evenfeather
Full Member
- Joined
- May 30, 2025
- Messages
- 42
- Reaction score
- 14
I was very very fortunate to receive an interview invite at a medical school (that does MMIs) earlier this month. I have been trying to prepare by going over some practice scenarios. The problem is that, while I think my answers are okay to pretty good overall, the model response seems to completely blow it out of the water. They are bringing up multiple things I knew are important but completely forgot to include in my answer, perspectives I hadn't even considered, and are also able to seemingly fit an entire essay's worth of points in 2-3 minutes when my responses take 4-5 minutes (sometimes up to 6) to say less things.
I know that it is not advised to overprepare, and it is not realistic to try to memorize the "correct" answer for all possible different scenarios. I also understand these are model answers for a reason and not necessarily representative of an average matriculant's performance. At the same time, I can't help but feel discouraged and lost about how I can improve my answers.
For example, a common piece of advice is to have some sort of structure to your answer, addressing the main issue, different perspectives and options, weaving in a personal anecdote, then making a decision, etc. But as a real human being who is trying to think on the spot and sound coherent, on top of interview day nerves (which I will likely have), I'm not quite sure how I can do all of that in 3 minutes or less... I am also concerned that if I don't "hit all the points" so to speak, I will be docked points.
Right now I'm just practicing impromptu with different questions online + with a friend and focusing more on being confident and natural. Is there anything else I could be doing? My stats are on the lower end so I feel that the interview will be very important for me in swaying my chances.
I know that it is not advised to overprepare, and it is not realistic to try to memorize the "correct" answer for all possible different scenarios. I also understand these are model answers for a reason and not necessarily representative of an average matriculant's performance. At the same time, I can't help but feel discouraged and lost about how I can improve my answers.
For example, a common piece of advice is to have some sort of structure to your answer, addressing the main issue, different perspectives and options, weaving in a personal anecdote, then making a decision, etc. But as a real human being who is trying to think on the spot and sound coherent, on top of interview day nerves (which I will likely have), I'm not quite sure how I can do all of that in 3 minutes or less... I am also concerned that if I don't "hit all the points" so to speak, I will be docked points.
Right now I'm just practicing impromptu with different questions online + with a friend and focusing more on being confident and natural. Is there anything else I could be doing? My stats are on the lower end so I feel that the interview will be very important for me in swaying my chances.