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If religion came up in your interview, how do you think it affected you?
although the Christians were brutal and unfounded in their motives,
delicatefade said:Negatively. I'm from a Christian background and had a Muslim interviewer at one school. He asked me what I thought about current Israel/Palestinian relations, and to be honest, I felt trapped. I'm not a super Israel supporter but I wouldn't say I'm too sympathetic to the Palestinians either. I knew that he was clearly bringing it up having a specific answer in mind.
Next, we moved on the the brutality of the crusades. Which were brutal, without a doubt. I don't think he liked it when I mentioned that although the Christians were brutal and unfounded in their motives, the Muslims also fought their way through much of Europe so I thought that there was probably some blame on both sides.
Next, we discussed whether Islamic culture was "better" than Western culture. He clearly thought that it was, although his parents were immigrants and he had just finished telling me about the large, successful (ie- doctors, lawyers) Muslim population in Detroit. I pointed out that whatever flaws he thought Western culture had, his family surely thrived in a capitalist culture and the large Muslim population certainly seemed to be doing well as transplants. Western culture must not be that bad. I don't think he liked that either.
I'm pretty sure it had something to do with my being wait-listed despite my well above average GPA, MCAT, and EC's for that particular school. Sheesh.
Isn't it not politically correct to even talk about religion?
Loula said:I can't believe such an interview would occur in the U.S.?
Isn't it not politically correct to even talk about religion?
You should complain!!!
Loula said:I can't believe such an interview would occur in the U.S.?
Isn't it not politically correct to even talk about religion?
You should complain!!!
LoneCoyote said:I was surpirsed when it came up in one of my interviews since I have nothing about religion listed on my applications. The interviewer ended up asking me very detailed questions about what religion I considered myself, whtether I believed in God, what that entailed, etc. Overall, it was not the greatest interview because the interviewer asked some other very random, personal questions. I got waitlisted.
curlycity said:when they asked ...the magic bullet "what about having children," I made a sensible answer instead of getting offended and refusing to answer.
Scubadoc said:what did you say!?
SlopinMunkyDude said:Sheesh, he wouldn't have liked to hear my opinions on Fatimid Caliph Al-Hakim. That guy disgraced Islam (brought a pig into a mosque and replaced Allah's name with his own) and Christianity (destroyed some 10,000 Christian churches in less than a decade, including the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, which incited the Crusades). That's about the best I could have done. I really don't think either sides' motives were unfounded.
That's a tough interview, man.
Did you make your beliefs a fundamental part of your application?
LoneCoyote said:I was surpirsed when it came up in one of my interviews since I have nothing about religion listed on my applications. The interviewer ended up asking me very detailed questions about what religion I considered myself, whtether I believed in God, what that entailed, etc. Overall, it was not the greatest interview because the interviewer asked some other very random, personal questions. I got waitlisted.
thewzdoc said:Oh man...I hope it doesn't come up in any...I'd have to find a way to side step that hot potato....It?s hard to discuss what your beliefs are without sounding like you are ?against? someones?.
tzalli said:I think it is fair game to get a sense of the person sitting in front of you even when not PC.
As a person you my have your personal beliefs and strong feelings towards a specific population (for instance when you are at war with a nation)
However the adcoms want to make sure that any bias stays out of the hospital. Their way of discovering this (or at least trying) is by bringing up subjects like the israeli/palestinian conflict (especially if you are involved) and asking for your thoughts.
I would think that the adcoms would be wrong not to ask about it.
Newquagmire said:what are you gonna do when a patient comes in and says something completely wacky? are you going to say, "i'm sorry, that's an illegal question, i'm not answering it, and i'm reporting you to the admissions office?"
delicatefade said:of course this is all evidence that medical school admissions are totally random and controlled by the whims of The Man. If you pre-meds don't believe that now, you will!!!
flighterdoc said:You're contradicting yourself. You want the adcoms to make certain that you're unbiased, but they start out asking such a politically charged question?
I admire your self-control, though.
tzalli said:Not at all.
I think people are biased. I also think that adcoms realize this.
However as a doctor you need to focus on the human being with a clear mind.
This my friend is a very hard task.
Imagine doing CPR on a suicide bomber who just killed a dozen innocent people. Not easy (from experience).
