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I looked at some of the FAQs, but didn't find a comprehensive set of instructions for how residency programs work.
thanks!
thanks!
DukeDoc08 said:maybe it's late or maybe I'm confused
if candidate is favored:
let's say you ranked a program 20 and they ranked you #1 and you didn't rank at anything else in your top 19
you end up at the program that ranked you #1 even if someone else ranked them #1 and they ranked that person #2?
assuming they only have 1 spot
DukeDoc08 said:maybe it's late or maybe I'm confused
if candidate is favored:
let's say you ranked a program 20 and they ranked you #1 and you didn't rank at anything else in your top 19
you end up at the program that ranked you #1 even if someone else ranked them #1 and they ranked that person #2?
assuming they only have 1 spot
DukeDoc08 said:maybe it's late or maybe I'm confused
if candidate is favored:
let's say you ranked a program 20 and they ranked you #1 and you didn't rank at anything else in your top 19
you end up at the program that ranked you #1 even if someone else ranked them #1 and they ranked that person #2?
assuming they only have 1 spot
zzyzx said:so you don't really "apply" to specific programs, they just see your application and invite you to interview if they like you? what if no places wanted to interview you?
also, do they pay for your transportation to get to the interview? i'm hoping yes, guessing no.
Don't be too doomsday. It is a complicated process that no one really understands (!), but keep in mind that virtually all students that go through the match do, in the end, MATCH.beefballs said:holy crap this sounds like a bureaucratic nightmare
There's a couples match process as well.brightness said:What if, lets say, you happen to be married to or dating another doctor who needs to match as well? This isn't my situation, as I'm not even in med school, but I'm just curious- it seems very likely that people would find someone to date or marry in med school.
liverotcod said:India7, you'll go to the highest ranking program on your list that has you anywhere on their list.
The algorithm isn't really hard to understand, but it's a little tricky to describe. Their web site does a pretty good walk through of it.
Depends on how many spots there are at at Program Y. If there are two or more spots, or if the candidate Program Y ranked #1 winds up somewhere else (because she matched at a program she ranked higher that had a spot for her), then A will go to Program Y.derf said:o.k., how about this scenario
Candidate A ranks Program Y #1 , but the Program Y ranks him/her #2
Candidate A ranks Program Z # 2, but the Program Z ranks him/her #1
Z is NOT the candidates first choice obviously
Where does candidate A end up? Does the applicant get screwed merely due to a single rank difference by the programs? I know the easy answer would be the candidate is going to Program Z, but I wanted to know if anything is inherently built into the formula to give candidates the benefit under close situations.
liverotcod said:Depends on how many spots there are at at Program Y. If there are two or more spots, or if the candidate Program Y ranked #1 winds up somewhere else (because she matched at a program she ranked higher that had a spot for her), then A will go to Program Y.
The candidate is always getting the benefit, under all situations.
I have the benefit of a career in software design - you spend a lot of time walking through algorithms and making sense of them.derf said:thanks for the response. all this stuff is still new on my end, but starting to make sense 🙂
liverotcod said:India7, you'll go to the highest ranking program on your list that has you anywhere on their list.
The algorithm isn't really hard to understand, but it's a little tricky to describe. Their web site does a pretty good walk through of it.
neutropenic said:Yes, you apply to specific programs which are transmitted through eras or another service (the SF match for neurosurg et al I believe. You get invited if they like you, hear nothing if they didn't, some will send rejections too.
Some will invite their most preferred candidates early on and their less preferred candidates later on.
Transport is variable by field applied to, some will pay for costs, most will not. Some will pay for a night of lodging.
njbmd said:Hi there,
The above is not entirely true. Most places have ranking meetings after every interview day and one final ranking meeting overall. If you are an excellent candidate for a program, whether you interview on the first day of interviews or the last day of interviews, you will still be ranked highly by the program.
Also, many programs only have three or four interview days and thus everyone cannot interview on the first day. They will continue issuing invitations until all of the days are filled. If you sent in your application early, you are at an advantage with programs that have only a few interview days. In the MATCH, early is better.
njbmd 🙂