meepleep62
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Worthy advice. Noteworthy.One way I suggest is to write about all your frustrations, feelings of unworthiness, etc. in a diary (written or typed or even audio). Do that how many times you feel the need to, and after a while, you will not only be keeping a "record" but might also see how much you can reflect from this experience as time goes on.
You may seek "postmortem examinations" too from your EMT peers and coaches that might still be worthwhile even if you can't repeat the practical again (not sure if that is the case) when you are more comfortable.
What do you mean?Go ask Grammarly.
I want to know whether or not I should mention this at all? I know a user told me to mention this as a time I failed, but I am afraid they will see this as me being inadequate or too dumb for medical school.Didn’t you ask this last week or a couple of weeks ago?
Just checked and you did. Oh and I see @Mr.Smile12 linked it. What advice are you really looking for this time?
Thank you so much for this reply! I really hope you are right and medical schools can be as forgiving and kind as you!Failing a practical has nothing to do with your ability to be a successful physician. Sometimes, we as humans make mistakes in judgment. Maybe you underestimated the situation, maybe the overall material was too easy that you failed to prepare properly. Whatever the reason, you couldn't bypass that obstacle that day. That failure was only a single timepoint in the long trajectory of your life. The most successful people I interacted with, were people who were able to pick themselves up after a setback, reflect on what let to it, learn from it, forgive themselves for being human and move on! I promise you, that if you use this setback as a motivation to improve how you tackle these situation, it might be the best thing that happened to you. You want to make your mistakes when the stakes are low and you have the opportunity to pick yourself up and try again. Be kind to yourself!
Will med schools not see this as inadequacy or that I'm too dumb?Your WAMC.
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Fortunately, a common question on the Interview trail is, "Tell me about a time when you failed/disappointed yourself/etc." Own it and develop your talking points.
My interviewers want to see how you handle failure. If you think it's an inadequacy, they'll agree. If you think it was a learning moment, they'll also agree.Will med schools not see this as inadequacy or that I'm too dumb?
It was not for college credit.Did this EMT course carry college credit? If so, you must report having taken it even if you did not apply the credits toward your degree. If not, you need not report it.
When you say "practical" do you mean that you were assessed on your ability to perform a specific procedure or task and that you were unable to do to the satisfaction of the instructor? Did you ask for feedback and take that into account when making a second attempt? If not, you should do so before making a third attempt. Looking back on the performance, assess it yourself? Were you overly confident? too nervous? clumsy? inattentive? forgetful of key steps or out of step with the sequence of steps? What went wrong? Why?
You may be a good candidate for medical school but you need to be able to assess your own performance, identify weaknesses, and remediate them. That is a very important aspect to success in medical school.
Med schools also want to see resilience. You will not get 100% every time and you need to be able to pick yourself up, figure out what went wrong, correct it, and go again. This is a good learning opportunity although it might not feel like it in the moment.
It's just as you say!If it's not a college credit/on your transcript, pretty sure it doesn't need to be shown as a failure in transcript. Your activity can be volunteering in an EMS organization as "insert role title".
I assume the practical was a simulated scene where you had to get enough rubric points without hitting any critical fails and you may have messed up on the remediation/2nd attempt on it? If it's not grounds for failure of the program then it's honestly not the biggest of deals. Study up, practice more for the next one and do better. I was heavily involved in running EMT education and proctored many practicals that did sometimes involve repeat failures for a variety of reasons. Everyone's clinical skills start somewhere. Many of those students have gone on to medical school and are now residents (humorously before me lol).
I am an EMT. You absolutely don't need to disclose it. It's a technical course that doesn't carry any academic credit. I can guarantee no one will ask you about credentials. Most of people on the committee won't even know what are the required credentials to practice as an EMT for that particular locale. As long as the squad you are volunteering with followed all the rules, you are good. You failed because of a technical issue, that you can address by taking the class again, or you can choose to let it go. Lots of students work on their campus squad without ever getting credentialed and go on to be great physicians. If you decide to try again and you succeed in getting certified (which I am certain you will be able to do), that would be a great anecdote to write about in your application about dealing with failure. This instance of momentary failure does not define you. I can guarantee you that almost every MD on that committee had a onetime failure story that puts your story to shame!It's just as you say!
I failed the practical twice, and that is the limit at the place I took the practical at for 🙁, so I would have to retake the entire course again for the certification. I was just really frustrated because 1) I wanted an EMT cert so I could actually lead calls and not just assist on them 2) I am worried about how medical schools would perceive this if they found out