What went wrong and who can I talk to about my application?

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Mr. MCAT

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Okay I applied this year to about 24 medical schools (22 MD and 2 DO) and didn't get a SINGLE INTERVIEW. Not one. I have a 3.48 science and 3.54 cumulative GPA (with 2 withdrawals, accidentally missed drop deadline) with a 38 MCAT (though my first attempt was a 30). Basically, I want to know if there is some GLARING error in my application that could have prevented me from being getting an interview. I had most of my secondaries done by the end of July if not earlier. I applied pretty broadly, only 1 or 2 top tier schools, most mid tier, some low tier.

Here are some more stats:
40 hours PACU volunteer
1500 hours clinical experience for ED scribing
100 hours volunteer at Santa Cruz county medical society
300 hours of KZSC radio disc jockey volunteer
100 hours as kzsc mentor/TA volunteer
80 hours shadowing experience with paramedics
NO RESEARCH EXPERIENCE attachFull188737
A ton of work experience (I pretty much worked during all of college) including:
Pet store employee
UCSC orientation leader
AVID tutor
Taco hell
Central Valley After school Foundation
And I'm probably about to get a job with Kaplan as an MCAT teacher soon
Intermediate Spanish speaker; native English.

Here are some reasons I would expect for not getting an interview:
  • Bad personal statement (I realized I used kind of a cliche intro in my PS, but would this really turn so many schools off??)
  • No research experience, which I am about to remedy (speaking with a lab PI tomorrow)
  • low GPA; however, I feel my MCAT is high enough to make up for this
  • need more volunteer hours (about to go to Chile for 3 months to volunteer teach English starting in April)
  • LORs, only one good professor LOR, the other two were probably meh. However, good LORs from docs I've worked with in the ED.
  • MAYBE lack of shadowing experience, though I feel my work as a scribe should cover this
  • I am white and well off, from California (not making an excuse! obviously rich white people from cali can still get in).

Let me know what you think please! I would love to be able to sit down and talk with a acceptance committee person from some medical school. Anyone have any ideas how I can make this happen??

Thank you,
Depressed Mr. MCAT
 

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Very surprising that you didn't receive a single interview.

A few possibilities:

- Steep downward trend in grades (eg - C's and D's in Junior or Senior year)
- Bad (worse than "meh") LOR
- Offensive personal statement riddled with red flags

Those are really the only things I can think of. Hopefully Goro, Gyngyn, or LizzyM can weigh in here.

-Bill
 
Low GPA - high MCAT doesn't completely offset low GPA.

LOR's that aren't "good" or "great" or "strong" will not help you.

Your PS may have raised some eyebrows?

Lack of cold hard shadowing experience (scribe doesn't count) is usually an app killer.

You don't need research to get into med school (I got accepted without any research experience), but you do need to show longitudinal commitment to a few activities.
 
No downward trend and I think only one C+ during college. Not necessarily an upward trend but basically I had a lot of B's.

I don't think the personal statement was at all offensive, I doubt any one would think that about it.

Definitely could be that a professor tried to screw me over with a LOR but I doubt it. If anything just two of my LORs were generic. However, many of the schools I applied to only required 1 LOR from staff and the others could be like doctors or whatever. So many of the schools didn't even see the generic LORs.

Thanks for the help and response!
 
Longitudinal activity: scribe for 2 years now. But yeah I get it, that is something I am missing. I never stuck with anything for too long. Hopefully me going to Chile for 3 months will show some commitment on my part.

Would you guys recommend I do a post-bac?
 
Low GPA - high MCAT doesn't completely offset low GPA.

LOR's that aren't "good" or "great" or "strong" will not help you.

Your PS may have raised some eyebrows?

Lack of cold hard shadowing experience (scribe doesn't count) is usually an app killer.

You don't need research to get into med school (I got accepted without any research experience), but you do need to show longitudinal commitment to a few activities.

Ehhhh.

After working in a hospital for a few years, there is no way I'm going to go shadow a doctor. Why would someone? The whole point is to know what you're getting yourself into.
 
Ehhhh.

After working in a hospital for a few years, there is no way I'm going to go shadow a doctor. Why would someone? The whole point is to know what you're getting yourself into.

+1 . I got in with just having worked in a hospital (not even in a direct patient care role) and a combat medical unit.
 
