resident1 said:One very helpful tip:
IT DOES NOT MATTER WHERE YOU GO FOR MEDICAL SCHOOL TO GET A RESIDENCY IN CALIFORNIA. GO OUT OF STATE IF THAT'S WHERE YOU WANT TO GO.![]()
what about staying in CA and going east for residency? any biases?
resident1 said:One very helpful tip:
IT DOES NOT MATTER WHERE YOU GO FOR MEDICAL SCHOOL TO GET A RESIDENCY IN CALIFORNIA. GO OUT OF STATE IF THAT'S WHERE YOU WANT TO GO.![]()
Olanzapine said:If you print out your AMCAS application, you shouldn't eat it, even if you are really hungry.
speedbird001 said:Make that post by felipe5 #19.
Here's another one:
20. Follow the golden rule. Be nice to everyone you see at your interview. Not only should you treat your interviewers with respect, but also do the same for the secretary and any other staff. I've heard stories of people getting rejected simply because they were rude to the secretary.
Horseradish99 said:Every morning when you step out of the shower, step into your positive shell. Pull it up around you like a warm towel and zip it up. Look in the mirror and remind yourself that you are worthy and that the world (and the world of medicine) is a good place to be.
In short, train yourself EVERY DAY to think positive. For some of us this comes naturally. Others... you have to do something silly like ritually put on a "positive shell." Sounds dumb, but I do it every single morning, and my med school classmates can attest that I tend to be one of the most happy-go-lucky, positive people out there.
Not only will positivity affect how you come across in interviews, it will affect your outlook on the whole application process. Plus, it's just a great life attitude to have.
Please! said:Look sharp on your interviews 😎
Be clean and fresh smelling, and for goodness sake, take out the tongue/nose/eyebrow ring. I've seen a number of people on interviews with these things (especially the tongue ring) and it always surprised me.
Spitting Camel said:Don't ask people on SDN to choose your medical school for you. Sit in a room by yourself, and THINK about the next four years of YOUR life!
funkless said:NEVER rehearse an answer. NEVER EVER EVER. Try to have a general idea of how you'll respond to something, but don't memorize, like, you know, words.
--Funkless
Scubadoc said:Hey Arsenic are you going to U of M?
edj80 said:If January comes around and you still haven't been invited to interview at schools on your list, write them. Express your interest and specifically ask for an interview. A friend passed this advice on to me and it worked. I wrote to 4 schools I had not heard from, in a matter of weeks was invited to interview at 3 of them, and was fortunate to receive acceptances from all three. And it wasn't because my application was anything special. With piles of literally thousands of similar applications of well qualified applicants, anything you can do to get someone in admissions to pull your file will help.
Tezzie said:33. Do not lie on your application !!!
Yes that includes conveniently "forgetting" about shady past activities that can be found out.
snowhite said:Steer clear from competitive, uptight pre-meds.
Super Rob said:I'm gonna join the chorus:
With regards to the interview
BE YOURSELF throughout this entire process. No matter how pompous or socially inept your interviewers come across (and there will be a few of them), just be relaxed and be yourself. Use your sense of humor if you have one but don't go overboard. I liked most of the thirty-or-so interviewers I met with. I fell asleep in one interview (later accepted) and one of my interviewers was sort of insulting (later rejected).
docmemi said:be honest. be confident. be brave and corageous...dont be afraid to take risks. dont give up...be positive. write letters. keep in touch with your first choice. (turn in secondaries immediately). have a theme or short list of things that you want to convey to the committee (on paper, interview)...keep tieing things back to that theme or list of things. tell stories in your interview if you can. be very chill with your interviewer...speak to him/her like a friend or a date, not like you are making bs up. return all secondaries...dont reject yourself, apply to many places.
wldhokie said:Do you think its alright to turn in your secondary in person. I only live a couple minutes away from my top choice school and I was thinking that way I could get it in wuick and I wouldn't have to worry about it getting lost in the mail. Or am I just being stupid and should just mail it in like everyone else? Thanks! 🙂