Letters of interest timing? Update letter timing?

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

lifeisgood7

Full Member
7+ Year Member
Joined
Jun 20, 2016
Messages
48
Reaction score
42
Hello! I am super passionate about some of the medical schools I have applied to so far and am wondering which schools I can be more proactive about/aka which ones are more receptive to them? The ones I am very passionate about are Michigan, Case Western, Mayo, Vanderbilt, Duke, and Emory
 
Last edited:
As a follow-up, I would be outlining my gap year plans/accomplishments so far (started a new job working with hospital administrators) in an update letter because I didn't put it in the primary at all and some secondaries didn't allow me room for it!

Am I able to combine a letter of interest with an update letter or should those be separate?
 
Hello! I am super passionate about some of the medical schools I have applied to so far and am wondering which schools I can be more proactive about/aka which ones are more receptive to them? The ones I am very passionate about are Mayo, Case Western, Michigan, Vanderbilt, Duke, and Emory
LOI are a waste of time. The schools already know that both:
1) you're interested because you sent them an app
2) you're lying, because you have multiple candidates you want to take to the prom
 
I'd argue against the notion that all LOIs are a waste. The only time I'd send a Letter of Intent is if you have an acceptance at another school but would rather go to another school you're on the Waitlist for. This will hold some weight. I did this last cycle and it turned out for me (did the LOI actually help? Who knows). A Letter of Interest sent to multiple schools without any pull is useless.

Most schools allow 2-3 updates so you should periodically send them (maybe in October if you applied July/August) with your updated accomplishments and plans. I'd really only use them for significant updates (starting a new job isn't the best to use an update on. Once you've worked there for a month or so, then I'd write about it). Of course, focus on what you've already accomplished because planned activities hold less weight. Good luck!
 
I would say that is not true; most schools do not recommend updates nor do most schools have any formal process to evaluate or include update into the decision making process
Ehh I only had 3 schools out of 30 that I applied to that didn't accept any updates. List consisted of FL schools and private OOS.
 
Ehh I only had 3 schools out of 30 that I applied to that didn't accept any updates. List consisted of FL schools and private OOS.
Accepting them is not the same as wanting them.
They are a big pain to process and the type usually described will have no effect on the outcome.
 
Top