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So where do you start when ask this question? With your life history, how about why you want be a veterinarian? Any current students want to share with us how you answered the question.
They're going to get the information they want out of you one way or another, so don't fret too much. My interviews that I spent a lot of time prepping for didn't go nearly as well as the ones that I just went in there and charmed the adcoms' pants off with my normally rocking personality.
So where do you start when ask this question? With your life history, how about why you want be a veterinarian? Any current students want to share with us how you answered the question.
I agree with what racccjlm said about not covering material in your application, but with a couple caveats: First, schools do 'closed book' or 'open book' interviews. In a 'closed book', the interviewers won't have looked over your application, so there's no harm covering that ground again if it's useful. Research your particular school to find out how they do it. I just plain outright asked at the beginning of my interview - don't be shy about doing that. It's not a state secret. I tried to be tactful about how I asked - something like "So I don't cover ground you've already read about, can you tell me if you've reviewed my application?" Second, having SOME overlap with your application is good, because it promotes the image of a coherent, unified application where the strong points are repeatedly emphasized. There's a balance between over-repetition and leaving them wondering why you didn't include something on your PS or whatever.
Practicing, knowing the basic gist of what I wanted to say and then letting it just flow out of my mouth later seemed to work really well. If you can get them to laugh, they will remember you better!
For the Western interview, one of the questions people have reported being asked is "Tell me one thing about yourself, and only one thing"
I've been thinking about what I would say if I were asked this. Would "I'm allergic to all furry animals" be a bad response?
(Full disclosure: allergies won't keep you out or hold you back, but imo it's not something the interviewer needs to know and it doesn't really help them understand you as a person. And you can get more mileage out of that question.)
I felt like they tried to use the question to put you at ease as well. Its a pretty standard question most people have a good answer ready for. It puts the interview off to a good start and gives you a second to breathe before the gritty questions hit ya!
I'd rather have gritty questions. They're specific and have a point. Open-ended questions are just an invitation to say something stupid. 🙂