- Joined
- Oct 4, 2017
- Messages
- 193
- Reaction score
- 244
Dear all,
I'm pretty new here so I don't know if this is the way to ask. But I've been applying this cycle, and I've been looking at SDN this year (friends told me to stay away, but I've actually found some helpful stuff).
I would like to know if there's something drastically wrong with my application. i was complete at most schools between end of July and mid-August. I have so far received an interview from one top 15 (which was a while ago like September 2nd, interview completed by mid September), and then I have an interview from my state school(s) and a local private medical school near my home down (ranked within top 100).
Here's my profile:
sGPA according to AMCAS: 3.77, overallGPA according to AMCAS 3.73, and other GPA according to AMCAS 3.67. Graduated from top ten school. I also did a master's as well from an institution. I don't think those grades are important, but my overall for masters was a 3.5 (a techy subject). I got another masters abroad, and I passed that one (they only do pass/fail, they don't do anything else).
MCAT: 33 first time (10 V, 11 PS, 12 BS) back in 2014, 519 second time (2016), pretty even (131 BS, 131 PS, 127 CARS, 130 PSYCH).
A summary of my ECs:
1) I founded an organization on campus that does music at hospitals, and did some really cool work, like recording albums and donating it to places. Got a rec letter from the clinical professor in neurology that worked with me on this, and have sent that to all schools almost. I wanna say easily 300 hours.
2) Did some academic and volunteer work with arts and science education in the local community. Did some thesis work on it, and have a rec letter describing my thesis/scholarly work on this. The work would be easily like 200-300 hours of work.
3) Research. Have two papers in Cell and Nature Comm (middle authorship). Have two-three letters (to send to those colleges that ask for everything). easily like 500-600 hours if not more.
4) Shadowing: 150-200 hours done throughout different periods (mainly summers)
5) Clinical Volunteering: got a rec letter about this one as well, easily 150 hours.
6) random health activities, like being a residential peer health educator, etc.
7) was a teaching assistant for two classes (rec letter from one of the professors whose class I also took, it was a science class).
The four I focus on throughout my apps (when asked specific questions in secondaries) the organization I founded, the clinical volunteering, the science education stuff, and my research.
For any of the "other" questions that ask more about life stories or something, I talk about my parents functioning as caretakers for my grandparents who have very severe chronic illnesses, and how watching my mom function as a physician both in the house and at clinic has made me more passionate about medicine. I also had an experience with emotional abuse in college, which I choose to talk about when discussing resilience.
I have one of four international study abroad scholarships (Rhodes, Marshall, Mitchell, Gates-Cambridge). I've put this in my Honors/Awards section on work/activities, in the primary but sometimes I get a chance to talk about it in secondaries too, when schools ask for "what did you do in your gap years".
I have sent on average 6-8 rec letters to each school, since I have had two gap years. My school doesn't do the committee letter thingy (don't ask me, I don't know why...). I was told that if they didn't want to read all my letters, they wouldn't, and that they would just read the ones they want. I'm extremely confident that these rec letters are great, because I know my these people wouldn't write letters if they didn't think well of me. They're all people I've had incredibly great rapports with.
My personal statement is about how I find medicine interesting to me because it oftentimes functions at the intersection of my two passions, arts and science (which is reflected in the EC activities I focused on) and at the intersection of science and society. It isn't the typical like "I like science and helping people" story (although I get to that), but I don't think it's a personal statement that will keep me from interviews, since I do have one top 15 med school interview. I've shown that personal statement to about 20 people now, a range of people already in med school, and friends.
I was wondering if someone (maybe an adcom person) could point me to what could be missing in my application? Or maybe something that doesn't look right? Maybe I've looked at it way too much and am thinking to myself "oh there's nothing wrong", but maybe other people can look and tell me something that I don't see. To me it just seems weird that only one "not-my-home-state-or-home-town" school has given me an interview (that too way back beginning of Sept), and then I've heard silence. I've definitely come across people at my top 15 interview that said they already had some interviews from other schools, so I'm not sure what to think. They were complete before and after me, so I know there isn't any chronological order.
