Do our chances of getting into medical school increase if we get a nice interviewer vs. a mean one?
Do our chances of getting into medical school increase if we get a nice interviewer vs. a mean one?
It's also possible that an interviewer is extra nice because he/she likes your application a lot or is extra mean because he thinks your app sucks and he is wasting his time.Depends how you look at it. If you catch a normally neutral interviewer (or even nice one) who's having a bad day and takes it out on you, yup it may affect your chances. There's always the possibility of interviewers having uncharacteristically good or bad days that an Adcom would not know to adjust to.
Win the respect of a meanie and it's a gold mine. I think that's what happened at my top pick! 👍
Those of us who use interviewer feedback to make admission decisions know who's a sweetheart and who's a meany. We adjust accordingly.
don't you think then that luck also plays a part in this entire med school application process. what if you get an interviewer who is having a bad day? what if you get an interviewer who is a newbie and whose letter doesn't carry as much weight? what if you get someone who is more nit-picky than others? why are there so many variables involved in this process?!?
don't you think then that luck also plays a part in this entire med school application process. what if you get an interviewer who is having a bad day? what if you get an interviewer who is a newbie and whose letter doesn't carry as much weight? what if you get someone who is more nit-picky than others? why are there so many variables involved in this process?!?
With the slight editing, we together hit a home run (and 4 cliches).Part of life is to learn to roll with the punches and hope for the best, while expecting the worst (3 cliches in one sentence, not bad 😛)
Just gotta watch out for the good-interviewer bad-interviewer technique
This is the killer....anyone else have a polygraph test at interview? I was hooked up to one and my answers to questions were checked for lying.😱
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You kids are lucky. Back when I interviewed, most schools used waterboarding.
Being on the other side of this process, I can tell you that who interviews you is certainly just as important as how you interview.
Just to give you an example, at our school, when med students interview applicants, we can't really help your chances to get accepted, but we certainly can kill your chances if we give you bad interview marks. Knowing this, I only gave applicants perfect (or near perfect) marks when I interviewed, regardless of their performance. I remember the randomness of this process, and don't want to be the one keeping one of you from your dream school (because, honestly what do I care about your interview performance unless you are a total D-Bag?). My classmate peers were far more harsh on interview performance, and never gave any applicant a perfect interview score. Occasionally their low marks would be the only thing keeping a borderline applicant from acceptance.
FWIW, you will find medical school 3rd year rotations to be the exact same. You will have attendings that give even the weakest students Honors no matter what, because they are just nice people and want the best for every student. You will also find old-school attendings who only give honors to one student every year, because that was how they were trained. Your grades will be largely determined by who your attending is, just like your chances of acceptance may depend on who is leading your interview.
You kids are lucky. Back when I interviewed, most schools used waterboarding.
Those of us who use interviewer feedback to make admission decisions know who's a sweetheart and who's a meany. We adjust accordingly.