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Psych is not one of those fields. That being said, I agree that OP needs to apply well beyond what would otherwise be considered standard for someone with their stats.I would apply much more broadly than 40-50 programs especially if these charges appear on your background check. It is not uncommon for people with clean records and great scores to apply to 70+ programs in competitive fields. The only thing you have to lose is money here, and if you gamble and apply too narrowly, you'll be out of luck for a year.
What I meant is that is normal for students to have to apply broadly when the chances of matching are lowered such as in a competitive field or in the case of OP, a criminal record.Psych is not one of those fields. That being said, I agree that OP needs to apply well beyond what would otherwise be considered standard for someone with their stats.
Hi all,
I was advised to apply broadly, but of course only take a normal amount of interviews.
Are you a usmd?
Did the arrests result in convictions ?
?
Any applicant with a checkered history or red flags should take every single interview offered.
You should be applying to much more than that. I would apply to at least 100 programs. At this point adding more programs is just a drop in the bucket when it comes to missing a year's salary because you didn't match.Thank you for the advice everyone, I applied to 62 and I will likely add 10-20 more tonight.
By that point in time, the reviews don't really matter. Obviously you can't fail any rotation, but a borderline pass won't have any impact. Given your situation, I would probably err on the side of more interviews rather than less.I will take every interview offered to an extent, we do not get time off to interview at my school and I cannot miss Excessive days on rotations if I expect to have decent reviews, not to mention expecting to actually learn on these rotations.
I think other physicians and advisers have recommended this because they believe I will already be filtered out (before being offered an interview) if the charges are a deal breaker.