Thanks for the help
Sincerely,
First time user, and a little lost tbh haha
I'm pretty new here so I don't know if this is the way to ask. But I've been applying this cycle, and I've been looking at SDN this year (friends told me to stay away, but I've actually found some helpful stuff).
I would like to know if there's something drastically wrong with my application. i was complete at most schools between end of July and mid-August. I have so far received an interview from one top 15 (which was a while ago like September 2nd, interview completed by mid September), and then I have an interview from my state school(s) and a local private medical school near my home down (ranked within top 100).
Here's my profile:
sGPA according to AMCAS: 3.77, overallGPA according to AMCAS 3.73, and other GPA according to AMCAS 3.67. Graduated from top ten school. I also did a master's as well from an institution. I don't think those grades are important, but my overall for masters was a 3.5 (a techy subject). I got another masters abroad, and I passed that one (they only do pass/fail, they don't do anything else).
MCAT: 33 first time (10 V, 11 PS, 12 BS) back in 2014, 519 second time (2016), pretty even (131 BS, 131 PS, 127 CARS, 130 PSYCH).
A summary of my ECs:
1) I founded an organization on campus that does music at hospitals, and did some really cool work, like recording albums and donating it to places. Got a rec letter from the clinical professor in neurology that worked with me on this, and have sent that to all schools almost. I wanna say easily 300 hours.
2) Did some academic and volunteer work with arts and science education in the local community. Did some thesis work on it, and have a rec letter describing my thesis/scholarly work on this. The work would be easily like 200-300 hours of work.
3) Research. Have two papers in Cell and Nature Comm (middle authorship). Have two-three letters (to send to those colleges that ask for everything). easily like 500-600 hours if not more.
4) Shadowing: 150-200 hours done throughout different periods (mainly summers)
5) Clinical Volunteering: got a rec letter about this one as well, easily 150 hours.
6) random health activities, like being a residential peer health educator, etc.
7) was a teaching assistant for two classes (rec letter from one of the professors whose class I also took, it was a science class).
The four I focus on throughout my apps (when asked specific questions in secondaries) the organization I founded, the clinical volunteering, the science education stuff, and my research.
For any of the "other" questions that ask more about life stories or something, I talk about my parents functioning as caretakers for my grandparents who have very severe chronic illnesses, and how watching my mom function as a physician both in the house and at clinic has made me more passionate about medicine. I also had an experience with emotional abuse in college, which I choose to talk about when discussing resilience.
I have one of four international study abroad scholarships (Rhodes, Marshall, Mitchell, Gates-Cambridge). I've put this in my Honors/Awards section on work/activities, in the primary but sometimes I get a chance to talk about it in secondaries too, when schools ask for "what did you do in your gap years".
I have sent on average 6-8 rec letters to each school, since I have had two gap years. My school doesn't do the committee letter thingy (don't ask me, I don't know why...). I was told that if they didn't want to read all my letters, they wouldn't, and that they would just read the ones they want. I'm extremely confident that these rec letters are great, because I know my these people wouldn't write letters if they didn't think well of me. They're all people I've had incredibly great rapports with.
My personal statement is about how I find medicine interesting to me because it oftentimes functions at the intersection of my two passions, arts and science (which is reflected in the EC activities I focused on) and at the intersection of science and society. It isn't the typical like "I like science and helping people" story (although I get to that), but I don't think it's a personal statement that will keep me from interviews, since I do have one top 15 med school interview. I've shown that personal statement to about 20 people now, a range of people already in med school, and friends.
I was wondering if someone (maybe an adcom person) could point me to what could be missing in my application? Or maybe something that doesn't look right? Maybe I've looked at it way too much and am thinking to myself "oh there's nothing wrong", but maybe other people can look and tell me something that I don't see. To me it just seems weird that only one "not-my-home-state-or-home-town" school has given me an interview (that too way back beginning of Sept), and then I've heard silence. I've definitely come across people at my top 15 interview that said they already had some interviews from other schools, so I'm not sure what to think. They were complete before and after me, so I know there isn't any chronological order.
Thanks for the help
Sincerely,
First time user, and a little lost tbh haha