I think the biggest detriment to SMPers is that even tho your advisor will send a progress report to ur schools a couple months into ur fall semester detailing the avg grade you have in ur fall courses, this really isnt enough in most cases to get u an actual interview at these schools. Your actual complete fall grades are only sent out I believe during mid-late january so by this time, it is rather late in the interview cycle already and schools have filled a good amount of seats. This is why you really have to try to do great ur first semester so that you can impress the committees, enough so that they extend you an invite. After this point, it will be up to you to keep schools abreast of you are doing in your spring classes...you have to email them and let them know what grades u got in physio, endo bc I dont think the advisors will send another progress report (u could always ask). So I think your game plan should be: kick major a$$ (B+ or above in med classes, A- or above in grad classes) during fall semester, and try to pull at least a B+ in physio...if u can do this, I think you will be in good standing with ur applications. Also whats very tough is the fact that the SMP is like a concentrated pool of applicants who are ALL advised to apply to the same schools (NYMC, SLU, RFU, GW, Gtown....) so what ends up happening is that these schools are flooded with SMPers and thus in the end (even after advisors try to repeatedly tell u that SMPers arent competing against each other) you end up pitted against each other, so usually the applicant with the higher SMP gpa wins. I really really wished that the advisors at SMP looked at each individual application and counseled the student whether or not to apply during SMP year....I have to say that I think it is quite difficult to get interviews when your first set of grades are only going out in january.....Of course some students get interviews in the middle of fall semester (these are usually students who were relatively well off to begin with). I think the advisors really need to work on the counseling aspect a lot more and also since each student is paying 28K, it would be nice if they actually did some work as advocates for the students (i.e. making calls to schools about students, writing multiple update letters...) I know its difficult to do this with 140 or so SMP students, but we are all paying ****loads of money to be there...On a side note, I also think it would be nice if the first yr med students @ gtown just accepted the fact that their school desperately needs the money from the SMP program, instead of asking the constant question of "why do they have to be in our classes"...and "they dont affect our curve right??..." I think most of you will find that the nicest first yrs u guys will meet will be the SMPers who were accepted from the previous yr.
Bobodr, I find it a little alarming that u didnt get any interviews with a 3.5 and 31...or did u get interviews and u never came off waitlist? thats a diff story...