- Joined
- Sep 30, 2014
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Thanks for the input everyone. Deleting so I remain anonymous muahahahaha 😉
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I would wait till the decision comes out hahaIf this is true, it does sound inappropriate in my opinion. Have you contacted the dean or the ADCOM?
definitely worth reporting how you feel it was inappropriate, even if they decide it wasn't.
I would wait till the decision comes out haha
yeah i guess you're right. part of me says i wouldn't want to go to a place that allows this kind of questioning, but then again it's only one person.
I agree with you, crossfit. People say to never mention anything negative about yourself in your PS, but I don't see it as a bad thing at all. You can give such clear examples/explanations of your strong attributes by explaining how you earned them, through overcoming hardship and adversity. Like you, I talked about my past mistakes. I used those experiences to show how I've become a stronger person and how those experiences will make me a better doctor than if I hadn't made the mistakes I made. My first school where I was complete was on 9/30. In 3 weeks, I've received 3 IIs.
It's one thing to harp on the negatives and make excuses, but by talking about what hardships you went through to become the person you are today, I think it gives you the potential to create a very, very strong PS. Just depends on how you word it.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that an absolute such as "for future advice do not put negative attributes into PS" is a little over-simplified. If tutoring or collegiate athletics were defining experiences in your life, then they are worth writing about. If a personal struggle you had to overcome was the defining experience, then that's worth writing about. OP has received 4(?) IIs, and I wouldn't be surprised if his/her strong PS has been a factor in receiving them.
Maybe I'm wrong. I'm not an adcom, so I could be totally off base here. But I know that if I was an adcom, I'd be very impressed by an applicant's ability to tackle a huge problem, change their life around, and have the courage to talk openly and honestly about their past struggles.