
Are you OK with them continuing to exaggerate their involvement in activities in the future?I'm going to leave it at mind your own business and stop being a busybody. There is 0 reason for you to go out of your way to notify AMCAS in the off chance that they misrepresent their involvement.
Here's a great quote for this situation: "Never worry about what I'm doing. Only worry about why you're worried about what I'm doing."
Are you OK with them continuing to exaggerate their involvement in activities in the future?
What if they were to get a residency spot you both were competing for because they exaggerated their involvement in activities?That's their issue, not mine.
What if they were to get a residency spot you both were competing for because they exaggerated their involvement in activities?
Who actually gives a flying **** about a pre-med club?
I'm not disagreeing that this particular thing is meaningless. But current actions indicate future actions. This seems like an easy thing to nip in the bud (assuming there's hard evidence).Who actually gives a flying **** about a pre-med club?
OP: there is no such thing as "an important pre-med club on campus". Get over yourself.
What if they were to get a residency spot you both were competing for because they exaggerated their involvement in activities?
I take integrity very seriously, and would never exaggerate or fabricate information on my application. There's a difference between advocating exaggerating on your application and believing that people should not meddle in others' personal affairs. Mine is the latter.
Lol it's funny... because all of the people bashing OP are the ones exaggerating (lying) their activities, and they're threatened because they know they're in the wrong.
This is deflection, not a response. Regardless, people keep saying it's none of whoever's business. These people are your potential peers and classmates and potentially future physicians. I'm not sure why people don't think that makes it their business.Whats with the moral grilling here?
In the overall scheme of the application: MCAT, GPA, 14 other activities (factoring in research, clinical experience, etc...), Personal statement, Letters of recommendation, secondary essays, and interview - an exaggeration of involvement in a single activity matters so close to 0 that its not even funny. Nobody is losing a spot because someone who was only kind of involved "might" be saying they were really involved
I take integrity very seriously, and would never exaggerate or fabricate information on my application. There's a difference between advocating exaggerating on your application and believing that people should not meddle in others' personal affairs. Mine is the latter.
Its not my business because its someone else's business. I don't get what you're arguing with me for. I'm done with this thread.This is deflection, not a response. Regardless, people keep saying it's none of whoever's business. These people are your potential peers and classmates and potentially future physicians. I'm not sure why people don't think that makes it their business.
You want to stay classy. For every activity, the members have to put a point of contact. If medical schools call, then you can do your thing. Otherwise, stay quiet.Hi All,
I am a co-president of an important pre-med organization on campus. We had multiple e-board members this year who simply did not fulfill their required duties, and we had to remove them. Trust me, we tried really really hard to be nice to them, but they repeatedly took advantage of us being "nice" and came up with an excuse each time we tried to discuss their bad performance with them. They are all in the process of applying to medical school. Without going into too many details, we have substantial reason to believe that they are misrepresenting their experience and contributions to the organization on their applications. Do you know if there is any way we can report this potential misrepresentation to amcas?
Honestly, we're not just trying to sabotage their chances. We simply feel that this is the ethical thing to do.
Thank you!
Just to be fair, if you're going to BS an activity on AMCAS you probably won't put OP as your contact, you might put yourself say you're president of the club and had no other contact... If these people are BSing they definitely aren't putting OP as the contact or anyone else from the clubYou want to stay classy. For every activity, the members have to put a point of contact. If medical schools call, then you can do your thing. Otherwise, stay quiet.
This thread just brought to light that I really need to clean up my language before interview season lol.