bad about it. Again, I'd like to know how they are using that information. I hope someone who doesn't really care whether or not they get admitted at a specific school will challenge an interviewer who asks this asinine question.
Could it be possible that they’re just trying to make conversation? I don’t think it’s too unusual to ask someone how their cycle is going. I agree that the information shouldn’t be held against them one way or the other. I understand why the question might be a little uncomfortable, but I think it’d be best to just answer it and move on.
I agree that questions about interviews should probably not be asked, but the example you gave here is objectively much worse for obvious reasons.Anyone who asks this question should be reported to the admissions office just as if they'd ask, "why is a pretty girl like you applying to medical school?"
I suspect the interviewer is simply trying to gauge the competition, or the school itself is excessively needy. I don't think the question is as malignant as does my learned colleague LizzyM, but it's definitely a question I do not ask, nor do my Adcom colleagues.Could it be possible that they’re just trying to make conversation? I don’t think it’s too unusual to ask someone how their cycle is going. I agree that the information shouldn’t be held against them one way or the other. I understand why the question might be a little uncomfortable, but I think it’d be best to just answer it and move on.
I’ve been asked this at three separate interviews and it’s always horrible answering...This would piss me off... and I'm an interviewer! I would turn it around and ask, "how will this information be used to determine whether I'm admitted here?"
Those questions should be out of bounds!
Can you imagine asking a college senior during an interview for a full-time corporate job how their job hunt is going and if they've had any other interviews and if they have any job offers yet? It is not a way for an interviewer to make conversation and it biases the interviewer, even if only subconsciously. Anyone who asks this question should be reported to the admissions office just as if they'd ask, "why is a pretty girl like you applying to medical school?"
I’ve been asked this at three separate interviews and it’s always horrible answering...
This doesn't just apply to this scenario, but at what point do we decide that certain things that happen during the application process could use a change? Do we have any kind of agency to make that happen?Yeah I mean isn’t it a match violation to ask about residency interviews? Not sure why it should be okay here.
This doesn't just apply to this scenario, but at what point do we decide that certain things that happen during the application process could use a change? Do we have any kind of agency to make that happen?
“Why our school?”
-something something collaborative atmosphere
“Oh so you think competition is a bad thing?”
“Why our school?”
-something something collaborative atmosphere
“Oh so you think competition is a bad thing?”
I do hate questions like that. It's just an invite to lie.I recently got asked at a DO interview about how many MD schools and DO schools I had applied to this year and of those which one was my top choice. She made sure to write the answer down. It felt incredibly intrusive
I recently got asked at a DO interview about how many MD schools and DO schools I had applied to this year and of those which one was my top choice. She made sure to write the answer down. It felt incredibly intrusive
I mean collaboration and competition are not antonyms so it's kind of a silly response on the interviewer's part. Many of the best, sports teams in the world are extremely internally competitive while being extremely collaborative and well, a team =)“Why our school?”
-something something collaborative atmosphere
“Oh so you think competition is a bad thing?”
I got asked recently by a med student interviewer some version of, "What is one thing your parents did well growing up, and one thing they did poorly?"
I also got asked how my parents divorce affected me after mentioning that they were divorced while telling him about myself.
It was a much more personal interview than I expected it would be.
Not sure what the first one accomplishes..
Not sure what the first one accomplishes.. the second is fair game since you brought it up. I would probably ask that if I were interviewing someone. It’s a good adversity question IMO
That can be a seriously upsetting question for some people. Jesus christ. Like what if someone was abused by one/both parents?Divorce was def fair game, but yeah the parent one was a bit whack for me.
I go to a small but rigorous health sciences school in upstate NY. I have been asked to explain why my school has a second campus, and I have been asked about why I chose such a small school.Not shocking but I get pretty annoyed when interviewers ask why I chose my undergrad or what other undergrads did I get accepted to. I don’t go to an Ivy or some obscure liberal arts college or clown school. Nearly every single one of my interviewers asked this.