Other away rotation advice:
1) Do you have a record of all of your immunizations? If not do two things now, first go to your schools health department and see I'd they can get you record of them (most schools require these immunizations for admission so you like proved it to them at some point). If this doesn't work, make an appointment with your primary care doc to get titers done. You will need this for every school you apply to on VSAS.
2) Other places randomly want weird stuff, but you won't know until closer which do so don't do these yet but be aware that you may need to: Get letters of rec, get a criminal background check from the police station, etc.
3) Timing is everything for these, you should submit to your programs the day it opens.
4) Don't shy away from a research rotation if the clinical spot is full. I didn't do one, but fellow applicants I know did these at big name places and got interviews there. Correlation doesn't equal causation and all that, but it certainly didn't hurt their chances.
5) If there is a rotation that you are planning on using for "big wig letters" do it first. Rad Onc big wigs are amazing people, but super busy. You don't want to be waiting on these letters on into October. Stress you don't need!
6) Goes with out saying: These are the single biggest tool you have to guide where you get interviews, use this power wisely. Don't do a rotation at UCLA if you hate LA just to "spend some time in Cali". Pick a region you are interested in, and a program in a city you are interested in. Biggest bang for your buck.
Edit: Thought of more!
7) Craigslist for sublets near the university, closer the better in this instance since you will be the first one there and the last one to leave.
8) If you have a family like I do, don't schedule two away rotations back to back. It will weigh on you, and effect your performance near the end. Do Away-Home-Away, that way you have some time at home with the family the middle. Small, but makes a big difference.
9) In addition to the SDN wisdom of one reach and one reasonable, I'd add to diversify these in terms of size. Despite what the ladies say bigger isn't always better. In fact, this hugely impacted my rank list in the end. Going in to the season I thought I wanted to be part of a bigger department for the resources, but found that I jived better with the more medium sized program and this is something you need to experience to know.
10) I got involved with research on one of my aways. Some say to do this, others say not to. I won't suggest one way or the other, but I will say that for me it was huge. It allowed me to get to know some of the faculty much better than I otherwise would have, and allowed me to do things like head and neck contouring, that again, I wouldn't have been doing on the clinical side of things.
Alright thats it for now, depending on where I match I may have additional advice 🙂