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You have a perfect GPA and a wonderful MCAT score but that’s about it. Your ECs seem very lack luster and you barely meet the basic expectations. What else did you do in school? What other activities did you take part in? It would be a shame to apply with great stats but be rejected because of the lack of other activities? You probably have additional activities. Think about it. A gap year or two might be a good idea in your case. Where did you see yourself in medicine? Do you need research to get there? Are you thinking academic medicine or rural medicine?
I updated the list to include research and other ECs. Thanks for your inputDo not include the virtual shadowing. Do you have any research experience or other ECs ?
@Mr.Smile12,I concur with the previous advice. You will be evaluated on more than your stats, but you also will be expected to have more impactful accomplishments if you intend to apply to brand name schools.
You spent 100 hours on shadowing 2 specialties. That way too many hours for too few perspectives. You don't even have primary care covered. Meanwhile you have the same number of clinical experience hours as an MA to date.
Then you only have the bare minimum 150 hours of community service activities.
No research???
There must be more. This looks like someone who only devoted their entire undergraduate time studying and no involvement making a difference on campus or with others. There is a tendency to staying safely in their comfort zone, and thus no preparation for the real challenges facing patients or caregivers.
Do more food pantry/food security work. Get it up to at least 250 hours before applying to be at least on par with your peers. If getting into a top brand school is a priority, consider taking a gap year to do Peace Corps or Americorps or a prestigious scholarship (Rhodes, Churchill, Gates, etc.). Show us you can stretch beyond your comfort zone for an extended period of time in communion with underresourced communities (especially in the US), and you will get the attention you want from brand-name schools. We want to know that the schools you graduate from will miss you and that you left behind an indelible impression and campus impact.@Mr.Smile12,
I had about 500 hours of research as an intern for biology lab and 24 hours volunteers to help with HIV screening events. I plan to get a few additional hours for non-clinical volunteer during spring break. Anything else I should look for to help with my app in this cycle?
Thank you very much for your advices. I updated my list to include research and other ECs. The truth is I didn't know much about other requirements beside academic, during my first 2 years and just focusing on research and shadowing. Also, I was thinking about a gap to build up stronger application. However, part of me wanted to try my luck this year to see if I can get in if I can. As for academic or rural medicine, I prefer clinical medicine practicing in the city and haven't thought about rural medicine, since I'm fairly new in the process.You have a perfect GPA and a wonderful MCAT score but that’s about it. Your ECs seem very lack luster and you barely meet the basic expectations. What else did you do in school? What other activities did you take part in? It would be a shame to apply with great stats but be rejected because of the lack of other activities? You probably have additional activities. Think about it. A gap year or two might be a good idea in your case. Where did you see yourself in medicine? Do you need research to get there? Are you thinking academic medicine or rural medicine?
Thank you for the great advices.Do more food pantry/food security work. Get it up to at least 250 hours before applying to be at least on par with your peers. If getting into a top brand school is a priority, consider taking a gap year to do Peace Corps or Americorps or a prestigious scholarship (Rhodes, Churchill, Gates, etc.). Show us you can stretch beyond your comfort zone for an extended period of time in communion with underresourced communities (especially in the US), and you will get the attention you want from brand-name schools. We want to know that the schools you graduate from will miss you and that you left behind an indelible impression and campus impact.
Thank you very much for the school list. For learning purpose, how do students compile the list ? MSAR ? LizzyM ? what are the the prereqs? GPA? MCAT ? location ? I was trying out the LizzyM score and got a list, which didn't include Maryland, where I hope that I can attend.I suggest these schools with your stats:
Maryland
West Virginia
U Virginia
Duke
USF Morsani
Miami
Vanderbilt
Washington University (in St. Louis-they like applicants with high MCAT scores)
Northwestern
Western Michigan
U Michigan
Case Western
Ohio State
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Jefferson
UPenn
Johns Hopkins
Hofstra
Einstein
Mount Sinai
NYU
Cornell
Rochester
Brown
Yale
Boston University
Tufts
UMass
Kaiser
UCSF
Mayo
Virtual shadowing has very little value. What you describe is not really clinical where you are in person with patients and their doctors. The list of schools is based on MCAT, GPA, ECs and state of residence. No lower tier schools since they will "yield protect" with your stats.Thank you very much for the list. For learning purpose, how do students compile the list ? MSAR ? LizzyM ? what are the the prereqs? GPA? MCAT ? location ? I was trying out the LizzyM score and got a list, which didn't include Maryland, where I hope that I can attend.
Another question, any reason why I shouldn't list virtual shadow experience ? It was a 2 week program provided by University of Maryland Medical Center. I was able to learn more about medicine by shadowing several specialties, including primary care. There were also my sessions, where I was able to talk to doctors and med students.
Thank you very much for the school list. For learning purpose, how do students compile the list ? MSAR ? LizzyM ? what are the the prereqs? GPA? MCAT ? location ? I was trying out the LizzyM score and got a list, which didn't include Maryland, where I hope that I can attend.
