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Well, let's just say for arguments sake, that you are neither amazing at interviewing, nor are you horrifically socially awkward. You are basically just the average joe, and tend to leave interviews feeling good, but not amazing.
The point I was trying to make is that it's not just random chance based on the number of people that schools accept after interviews.
Otherwise, if you got a particular number of interviews, you could guarantee an acceptance.
It's not just like flipping a coin a certain number of times to assure that you'll get "heads."
The point I was trying to make is that it's not just random chance based on the number of people that schools accept after interviews.
Otherwise, if you got a particular number of interviews, you could guarantee an acceptance.
It's not just like flipping a coin a certain number of times to assure that you'll get "heads."
I don't think anybody is assuming that it's a coin flip, but I believe that it comes close.
I'm of the opinion that most candidates don't distinguish themselves in interviews, either positively or negatively. Sure, they may think they did, and they may swear that their acceptance or rejection was because of the interview, but it's all a matter of perception. Awkward, antisocial goobers can pull themselves together and come off as a likeable fellow for thirty minutes. My worst interview became an acceptance, and I have yet to hear from my best interview.
So, if you don't have a four leaved clover, I WIN!!! 
I also agree that it is certainly not random. It has a lot to do with your interviewing skills. BUT assuming it was random, we can calculate easily the number of interviews you really need. Assuming that you have a 33% chance (which seems to be the average) of getting accepted once interviewed, then you would need
1 - (.67)^n = 0.95 (for 95% confidence) => n = 7.48
So, if you have 7-8 interviews, you can say with 95% confidence (i.e. almost assured) that you will get at least 1 acceptance. Of course, this is again assuming that it is completely random, which it is not.
Haha, of course it's not like a coin-flip, but it sometimes does feel random. For example, what if you think an EC was very valuable, but the people assigned to your file just can't really relate? Or think another person's EC is "more" valuable. I feel like those kind of subjective little things, that may or may not have impact on your file, make things feel a little like luck. All of our applications involve some combo of EC's, numbers, and interview feedback, and many of us are probably fairly similar to each other in many of those 3 aspects (EC's like volunteering/travel/research, competitive numbers around the school averages, your normal genial persona), so when it comes judgment time, who's to say who is "better"? You could probably make a good argument for any of those cases, so I guess it just FEELS like it's random which line of logic the adcoms agree on. While it's true admissions is by no means purely random, it's also not entirely objective either, an hence where the luck comes in.
Of course, I'm just playing the "calculate the chances" game that so many of us SDN-er are found of 🙂 You know how much we love averages and such!
I also agree that it is certainly not random. It has a lot to do with your interviewing skills. BUT assuming it was random, we can calculate easily the number of interviews you really need. Assuming that you have a 33% chance (which seems to be the average) of getting accepted once interviewed, then you would need
1 - (.67)^n = 0.95 (for 95% confidence) => n = 7.48
So, if you have 7-8 interviews, you can say with 95% confidence (i.e. almost assured) that you will get at least 1 acceptance. Of course, this is again assuming that it is completely random, which it is not.
Just so you know, thats not what confidence means (ie confidence and probability are not the same thing), important distinction if you're going to be a doctor.

Well, Hopkins for example ultimately accepts about 1/3 of the people they interview (including off the waitlist)...so maybe that's why 3 sound right? It would be awesome if it were 3! Oh, if only probability was certainty..ah well.
I heard you need at least 7 interviews in order to be confident that you ultimately will be accepted...
Um... if you have 1/3 chance to get into each school, 3 interviews give you a 70.3% chance of being accepted anywhere.
Lol, you should get your facts straight before questioning my math! 😡
Confidence levels ARE probabilities. Usually, they refer to the probability that a certain population statistic will lie within a certain confidence interval:
"The confidence interval is the plus-or-minus figure usually reported in newspaper or television opinion poll results. For example, if you use a confidence interval of 4 and 47% percent of your sample picks an answer you can be "sure" that if you had asked the question of the entire relevant population between 43% (47-4) and 51% (47+4) would have picked that answer.
The confidence level tells you how "sure" you can be. It is expressed as a percentage and represents how often the true percentage of the population who would pick an answer lies within the confidence interval. The 95% confidence level means you can be 95% certain; the 99% confidence level means you can be 99% certain. Most researchers use the 95% confidence level."
You can then use the CL and CI to calculate a necessary sample size. In our case, however, there really isn't an "interval;" it's a discrete random variable (either acceptance or not). But the principles are the same, and that's why we can easily calculate the necessary sample size to give us a 95% probability that there will be at least one acceptance.
You should learn to get your facts straight before jumping to conclusions...that's an important distinction if you're going to be a doctor too. 😳)
There are ppl on here that had 10+ interviews w/o getting in last year that have 6+ acceptances already this xear. There is just no way to know.
Comparing # of interview to # of acceptances is irrelevant. If you are an applicant with a dynamic personality that shines through in your interviews, 1 interview would = 1 acceptance.
But if you are....... well, the opposite. I suppose that you could have 10 interviews and not a single acceptance.