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I am interested, if you don’t mind, may I read the publication?Hello!
Thank you for taking the time to read my post! I appreciate it!
Currently, I'm a freshman, and I recently published some literature research I did in high school which I tweaked and perfected in college and became published in a journal. So I was just wondering: how would this publication look to medical schools considering that it is non-scientific and such?
Thanks!
It is not a "publication" like research findings are "publications" but you might want to list it as "research" outside the realm of the sciences.
It is not a report of a research endeavor that involved a testable hypothesis with intro, methods, results, discussion, conclusion. That's what med school adcoms are usually expecting when they see something in the work/activities section that is labeled "publication".How is it not a publication? It’s presumably peer reviewed, indexed and goes in a journal?
It is not a report of a research endeavor that involved a testable hypothesis with intro, methods, results, discussion, conclusion. That's what med school adcoms are usually expecting when they see something in the work/activities section that is labeled "publication".
Similarly I feel it is almost certainly more interesting than the typical level of science publication students manage to obtain. Would much rather discuss.if I was an adcom, I’d weight it more highly than a science publication (assuming a reputable literature journal) because I like eclectic thinkers and I would guess that it took more independent effort than a typical undergrad science publication
I appreciate anyone who can publish anything. It shows good results with writing to the specific audience. If we were talking the AAMC entering competencies: "writing skills, check." At best that is how I value it as an adcom, but there will be more to show on how good your writing skills are in the application that is more valued. That's where I would put my chips for your chances.if I was an adcom, I’d weight it more highly than a science publication (assuming a reputable literature journal) because I like eclectic thinkers and I would guess that it took more independent effort than a typical undergrad science publication