I understand what you are saying, applying is expensive as heck, but come on. Not everyone who applies has a ton of money. I know I sure don't. My cell phone got cut off, doctors bills went unpaid and food was forgone trying to get app fees in. I asked family for money (hey grams can I have 80 dollars for an app, hey bro can I have 75 bucks for an app). I made a game out of it...Ohh I'll let you know if yours makes it lol. I was not eligible for a fee waiver, my parents make too much even though dad is in bankruptcy. I emailed the schools that offer free secondaries with an AMCAS waiver and explained my situation and guess what? Two free secondaries. Nobody said apply to 20 or even 30 schools. Having 15 would have been ideal for you, but whatever you're broke so forget I said that.
Also, adcoms do not know how many schools you applied to unless you tell them. they do not know acceptances until after may 15...so that should not be a factor in deciding where to apply.
I never said I didn't know that. I certainly do. My question had to do with deciding which school is the best choice for a letter of intent. A letter of intent is different from a letter of interest because with a letter of intent you're saying you'll definitely attend the school should they accept you. Sure it's not a binding contract, but it is dishonest if you send that to more than one school. It seems as though you're more confused than I am about this.
All I was saying is that you need to send letters of interest to all the schools you applied to and have not yet been rejected from since obviously you are interested! I am not confused on this at all. Just because you decide not to send a letter of intent does not mean you also should not send a letter of interest.
I've been continuing to volunteer in the past year. But I am very busy with thesis work, so it's not like I really have time to do that anymore. I think most doctors understand it's nearly impossible to do anything besides grad work in grad school.
Sure, whatever you say. (I have met with two adcom members who told me to my face that it is important to continue volunteer work between cycles when reapplying as it confirms your dedication.)
This contains a contradiction I think. My reasons for wanting to be a doctor are like any else's: I enjoy science, I want to help people, I want a challenge, I find differential diagnosis to be fascinating, etc. My reasons for choosing xyz school--WAIT, didn't you just suggest that I blindly choose more schools? Are you kidding me? You really think people that apply to 20, 30 schools have good reasons for attending any but a few of those schools? The primary reason I chose my schools were for proximity to what I consider home and what I thought I'd get from the clinical experience (and obviously value in the case of the state schools). If you really think I should have a good reason for attending a specific school, then next time I should just pick one and do early decision.
No, I did not suggest you blindly chose more schools. I suggest that you sit down and look over information from more schools and generate a list of about 15 to apply to. Seriously if you cannot find 15 schools out of 131 in this country to attend then something is wrong. Each school is distinct from another, but the distinctions are not that great. You can pick one and do early decision if you are really sold, but you need to have more lined up for when you do not get in. This is not like applying to undergrad, you have to be a lot more flexible.
But a WL is basically saying, "you're good enough to get accepted, but we have better applicants." I really think it's hard to tell what's wrong with my application. I'd like to blame it on ECs, but I'm not sure how much weight they really have. Sure it's nice to have them, but I doubt it'll make or break the typical applicant. However, I'm afraid that I could have a bad letter of recommendation on my file (and I suppose that doesn't make it a letter of recommendation anymore). And obviously I'm afraid that my interviews might be awkward or unimpressive in some way.