Another question, any reason why I shouldn't list virtual shadow experience ? It was a 2 week program provided by University of Maryland Medical Center. I was able to learn more about medicine by shadowing several specialties, including primary care. There were also my sessions, where I was able to talk to doctors and med students.
The school list has several reach schools, and I'm worry that they don't even look at my app. As for the lower tiers schools, do you think I have any chances with VCU, Georgetown, George Washington and Temple? I'm would like to be able to attend school near home if possible.Virtual shadowing has very little value. What you describe is not really clinical where you are in person with patients and their doctors. The list of schools is based on MCAT, GPA, ECs and state of residence. No lower tier schools since they will "yield protect" with your stats.
There are no reach schools for an applicant with a GPA of 4.0 and a MCAT of 524. Georgetown is looking for applicants with far more clinical and non clinical hours than you have. You could try George Washington, Temple and VCU but they may "yield protect" with your stats.The school list has several reach schools, and I'm worry that they don't even look at my app. As for the lower tiers schools, do you think I have any chances with VCU, Georgetown, George Washington and Temple? I'm would like to be able to attend school near home if possible.
State | School Name | Apply ? |
FL | USF Health Morsani College of Medicine | Yes |
IL | Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine | Yes |
MD | The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine | Yes |
MD | University of Maryland School of Medicine | Yes |
MI | University of Michigan Medical School | Yes |
MI | Western Michigan University Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine | Yes |
MN | Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine | Yes |
MO | Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine | Yes |
NC | Duke University School of Medicine | Yes |
NY | Albert Einstein College of Medicine | Yes |
NY | Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell | Yes |
NY | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | Yes |
NY | NYU Grossman School of Medicine | Yes |
OH | Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine | Yes |
OH | The Ohio State University College of Medicine | Yes |
PA | University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine | Yes |
TN | Vanderbilt University School of Medicine | Yes |
VA | University of Virginia School of Medicine | Yes |
NY | Tufts University School Of Medicine | Maybe |
NY | University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry | Maybe |
NY | Weill Cornell Medicine | Maybe |
OH | University of Cincinnati College of Medicine | Maybe |
PA | Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania | Maybe |
PA | Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University | Maybe |
RI | Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University | Maybe |
VA | Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine | Maybe |
WV | West Virginia University School of Medicine | Maybe |
CA | Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine | No |
CA | UCSF School of Medicine | No |
CT | Yale School of Medicine | No |
FL | University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine | No |
MA | Boston University School of Medicine | No |
MA | Harvard Medical School | No |
MA | UMass Chan Medical School | No |
NY | Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons | No |
Thank you.Remove Jefferson, Virginia Commonwealth and West Virginia since they will "yield protect" with your stats.
I’m not sure if just a few additional volunteer hours will be enough to tie your application together. You have stellar stats, and while you were involved in research you don’t mention any publications/presentations. Have you read through school secondaries and seen the type of questions they ask and what experiences they are looking for? Do you think you have meaningful experiences, reflections, etc. to be able to answer those types of questions and more during interviews? If you do, that’s awesome. I just don’t want you to fall into the trap of other 4.0 applicants who don’t end up anywhere because their app otherwise lacked substance.I plan to get a few additional hours for non-clinical volunteer during spring break. Anything else I should look for to help with my app in this cycle?
Applying this cycle with such weak extracurriculars will mean that all of your money will go as donations. The schools you want to Target, in fact deserve to Target do not need the money. Better off taking your mom out for Mother's Day.Thank you very much for your advices. I updated my list to include research and other ECs. The truth is I didn't know much about other requirements beside academic, during my first 2 years and just focusing on research and shadowing. Also, I was thinking about a gap to build up stronger application. However, part of me wanted to try my luck this year to see if I can get in if I can. As for academic or rural medicine, I prefer clinical medicine practicing in the city and haven't thought about rural medicine, since I'm fairly new in the process.
You have put yourself on a clock. Most schools want MCAT scores within 3 years of matriculation.I am still on the fence about applying this cycle or taking time to explore and learn more about the medical path. I will take all the advices here into consideration.
I was looking at AmeriCorps opening in my area , and current opening required college graduated for the positions. Perhaps, I will look intio it after graduation.You have put yourself on a clock. Most schools want MCAT scores within 3 years of matriculation.
Take time to explore why you want to help people in the role of a physician by immersing yourself in communities outside your own experience. Do Peace Corps or an Americorps year. Many Mormons have their 2 year missions, and many Koreans and Israelis have compulsory military service obligations. Work in an Indian Health Service or a rural health clinic. Be changed by the communities you serve. Then you will understand how they need health care and how our system fails them.
Thank you for your input.Your resume checks enough boxes I think you are going to matriculate, likely at your flagship university. Moreover, you have the horsepwer with the GPA/MCAT scores to be a strong applicant at the schools most can only dream about if you take a gap or two and polish up the resume. However, opting for a gap year or two might come at a price, not just in terms of time but also financially. When factoring in living expenses and potential earnings lost during each gap year, the costs can add up significantly. It's really about thinking it through, having a plan, and envisioning where you see yourself in the future.