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Yeah I get a little bit of time off because classes end. Hopefully ill be able to fit in at least 30 hours. Thanks for the advice! Numbers are good enough for a top 50/100 school right?
Hey everyone,
So I'm beginning to look at schools to apply to and I have a few questions:
1) On MSAR some schools say that a research thesis is required - does this mean I shouldn't bother applying to these schools because of my lack of a research thesis?
So I am a D1 student-athlete (bet you can guess what school from my name) who runs track. Here are my stats:
3.71 GPA
3.75 sGPA
35M MCAT (Sept 2012)
No Research 🙁
Very little EC's other than track (few volunteering and shadowing hours) 🙁
Graduating in Spring 2014 with a major in Biology and minor in Economics.
What should I focus on to make sure I am on the right path? I have limited time due to my sport and need to budget my time efficiently. Any Advice?
Besides shadowing, which you can complete rapidly with long hours in a short time, you really, really need to get in clinical experience ot have a chance in the next cycle. If traditional clinic or hospital volunteer expectations are too rigid, ask your team physician if there is a Sport Injury clinic locally where you can help out. Or look further afield to skilled-level nursing homes, rehab center, hospice.Shadowing and Clincal Volunteering.
Do you get any time off this Christmas? If you could get in 50 hours of shadowing you could get that covered, then perhaps over the long term volunteer at a clinic etc. maybe 3-4 hours a week this year.
Otherwise you could always take a year or two off to boost your EC's.
There is passive clinical exposure, like shadowing, where you focus more on what the physician does and mainly watch them interacting with sick people (about 50 hours is the average listed). And there's active clinical experience, where you personally engage patients in some helpful way. For the latter, longevity counts more than total hours, but the average listed on applications is about 150 hours gained over 1.5 years. Of course, half of applicants have less than that. I recommend that you continue with this through your application year for the sake of update letters, Secondary essays, and interview conversations. What you get out of it is more important than the actual hours, as is how well you articulate this in essays and during interviews.what defines "clinical exposure"?
So I am a D1 student-athlete (bet you can guess what school from my name) who runs track. Here are my stats:
3.71 GPA
3.75 sGPA
35M MCAT (Sept 2012)
No Research 🙁
Very little EC's other than track (few volunteering and shadowing hours) 🙁
Graduating in Spring 2014 with a major in Biology and minor in Economics.
What should I focus on to make sure I am on the right path? I have limited time due to my sport and need to budget my time efficiently. Any Advice?
*Just a heads up your going to be pretty easy to identify. Your name says you go to UMass Lowell, and jump there. So unless your whole triple jump, high, long jump is applying for med school you are not going to be anonymous at all.
Sent from my iPhone using SDN Mobile app please excuse punctuation and spelling