- Joined
- May 11, 2004
- Messages
- 3,370
- Reaction score
- 0
I am SOL if they don't since it's probably my strong point but it seems improbable due to the sheer number of applicants.
I would venture to say "maybe". I would imagnie each school is differet, and thus the way they do things is different. Considering its the only opportunity (along with the secondary) to get behind the numbers, I would say that they do read most of them. Perhaps the only time schools do not is when a applicants numbers are either very high or very low. In these cases, the decision may be already made. However the fact that there are people with 38+ MCAT and 3.8+ GPA that get turned down pre-interview, I would think that they do read them.Cerbernator said:I am SOL if they don't since it's probably my strong point but it seems improbable due to the sheer number of applicants.
Ditto. Every interview that I've ever had, my PS has been a topic of conversation. Sometimes that's the only thing they've read..... 😉efex101 said:Of course they read your PS before granting interviews! all my interviewers had read my PS and had questions about things on there. How do you think they screen out of 1000's of applicants with so many with similar numbers? the PS is very important. Once you are interviewed it is usually based on interviewer feedback and whatnot.
i know this is what you meant, so i tried to answer it (even though i was just guessing). any interviewer can read a PS on the toilet 20 minutes before your interview. it doesn't mean that they know anything about you.No, I mean on deciding who gets interviews other than assigning interviews based on numbers alone.
EvoDevo said:Ditto. Every interview that I've ever had, my PS has been a topic of conversation. Sometimes that's the only thing they've read..... 😉
superdevil said:i know this is what you meant, so i tried to answer it (even though i was just guessing). any interviewer can read a PS on the toilet 20 minutes before your interview. it doesn't mean that they know anything about you.
Cerbernator said:So interviews are based solely on numbers then? How do you explain people with lower numbers getting interviews when people with higher numbers get rejected preinterview?
Amicus said:obviously URM status, geography (some schools really like to have a few people from each county in their state, or for private schools, a wide number of represented states)
im assuming you mean that at a particular school people with lower numbers sometimes get interviewed over people with higher numbers. a school vs school comparison wouldnt mean much.
they probably do look at the extracurriculars leadership ect on your amcas
also they may see something on the transcript that a simple number does not convey. difficulty of major (biochem vs history), the specific courses that the poorer grades were made in (organic vs bio vs french).
there is alot to go on besides personal statment.
but that doesnt mean they dont read the ps, they just dont have to to interview people in the way you describe.
a little math..
6000 apps, 10 minutes to read,=60,000 minutes=1k hours.
a full year of work for one person is 2000 hours. If 2 people spent four hours a day reading apps that would take 125 days. about four months (five not working weekends).
its definitly doable. much more so for state schools.
Cerbernator said:Perhaps but they do charge an arm and a leg for secondaries.
Cerbernator said:Here is my guess, you get 4 piles:
Pile 1: High numbers - auto interview
Pile 2: Average to below average - Get your ps read
Pile 3: Below Average - rejection unless state res.
Pile 4: URM - acceptance, full ride, and trip on Air Force One to meet the pres.
Cerbernator said:Here is my guess, you get 4 piles:
Pile 1: High numbers - auto interview
Pile 2: Average to below average - Get your ps read
Pile 3: Below Average - rejection unless state res.
Pile 4: URM - acceptance, full ride, and trip on Air Force One to meet the pres.
FenixFyre said:yeah i think that is pretty much dead on. we were given an example of a screening formula that one med school uses at a meeting once (they wouldn't state which med school). i think it was something like:
(cum. science GPA + cum. overall GPA) x 10 + (bio/phys/verbal MCAT score) x 2
125+ = automatic interview
115 - 124 = further screening
114- = rejection
Amicus said:ohh that reminds me, UMich is autointerview at a 35 or+ MCAT.
At lead that was the consensus of alot of students last year there.
i think the high number auto interview idea is dead on.