

How did you prepare for these? What are some of the questions & scenario they presented at your MMI?
Funny you should ask, we have an article on that exact thing: http://studentdoctor.net/2013/02/how-to-prepare-for-multiple-mini-interviews-part-2/
everywhere I looked there's info on medical school MMI, how is pharmacy school's different?
The point is really not to prepare for these. They want to make you think on the spot. I know at UCSF, they made a big point of emphasizing that preparing for MMI and predicting situations has not been linked to better performance.
Not everyone is excellent when it comes to 'think on the spot'. Unless the ability to do that is entirely genetic, I think it would be beneficial to prepare for it. I've also heard that you have to 'act out' situations. But I am not a good actor or else I would apply to acting school haha.
Not everyone is excellent when it comes to 'think on the spot'. Unless the ability to do that is entirely genetic, I think it would be beneficial to prepare for it. I've also heard that you have to 'act out' situations. But I am not a good actor or else I would apply to acting school haha.
Not everyone is excellent when it comes to 'think on the spot'. Unless the ability to do that is entirely genetic, I think it would be beneficial to prepare for it. I've also heard that you have to 'act out' situations. But I am not a good actor or else I would apply to acting school haha.
Sounds like you are not a good fit for the school doing these types of things.
haha. 🙄
I don't really think you should prepare for an interview in the same way you prepare for say, a speech for example. I've got an interview tomorrow and the only preparation I've done is go on google and type up "pharmacy school interview questions" and just look at what kinds of questions the interviewers might ask. I didn't come up with answers for any of them because that would get me to start memorizing what I need to say, which isn't too great. In the interview, it will probably come off as a bunch of canned lines devoid of emotion; I'm pretty sure that interviewers have seen hundreds and hundreds of interviewees and can spot memorized lines in an instant they're said.
Not trying to say that you shouldn't prepare for an interview; it just doesn't work for me. As a matter of fact, I would be hindering myself if I did so. I'd much rather react to a question and give a natural response than recite a line I memorized the previous night.
This guy is troll, look at his past posts. LOL
Meh whatever, just because I call it like I see it does not make me a troll. Just be yourself, it shouldn't be that hard.