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I know someone who got into a school with a LizzyM score of 69 and their MCAT was 499. Even if they had a 4.0, their LizzyM score would still be 65. This person had the maturity and personality adcoms were looking for so they accepted said person. If you have the right attitude to be a physician, there's still hope. But the kind of maturity and attitude I'm talking about is very rare.
Any advice on how to succeed in interviews with below average stats? GPA 3.6 and 501 MCAT. I have two interviews so far (one is my state school). I am ORM but non-trad with killer ECs
Thanks
Indeed. We'I know someone who got into a school with a LizzyM score of 69 and their MCAT was 499. Even if they had a 4.0, their LizzyM score would still be 65. This person had the maturity and personality adcoms were looking for so they accepted said person. If you have the right attitude to be a physician, there's still hope. But the kind of maturity and attitude I'm talking about is very rare.
Peace Corps, military service, working with extremely fragile populations such as the dying, elderly or developmentally disabled, TFA, AmeriCorps, prison outreach, in short, extensive service to others less fortunate than one's self.what killer ecs are we talkin about
ohhh i see, i misinterpreted the wording of your post.It wasn't. The school was. Their LizzyM was a 65 at best.
Lucky state!! Be yourself and rock it!!Wow, thank you for your advice, everyone! I am reading up Goro's advice currently.
May I ask, are many state schools offering II to the residents of their state only to reject them later? I want to hope that no school would waste that many resources but my state school's average stats are way above mine. I hope it's not just a courtesy interview.
Thank you once again!
Can you elaborate what you mean about the point you made in #3 (be able to think beyond concrete terms)?
I've been doing some of this in the county jail for a little over a year for personal/religious reasons and I wasn't quite sure what adcoms would think about it. It's nice to see they look at it favorably.prison outreach
When you're asked a straightforward question, answer it. Unless it's a really obtuse question, you shouldn't need to ask for clarification. For example, "tell me about yourself" is one of the most common interview questions, but we've seen SDNers flummoxed by it.Can you elaborate what you mean about the point you made in #3 (be able to think beyond concrete terms)?