The Medical School Application: Key Tips to Consider Before you Begin Drafting the Work and Activities Section

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The AMCAS application allows for a total of 15 entries. For each entry, you will provide a description of the activity (700-characters including spaces), experience dates, and completed/anticipated hours. You will then designate three of these entries as your “most meaningful,” which will give you an additional 1,325 characters (including spaces) to provide depth on the perspective you gained during the involvement.

Key tips to consider before you begin drafting:

  • Take advantage of all 15 entries. What have been your most meaningful experiences that influenced your decision to apply to medical school? To start, brainstorm and write them all down in chronological order, limiting yourself to college or postgraduate experiences. This section is purposely broad and can include activities from a multitude of categories. (Read about the newly established social justice/advocacy category here.) If you can’t find 15, think about that one-day community service event that had a particular impact on you, that tutoring involvement where you worked with middle school students, or how playing the piano helps you to de-stress. While not all experiences will be equally meaningful, several are probably still worth sharing if they influenced your path in some way.
  • You may also include anticipated experiences—past experience(s) that you have participated in and expect to continue with after you submit your application or an entirely new experience you have yet to start, but have a good idea what your work will involve. Just keep in mind that you may not enter anticipated activities in the following categories: Honors/Awards, Conference, Publications, Presentation.
  • After brainstorming all of your potential activities, take note of the 15 most relevant, some of which should fall into clinical work, research experience, community service, and social justice/advocacy, though make sure to span a diverse array of categories.
  • When selecting your three most meaningful experiences, highlight first those that will show the reader your commitment to medicine. Then think about those that will show the reader your abilities in critical thinking and problem solving and/or leadership, as these qualities set physicians apart from other members of a healthcare team. What did you think, feel, see, and do in each involvement? What did you learn? How did you grow?

Review the remainder of our W&A tips on our blog.

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