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post your most ridiculous examples of people who got into med school, but didn't deserve it a single bit. names withheld, of course.
he/she didn't!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! that's why he/she is venting!!!!!
Myself.
I've slacked throughout undergrad, half-assed any volunteering work or part-time job I've had, and pretty much relied on social skills to create a network of connections with professors that landed me research positions (which I slacked at) and good LORs.
If it were up to me, I'd just play video games all day and party all night long. Which is what I am doing now that I have been accepted. 🙂
This thread has the potential to get very ugly.I have my popcorn ready.
....but didn't deserve it a single bit.
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.
Some people make up stories on their personal statement that makes them stand out (ie they saved somebody's life, helped out the homeless, studied abroad ... all when they didn't) and this disgusts me but alas theres not much that can be done except hope that it gets brought up in the interview and they can't say a thing about it.
i am trying to have some fun and throw some dirt around.
This thread needs to be closed before things get ugly...
<soapbox>Well ... what we're now doing is stating how an entire committee of trained professionals are wrong, and we know more than them.
Some people make up stories on their personal statement that makes them stand out (ie they saved somebody's life, helped out the homeless, studied abroad ... all when they didn't) and this disgusts me but alas theres not much that can be done except hope that it gets brought up in the interview and they can't say a thing about it.
to HSTEACHER2MD
aren't you a highschool teacher writing on a student forum? and you're judging me on what I do for fun??
to HSTEACHER2MD
aren't you a highschool teacher writing on a student forum? and you're judging me on what I do for fun??
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.
If you look below his name along the left side of the post, you'll see a link to an MDapps profile wherein the information indicates that he will be a matriculant at a medical school this fall.
post your most ridiculous examples of people who got into med school, but didn't deserve it a single bit. names withheld, of course.
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.
Yeah man. Totally random.
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.
This is 1,000,000,000,000% true.
As a member of the admissions commitee at a top 40 med school, I must say that though there is a lot of "randomness" in the decisions process, most of the applicants who get denied just plain s-u-c-k (to put it lightly). 🙂
.ewwww
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.
I find this whole random concept funny. I applied to a little over 10 schools. I got interviewed by the ones I thought I would, and got accepted and I am going to attend the one I thought I would. SDN freaked me out, I could have applied to one school! Although I got rejected by a few that I thought I could get an interview, I was basically 50/50 on the schools I "thought" would interview me. If I applied to one school, I would have been ok and quite happy.
While I don't agree with the randomness argument, I don't think your post is much of an argument against it.
Your sample size is 1 and the applicant pool is about 42,000. The fact that you did as expected does not change the statistics -- your sample size is simply too small to extrapolate out whether your experience is common or an extreme outlier. Most people who apply to 1 school in your situation might be SOL.
post your most ridiculous examples of people who got into med school, but didn't deserve it a single bit. names withheld, of course.
What you have to accept (and I still haven't fully accepted it yet) is that a lot of stuff in this selection process is random. Whether they interview you, accept you, or reject you, a substantial portion of that decision could be up total chance. Also, there are just way too many qualified applicants out there. How many >3.5 GPA and >30 MCAT people are on this forum? Tons and Tons. The things that separate us and make us unique are minuscule. Everyone does research, everyone shadows, everyone volunteers... Its just too difficult to distinguish between each applicant.