- Joined
- Apr 28, 2008
- Messages
- 75
- Reaction score
- 2
Hey everyone,
I'm in sort of a bind. I have average matriculant profile, according to the 100s of people I've asked this question to (including adcoms) who agree that I have the stats to get in. I have a 3.65/31. I have some interesting ECs working in health policy in the State Senate and doing some biology research (no pubs), taking a grad school course on ion channel biophysics and aceing it, teaching elem students, etc. My problem is that I don't have enough clinical exposure( I did a lot in high school, though not as a college student) and some schools did suggest padding my MCAT by a few points. I've shadowed a bit this past semester with a radiologist, plastic surgeon, anesthesiologist, and internal med. specialist. I also completed an honors thesis on a medically related topic and I plan to pursue publication.
With that said, I plan to work in a lab doing clinical research in radiology, since that is what I am most interested in. It can pay off in the long-term if I get a publication or two for my residency application. I was thinking about applying this summer, but practical restraints with graduating and re-taking the MCAT have effectively made re-applying sort of burdensome. Not that it can't be done, but it isn't ideal. Ideally, I would like to have a fantastic new personal statement and reapplication ready to submit in May of my application year (June for AMCAS, obviously). I would also like to make my time off worthwhile, since I'll most likely be taking a year off (unless my waitlist schools show me love). I don't want to settle for barely getting into a state school because if I can get an MCAT in the mid 30's and significant clinical/research experiences with a publication (along with my honors thesis possibly getting published), it can really change the game for me in terms of the schools that I could approach. I don't have a shot at Harvard or JHU or anything, but I was thinking of Brown, Case, Baylor, Tufts, Sinai, etc as some top-tier reach schools to shoot for.
I don't doubt that this is possible if things go the way I envision them to, although there is the obvious problem that circumstances don't always fall in your favor. However, I was wondering what everyone's thoughts are about holding off for applying this summer and really bolstering my application, whereas I currently show little improvement and I can only speak about what I 'will' do rather than being able to refer to actual experiences, which I learned plays a HUGE role after interviewing.
THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO RESPONDS!!!🙂😀
I'm in sort of a bind. I have average matriculant profile, according to the 100s of people I've asked this question to (including adcoms) who agree that I have the stats to get in. I have a 3.65/31. I have some interesting ECs working in health policy in the State Senate and doing some biology research (no pubs), taking a grad school course on ion channel biophysics and aceing it, teaching elem students, etc. My problem is that I don't have enough clinical exposure( I did a lot in high school, though not as a college student) and some schools did suggest padding my MCAT by a few points. I've shadowed a bit this past semester with a radiologist, plastic surgeon, anesthesiologist, and internal med. specialist. I also completed an honors thesis on a medically related topic and I plan to pursue publication.
With that said, I plan to work in a lab doing clinical research in radiology, since that is what I am most interested in. It can pay off in the long-term if I get a publication or two for my residency application. I was thinking about applying this summer, but practical restraints with graduating and re-taking the MCAT have effectively made re-applying sort of burdensome. Not that it can't be done, but it isn't ideal. Ideally, I would like to have a fantastic new personal statement and reapplication ready to submit in May of my application year (June for AMCAS, obviously). I would also like to make my time off worthwhile, since I'll most likely be taking a year off (unless my waitlist schools show me love). I don't want to settle for barely getting into a state school because if I can get an MCAT in the mid 30's and significant clinical/research experiences with a publication (along with my honors thesis possibly getting published), it can really change the game for me in terms of the schools that I could approach. I don't have a shot at Harvard or JHU or anything, but I was thinking of Brown, Case, Baylor, Tufts, Sinai, etc as some top-tier reach schools to shoot for.
I don't doubt that this is possible if things go the way I envision them to, although there is the obvious problem that circumstances don't always fall in your favor. However, I was wondering what everyone's thoughts are about holding off for applying this summer and really bolstering my application, whereas I currently show little improvement and I can only speak about what I 'will' do rather than being able to refer to actual experiences, which I learned plays a HUGE role after interviewing.
THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO RESPONDS!!!🙂😀