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- Oct 24, 2011
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Interview Tips
As my student interviewer role has just about ended, I wanted to share my experience which may hopefully be at least a little helpful or reiterate some things. I was one interviewer but feel like my comments may resonate with fellow student interviewers.
· You’d probably never say stuff like “This instilled in me a drive” in everyday conversation. So please don't BS. Personally, I'd rather have an applicant be honest and say that they'd spend 100K to buy something cool, pay off loans, go on vaca...instead of saying they'd donate it all to Africa.
· Try not to memorize. Interviewers volunteer their time. We like to have fun too. It’s no fun getting a memorized robotic response because we get to know some screen prompt, not you. I remember when I first started interviewing I’d also have the same problem with memorized responses. I got a lot better by practicing saying my answers in different ways.
· Be who you are. I’ve interviewed some really extroverted applicants and those who are more reserved. One of my best interviewees was more introverted and took the time to pause and think through their answers. In MS1 we had a clicker questionnaire…half the class was split evenly into extroverted and introverted while the class above us had a higher proportion of introverts.
· Clinical experiences matter. Kind of obvious but make sure you have some good reasons for going into medicine. I had one interviewee who told me one of their primary reasons was “to reach the top of the pyramid”.
· Talking really fast. One interviewee had perfect answers…said all the right things, but talked so fast that I had trouble following their train of thought and had to bring this up in the report to the committee.
· Whether student or faculty interviewer I think it really comes down to whether or not you like the interviewee and if you want to see them again. So just be you!
As my student interviewer role has just about ended, I wanted to share my experience which may hopefully be at least a little helpful or reiterate some things. I was one interviewer but feel like my comments may resonate with fellow student interviewers.
· You’d probably never say stuff like “This instilled in me a drive” in everyday conversation. So please don't BS. Personally, I'd rather have an applicant be honest and say that they'd spend 100K to buy something cool, pay off loans, go on vaca...instead of saying they'd donate it all to Africa.
· Try not to memorize. Interviewers volunteer their time. We like to have fun too. It’s no fun getting a memorized robotic response because we get to know some screen prompt, not you. I remember when I first started interviewing I’d also have the same problem with memorized responses. I got a lot better by practicing saying my answers in different ways.
· Be who you are. I’ve interviewed some really extroverted applicants and those who are more reserved. One of my best interviewees was more introverted and took the time to pause and think through their answers. In MS1 we had a clicker questionnaire…half the class was split evenly into extroverted and introverted while the class above us had a higher proportion of introverts.
· Clinical experiences matter. Kind of obvious but make sure you have some good reasons for going into medicine. I had one interviewee who told me one of their primary reasons was “to reach the top of the pyramid”.
· Talking really fast. One interviewee had perfect answers…said all the right things, but talked so fast that I had trouble following their train of thought and had to bring this up in the report to the committee.
· Whether student or faculty interviewer I think it really comes down to whether or not you like the interviewee and if you want to see them again. So just be you!