Adcoms are not interested in potential doctors who cannot let go of their biased opinons for the preservation of life.
They ask the hard questions not to see if you are biased (they know we are in certain cases), but to see how we can handle the balance between medicine and some real crazy realities.
Newquagmire said:what are you gonna do when a patient comes in and says something completely wacky? are you going to say, "i'm sorry, that's an illegal question, i'm not answering it, and i'm reporting you to the admissions office?"
leechy said:It's true that probing questions about religion and politics can be a way of assessing how you handle awkward situations, and whether you can deal with them when dealing with patients... But the downside is that, rather inevitably, your answers to questions of religious belief are going to affect how your interviewer perceives you - just as everything else you say is affecting how he perceives you.
Newquagmire said:what are you gonna do when a patient comes in and says something completely wacky? are you going to say, "i'm sorry, that's an illegal question, i'm not answering it, and i'm reporting you to the admissions office?"
tzalli said:Good point,
I never thought of it from that direction.
I just assumed it was a question that would pop up with my military background, and when it did I never considered that option.
I passed the interview.
flighterdoc said:Thats just a silly analogy. The patient doesn't have any position of power over you, the interviewer does by their position - a bad review and you are objectively harmed.
Now, if a patient came in asking questions that weren't relevant to their care, I'd politely tell them to stfu.
Newquagmire said:life is full of silly analogies, and i'm determined to make them all. don't fear the interviewer, it's just an interview.
douche said:Shouldn't these types of questions be strictly prohibited at PUBLIC schools? IMHO, you have a valid complaint here.
kingcer0x said:You have balls if you tell an interviewer you wont perform abortions because of your faith. You are telling him that your beliefs do not allow you to perform a legal recognized medical procedure even in cases where it is necessary.
douche said:Shouldn't these types of questions be strictly prohibited at PUBLIC schools?
Newquagmire said:no. how is a public school any different?
delicatefade said:Negatively. I'm from a Christian background and had a Muslim interviewer at one school. He asked me what I thought about current Israel/Palestinian relations, and to be honest, I felt trapped. I'm not a super Israel supporter but I wouldn't say I'm too sympathetic to the Palestinians either. I knew that he was clearly bringing it up having a specific answer in mind.
Next, we moved on the the brutality of the crusades. Which were brutal, without a doubt. I don't think he liked it when I mentioned that although the Christians were brutal and unfounded in their motives, the Muslims also fought their way through much of Europe so I thought that there was probably some blame on both sides.
Next, we discussed whether Islamic culture was "better" than Western culture. He clearly thought that it was, although his parents were immigrants and he had just finished telling me about the large, successful (ie- doctors, lawyers) Muslim population in Detroit. I pointed out that whatever flaws he thought Western culture had, his family surely thrived in a capitalist culture and the large Muslim population certainly seemed to be doing well as transplants. Western culture must not be that bad. I don't think he liked that either.
I'm pretty sure it had something to do with my being wait-listed despite my well above average GPA, MCAT, and EC's for that particular school. Sheesh.
tzalli said:I passed the interview.
thewzdoc said:😕 What's that mean.....did you get offered a place?
samurai_lincoln said:Because discrimination on basis of religion is prohibited for "state actors" (governmental entities, including public schoos), but this is not the case for private organizations. Think of Augusta National or the local Elks lodge, who are free to exclude whomever they want.
However, the sticky point here is that private employers are forbidden from asking interview questions relating to religion (can't even imply it - "can you work weekends?"). Not sure whether this also applies to private schools.
as we learned with the stem cell debate, all schools receive government funding in one form or another. to separate religion and the us government is like trying to separate privately funded stem cell research and the nih funded projects in the same lab...
tzalli said:Let me clarify something.
The question "so as an Israeli what do you think about the current Israeli/conflict" was not asked directly.
Actually, the interviewer shared his thoughts on the war in Iraq trying to get at my opinion.
Only then did the discussion jump to the parallel Israeli/palestinian conflict.
I don't think that this changes anything, but the exact story should be told.
douche said:Public colleges/universities, however, are there to provide affordable and accessible education to the public. Taxpayers support them so that they and their children can have access to this education. Research grants/etc. for private universities/research is a different thing.