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- Sep 13, 2012
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Now that interviews are starting to come through, how much should we read into WHEN we got the interviewer offer.
My uneducated thoughts are-
a) if you are offered an early interview (i.e., first batch), you are seen as a great fit for the program and will be recruited by the program. All you need to do to get ranked to match is not have an poor interview (i.e., be antisocial, act with a chip on your shoulder, act in a way that's inconsistent with your app), and you're pretty much set.
b) if you are offered an interview around when everyone else is, you are in the mix; and as long as you have a good interview and express strong interests you have a good chance to be ranked to match
c) if you are offered late (i.e., vast majority of slots are filled even when you reply immediately, or they only offered after you email/called), you have to have strong strong interview and mesh really well with the faculty and residents, and have a strong advocate on the committee, just to have a good chance for matching.
Is there any validity to interpreting the date of our interview offer in this way?
Does determination of interviews offers vary based on programs, making this generalization valid only for some programs?
Or for elite programs, even if you are in the first batch, do you still need to have an outstanding home-run interview to stand above everyone else that is interviewed?
My uneducated thoughts are-
a) if you are offered an early interview (i.e., first batch), you are seen as a great fit for the program and will be recruited by the program. All you need to do to get ranked to match is not have an poor interview (i.e., be antisocial, act with a chip on your shoulder, act in a way that's inconsistent with your app), and you're pretty much set.
b) if you are offered an interview around when everyone else is, you are in the mix; and as long as you have a good interview and express strong interests you have a good chance to be ranked to match
c) if you are offered late (i.e., vast majority of slots are filled even when you reply immediately, or they only offered after you email/called), you have to have strong strong interview and mesh really well with the faculty and residents, and have a strong advocate on the committee, just to have a good chance for matching.
Is there any validity to interpreting the date of our interview offer in this way?
Does determination of interviews offers vary based on programs, making this generalization valid only for some programs?
Or for elite programs, even if you are in the first batch, do you still need to have an outstanding home-run interview to stand above everyone else that is interviewed?