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With AMCAS opening up today I figured this would be a good time for those of us who have just gone through the application process to point out some overlooked aspects and tips. Here are my Big 3:
Maximize your BCPM GPA: It is up to you to decide how to designate a class. AMCAS tells you to do it by course content, not by course department, course title, etc. Obviously you can't make the Ochem class you got a C+ on anything but chem or try and make your English Lit class you got an A on into a BCPM class....but with "gray area" classes feel free to designate them in such a way as to maximize your BCPM GPA. Put the onus on AMCAS to change it because they rarely do. And most of all, don't take advice from the super anal people on SDN who always tend to designate courses conservatively. Remember, it's your call (although AMCAS can overturn) and it's by course content. How could someone else who hasn't taken the course possibly tell you how to designate it? If I had followed the advice of the people on here I doubt I would have gotten in this cycle because my BCPM GPA would have been sub-3.4 instead of 3.5+ . See this thread for my experience concerning this issue - http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=829188
Diversify your "3 most meaningful experiences": What I mean by this is don't pick 3 clinical experiences or 3 research experiences, etc as the activities where you are given 1325 extra characters to expand upon as your 3 most meaningful experiences. I picked 1 clinical experience, 1 research experience, and 1 personal offbeat hobby I was heavily involved in (improv/standup comedy). This year will only be the 2nd year of the "3 most meaningful experiences" so there isn't much to go by but I felt my method worked out fine. The offbeat hobby was brought up at all my interviews and I felt it was something that set my application apart and maybe even got me interviews I wouldn't have gotten otherwise with my stats....never underestimate how bored application readers/interviewers/adcoms get hearing about mission trips, ER volunteering, bench research, over and over and over again. Highlight your hobbies, if not as a "most meaningful," then at least somewhere else in your app.
Read previous year's school-specific threads: Not just last year's but 2, 3, even 4 years ago. Lots of good information in these on interviews questions that aren't in interview feedback as well as posts by current students that offer insight on the school not available elsewhere. Just search "X school of medicine 2009-2010 SDN" or "Y college of medicine 2010-2011 SDN" on google and it should be in the first couple links. It is a lot to read through and a lot of it is just paranoid applicants but the golden nuggets by interviewees and current students is totally worth it.....they greatly help in writing secondaries and prepping just before interviews.
Maximize your BCPM GPA: It is up to you to decide how to designate a class. AMCAS tells you to do it by course content, not by course department, course title, etc. Obviously you can't make the Ochem class you got a C+ on anything but chem or try and make your English Lit class you got an A on into a BCPM class....but with "gray area" classes feel free to designate them in such a way as to maximize your BCPM GPA. Put the onus on AMCAS to change it because they rarely do. And most of all, don't take advice from the super anal people on SDN who always tend to designate courses conservatively. Remember, it's your call (although AMCAS can overturn) and it's by course content. How could someone else who hasn't taken the course possibly tell you how to designate it? If I had followed the advice of the people on here I doubt I would have gotten in this cycle because my BCPM GPA would have been sub-3.4 instead of 3.5+ . See this thread for my experience concerning this issue - http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=829188
Diversify your "3 most meaningful experiences": What I mean by this is don't pick 3 clinical experiences or 3 research experiences, etc as the activities where you are given 1325 extra characters to expand upon as your 3 most meaningful experiences. I picked 1 clinical experience, 1 research experience, and 1 personal offbeat hobby I was heavily involved in (improv/standup comedy). This year will only be the 2nd year of the "3 most meaningful experiences" so there isn't much to go by but I felt my method worked out fine. The offbeat hobby was brought up at all my interviews and I felt it was something that set my application apart and maybe even got me interviews I wouldn't have gotten otherwise with my stats....never underestimate how bored application readers/interviewers/adcoms get hearing about mission trips, ER volunteering, bench research, over and over and over again. Highlight your hobbies, if not as a "most meaningful," then at least somewhere else in your app.
Read previous year's school-specific threads: Not just last year's but 2, 3, even 4 years ago. Lots of good information in these on interviews questions that aren't in interview feedback as well as posts by current students that offer insight on the school not available elsewhere. Just search "X school of medicine 2009-2010 SDN" or "Y college of medicine 2010-2011 SDN" on google and it should be in the first couple links. It is a lot to read through and a lot of it is just paranoid applicants but the golden nuggets by interviewees and current students is totally worth it.....they greatly help in writing secondaries and prepping just before interviews.