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I mean we are still in March so don't lose hope.Well I didn't do mock interviews but spent hours preparing for each and my interviews honestly seemed fine. I'll definitely work on that, though. Regardless, I'm worried about not getting as many interviews next cycle because my application won't show growth or improvement with new experiences in the past year.
Interviews. I didn't bomb any interviews and had mostly good answers - I'm not one of those weird/rude science robot types you meet - but I am fairly quiet.
I think there's a decent chance you'll get off a waitlist or two. ButI, too, expect the issue is your interview skills. Also consider a possible red flag raised in LORs (like if they all said you are quiet and don't contribute), an unremembered Institutional Action or legal issues that didn't pass a background check. Plan to rewrite all essays and activity descriptions. And revamp your school list.I applied to 16 schools early in the cycle and had 7 interviews. MI resident. Currently on 3 waitlists (low/mid tiers), 2 post-II rejections (top tiers), and waiting on two more decisions from interviews last month (one top tier and one state school), both of which are schools that waitlist a lot of people. If I do get accepted somewhere, it probably won't be until at least May so I will need to have reapplication plans either way.
I'm currently in a gap year scribing full time with some volunteering, both of which I started shortly before submitting AMCAS last year. If I reapply, I would have nothing new to add besides more hours so I'm not sure if I need to add new experiences now. I am likely quitting scribing either way in June and am travelling overseas June-July so I don't go crazy.
Currently have:
Areas of weakness:
- 4.0/526
- 1 year full time scribing in multiple specialties. Also shadowed 2 other MDs for a bit.
- 1.5 years volunteering in hospital. 1.5 years volunteering in free clinic. 1.5 years volunteering in after-school program.
- Helped lead freshman mentoring events on campus and site-led several nonclinical volunteer events.
- 1.5 years research with senior thesis, no pubs
- 2.5 years tutoring.
- Musical hobby
- LORs probably fine but not amazing. Had a committee letter too. No non-science prof letter but no schools said I needed it. Added an MD letter in January.
- Interviews. I didn't bomb any interviews and had mostly good answers - I'm not one of those weird/rude science robot types you meet - but I am fairly quiet.
- Essays were pretty good but not great.
- Should have applied to more mid-tier schools.
- Could use more leadership and maybe research for top schools
- Overall I'm pretty boring
Do I need to find a way to get new jobs, etc. in line right now just in case? Most of what I need to work on comes in at the secondary/LOR and interview stage, so would it be okay if my primary has the same experiences as my first application just with a lot more hours and a new PS? I really really don't want to reapply so any advice for waitlists would be great too.
Thank you!!
Most people are poor judges of their interviews. Work on your interview skills.I applied to 16 schools early in the cycle and had 7 interviews. MI resident. Currently on 3 waitlists (low/mid tiers), 2 post-II rejections (top tiers), and waiting on two more decisions from interviews last month (one top tier and one state school), both of which are schools that waitlist a lot of people. If I do get accepted somewhere, it probably won't be until at least May so I will need to have reapplication plans either way.
I'm currently in a gap year scribing full time with some volunteering, both of which I started shortly before submitting AMCAS last year. If I reapply, I would have nothing new to add besides more hours so I'm not sure if I need to add new experiences now. I am likely quitting scribing either way in June and am travelling overseas June-July so I don't go crazy.
Currently have:
Areas of weakness:
- 4.0/526
- 1 year full time scribing in multiple specialties. Also shadowed 2 other MDs for a bit.
- 1.5 years volunteering in hospital. 1.5 years volunteering in free clinic. 1.5 years volunteering in after-school program.
- Helped lead freshman mentoring events on campus and site-led several nonclinical volunteer events.
- 1.5 years research with senior thesis, no pubs
- 2.5 years tutoring.
- Musical hobby
- LORs probably fine but not amazing. Had a committee letter too. No non-science prof letter but no schools said I needed it. Added an MD letter in January.
- Interviews. I didn't bomb any interviews and had mostly good answers - I'm not one of those weird/rude science robot types you meet - but I am fairly quiet.
- Essays were pretty good but not great.
- Should have applied to more mid-tier schools.
- Could use more leadership and maybe research for top schools
- Overall I'm pretty boring
Do I need to find a way to get new jobs, etc. in line right now just in case? Most of what I need to work on comes in at the secondary/LOR and interview stage, so would it be okay if my primary has the same experiences as my first application just with a lot more hours and a new PS? I really really don't want to reapply so any advice for waitlists would be great too.
Thank you!!
As a 4.0/526 with multiple interviews and self described as "boring" you may have come off as someone with stats and no spark, passion, or needed interpersonal skill set.
While you application got you multiple interviews, that may have been more GPA/MCAT than excitement. As you said your essays were good but not great nor your letters.
Even if schools said you didnt need a non-science letter, not having one, just adds to the idea that your are all science and not much outside of it. Yes, even though you think you are not a weird robot type, from reading your post, that is exactly how you come off as. And coming off like that without research as well. If I were advising you, I would suggest
1) rip apart your entire written application from EC thru PS thru secondaries. you want to make your motivation, commitment, and passion come thru in every damn word. These need to be coherent, concise and compelling. They need to be hot and make the eyes dance. As I said your stats got you to interviews, it wasnt your application. Soi trash it, assume that everything needs to be rethought out and redesigned, You are starting from less than zero as you need a whole knew direction
2) you need intensive interview coaching/practice. I am sure you come off as a smart but uninspired type. (sorry if I am blunt)
3) And as most schools advise, the biggest mistake reapplicants make is reapplying too soon (see list/links below). Also attached is reapplicant guide form dean of admissions at Ohio school
Your reapplicant path is more difficult than most as it is academic that needs to be fixed, its really you and your ability to sell yourself
**********************************************
Many medical schools offer specific pages of advice for reapplicants, something I find few students look into. This would be true whether or not you are a specific reapplicant to that school. Below are links to a few and please note most say the most common mistake among reapplicants is applying again too soon
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Reapplicants - Miller School of Medicine Admissions
Roughly 20% of the students who apply to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in any given year are reapplicants. Data that we have collected indicate they have a lower acceptance rate than do first time applicants
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Heath
http://www.med.wisc.edu/education/md/admissions/reapplying/31716
(emphasis in the original)
There should be significant improvements in your application before reapplying. This might mean not reapplying the very next year. The most common error made by reapplicants is that they submit their next application too soon.
The Ohio State University College of Medicine
The Ohio State University College of Medicine - Tips & Advice
To maximize the chances of giving off this perception, you must allow enough time before reapplying. This will undoubtedly be the hardest part of the process, but be patient; if you rush it, you may join the ranks of those who are applying for a third time.
University of Minnesota Medical School
Re-Applicant
Though you can submit a second application immediately after your first application, you may want to consider waiting a year if you feel you need more experiences that help you demonstrate the essential and desired qualities of an ideal medical student.
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Reapplicants — admit
Our Ideal Candidate — admit
Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine
http://medicine.vtc.vt.edu/admissions/re-applicants/
LSU Health Shreveport
Re-Applicants
University of Missouri
http://medicine.missouri.edu/admissions/nontraditional.html
East Carolina University, Brody School of Medicine
whatif
Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (UNTHSC)
https://www.unthsc.edu/texas-colleg...ants-home/common-mistakes-made-by-applicants/
Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine
http://www.com.msu.edu/Admissions/Guidelines_For_Success/Reapplication.htm