baba_ghanoush_MD
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2018
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 1
GPA/MCAT: 3.97/523
Major: Physics
Research: Physics research (modeling and simulations) since February. Worked full time over the summer. Probably at around 500-600 hours now. PI thinks I am on track to be published.
Volunteering (non-clinical): Two years (~80 hours) working with kids with disabilities. Taught a cooking class and watch them while they eat pizza and play video games.
Doing an internship in the spring getting poor people supplies and basic needs: ~250 hours.
TOTAL: ~330 hours
Volunteering (clinical): One year (~70 hours) cleaning beds in a hospital
One year (~80 hours) screening patients in a clinic for domestic violence
TOTAL: ~150 hours
Leadership: Not much. On a programming board for honors college, and chairman in domestic violence advocacy group mentioned above. Also was on an auxiliary committee in student government for a year.
Shadowing: 120 hours, mainly with various surgeons or proceduralists (GI, urologist, transplant surgeon, ophthalmologist, cardiologist).
I am a senior at a state school. I was already locked into doing a gap year because I felt that my activities were weak. I took the MCAT this past summer and got the above score, and it really made me re-evaluate my goals. I am hoping to do the NIH gap year program, but I am conflicted over whether I should do one or two years. With my score, I could be competitive at a place like Harvard, which I never expected. I don't know how important it is to go to a place like that, but I feel like I should try for it if I have a chance. I'm just not sure if I need two gap years to be competitive there, since I didn't make the best of my undergrad. Or, has my undergrad already locked me out of a place like that? I know I have a lot of hours, but I feel like I didn't really get anything from cleaning beds, and my leadership stuff is just resume padding.
Would I get any tangible benefit from the extra gap year? I am currently only thinking about doing an MD. Haven't researched long enough to know that I want to do an MD-PhD.
Major: Physics
Research: Physics research (modeling and simulations) since February. Worked full time over the summer. Probably at around 500-600 hours now. PI thinks I am on track to be published.
Volunteering (non-clinical): Two years (~80 hours) working with kids with disabilities. Taught a cooking class and watch them while they eat pizza and play video games.
Doing an internship in the spring getting poor people supplies and basic needs: ~250 hours.
TOTAL: ~330 hours
Volunteering (clinical): One year (~70 hours) cleaning beds in a hospital
One year (~80 hours) screening patients in a clinic for domestic violence
TOTAL: ~150 hours
Leadership: Not much. On a programming board for honors college, and chairman in domestic violence advocacy group mentioned above. Also was on an auxiliary committee in student government for a year.
Shadowing: 120 hours, mainly with various surgeons or proceduralists (GI, urologist, transplant surgeon, ophthalmologist, cardiologist).
I am a senior at a state school. I was already locked into doing a gap year because I felt that my activities were weak. I took the MCAT this past summer and got the above score, and it really made me re-evaluate my goals. I am hoping to do the NIH gap year program, but I am conflicted over whether I should do one or two years. With my score, I could be competitive at a place like Harvard, which I never expected. I don't know how important it is to go to a place like that, but I feel like I should try for it if I have a chance. I'm just not sure if I need two gap years to be competitive there, since I didn't make the best of my undergrad. Or, has my undergrad already locked me out of a place like that? I know I have a lot of hours, but I feel like I didn't really get anything from cleaning beds, and my leadership stuff is just resume padding.
Would I get any tangible benefit from the extra gap year? I am currently only thinking about doing an MD. Haven't researched long enough to know that I want to do an MD-PhD.