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- Pre-Dental

Dr. juju said:okey guys,
so I was at ucsf and someone (I mean from the admission office) recomended that I shouldn't hand in my CV when I'm walking out of the interview! I thought that's considered professional 🙁
what do you think?
akdental said:whats a CV?
Dr. juju said:okey guys,
so I was at ucsf and someone (I mean from the admission office) recomended that I shouldn't hand in my CV when I'm walking out of the interview! I thought that's considered professional 🙁
what do you think?
Empty pockets said:I also want to say, that may seem desperate in their eyes.
good luck.
akdental said:whats a CV?
prez_al said:A lof of things are unprofessional, there's no point in handing them your CV, that's just too "in your face". It's those types of people that really "grinds my gears" because a while back, there was this one person who wanted to send thank you notes to the interviewers following their interview and the admissions coordinator immediately said it was unprofessional. That tactic might reek of desparation too, as you should've highlighted the BEST of you in your AADSAS application. Sorry for sounding blunt...
Empty pockets said:I DO NOT RECOMMEND IT. They interview several students a day and have a large file of stuff on each one.
Why complicate the interviewers with more useless crap.
Unfortunately, you will learn that they do not even have time to read through your application, they will skim over it right in front of you and ask questions at that time based on what catches their eye.
An extra CV would be pointless and confusing to them.
I don't recommend it at all.
djeffreyt said:depending on who you ask, some say thank you notes are necessary others say don't do it...it's kinda confusing. I don't want to seem desperate, yet at the same time some people see not getting a thank you as a sign of disrespect...
djeffreyt said:depending on who you ask, some say thank you notes are necessary others say don't do it...it's kinda confusing. I don't want to seem desperate, yet at the same time some people see not getting a thank you as a sign of disrespect...
Blando said:just a thought... do you think this be a difference at what school you interview at?i.e. your demographic. I mean, from what I understand, down south it is polite to always say yes sir, no sir, you know what i mean? and around boston a lot of people are jerks, and people could take that the wrong way.. i'm trying to get somewhere with this, like maybe it would be better to write a thank you letter to somewhere like mississippi instead of bu? its just a thought, criticism is encouraged
Empty pockets said:If not, ALL THE THANK YOU LETTERS NOTES WHATEVER WILL NOT MEAN ANYTHING TO THESE PEOPLE.
Thats the harsh truth.
You would be much better off to send suck up letters to the people who wrote you the recommendation letters as these people have much more power than you expect!
Empty pockets said:did you really think this out?
Just because a college is in the south doesn't mean all the professors are.
What it boils down to is this, your interviewer will be sitting in front of you with over 25 pages of information pertaining to you.
Although the interviewer is a Doctor, professor, whatever, this is OVERWHELMING TO HIM/HER.
If he has already interviewed 10 people that day that means that he/she has sifted through 250 pages of detailed crap.
Adding another piece of paper to their stack is not going to get you in dental school hands down.
If you applied early and did what you were supposed to do in your undergrad and on the DAT then your in great shape.
If not, ALL THE THANK YOU LETTERS NOTES WHATEVER WILL NOT MEAN ANYTHING TO THESE PEOPLE.
Thats the harsh truth.
You would be much better off to send suck up letters to the people who wrote you the recommendation letters as these people have much more power than you expect!
laelialudisia said:i do NOT agree with this statement. i know and have spoken with people on admission's committees at dental schools. i attended a lecture to a D3 class where the prof. (who was on the admission's committee at the school) was actually lecturing 3rd year students on the importance of ALWAYS sending thank-you notes, i kid you not.
the idea is not to suck-up as others are suggesting. the idea is to get your name in front of the decision makers as often as possible. if you are serious about getting into dental school i would DEFINITELY write thank-you notes. every single person i meet with will be getting a thank-you note!!!
SirShagaLot said:could u expand a little on the "much more power than you expect" part...i'm kinda curious about that.
Thanks
Empty pockets said:man if you can't figure out that the dentists who donate money to the schools actually have some clout as to who gets accepted then your confused as to how this whole acceptance thing works.
Empty pockets said:I wouldn't do it. The professor lecturing probably wasn't one of the professors who interviewed 200 students.
Do what you want in the end. If it bites you in the ass later its not my fault.