No downward trend and I think only one C+ during college. Not necessarily an upward trend but basically I had a lot of B's.

I don't think the personal statement was at all offensive, I doubt any one would think that about it.

Definitely could be that a professor tried to screw me over with a LOR but I doubt it. If anything just two of my LORs were generic. However, many of the schools I applied to only required 1 LOR from staff and the others could be like doctors or whatever. So many of the schools didn't even see the generic LORs.

Thanks for the help and response!

Well of course you wouldn't think your PS is offensive or "bad" - why would you write one that is intentionally so? No one does that. That doesn't mean that it wasn't. I agree that it's odd that you didn't get any interviews much less acceptances. My guess is that you had poor letters or there was something off with your PS and/or your activity descriptions.
 
Or out of the 24 schools you applied to all top 24 and they usually like research experience?

Congratulations on that 38 though. I hate when people dismiss it as "just numbers". Sure, it's not everything, but it's damn hard to do that well on the MCAT.
 
I'd be happy to read your personal statement if you want an unbiased opinion. I edited a lot of them for other SDN users.
Posting the list of schools you applied to may give some clues as well. Did you apply to lots of "low tier" schools with specific missions you didn't fit, or out of state?
 
Any legal issues or Institutional Action?
When was the second MCAT score available? Did schools know it was coming because you listed the second date on the Primary?

Personally, I think scribing covers a shadowing expectation fairly well (though it doesn't give one a feel for longitudinal care in an office-based setting), but if you didn't call attention to that and only listed EMT shadowing on the application, an inexperienced office-staff application scorer might have missed it. And some DO schools require a DO shadowing letter.
 
Not knowing you at all, but just from what you wrote here --

A very high MCAT (like yours), combined with a low GPA (like yours), especially one containing lots of B's, suggests to me that you're very bright but lazy and unmotivated. Reading between the lines that you're from a relatively wealthy family, I might also wonder if you're not also perhaps a bit entitled.

That's the very blunt bad news, and if there are things in your PS or LORs that strengthen this impression, that could be what sunk you application. And if that's the reason your app sank, then a 3-month stint in Chile probably won't help a bit. (Sorry, but that's the kind of activity rich kids do -- Foreign vacation!)

IF that's what went wrong, then what I'd want to see to combat that impression would be "humble, get your hands dirty" work, sustained over a longer time frame. Change your Chile stint to one in the CA Central Valley, teaching English to the children of migrant farm workers. Work in a soup kitchen or homeless shelter. Volunteer in a nursing home, or working with people with developmental disabilities.

And of course, if you're still in school, some Straight A's semesters to show you're serious.
 
just a thought-- maybe its not an offensive/red flag personal statement but instead a bland/generic/cliche personal statement that doesn't really make a statement? I can offer some feedback as well if wanted. I don't think its lack of shadowing-- ED scribing more than covers this.
 
Or out of the 24 schools you applied to all top 24 and they usually like research experience?

Congratulations on that 38 though. I hate when people dismiss it as "just numbers". Sure, it's not everything, but it's damn hard to do that well on the MCAT.

He mentioned that he applied to only 1-2 top tier places. Whether or not the mid/low tiers on his list valued research, idk.

But yeah, I think that there must be some red flags on your application, to not have received any interviews. Could be from a really bad rec letter (might want to meet with your pre-med adviser about this, see if he/she can help out in any way or give some advice) or from your PS (not necessarily in what you said, but how you said things). In terms of academics, the discrepancy between your MCAT and GPA might be sending other signals at the same time (ones which other people alluded to - like laziness). And if a rec letter said something that would confirm this suspicion, then that becomes an even bigger red flag.

But yeah, being from Cali sucks too (I've learned just how sucky that is, from my own app this year). Choose your OOS schools wisely (a premed adviser would come in handy here again).
 
Ehhhh.

After working in a hospital for a few years, there is no way I'm going to go shadow a doctor. Why would someone? The whole point is to know what you're getting yourself into.

It all depends on what you are doing. Being an ER scribe does not replace doing shadowing. As an ER scribe, you are performing a job, which in this context is a negative because it makes your focus performing a task, rather than learning about what you are getting into. You are exposed to the emergency room and health care administered there, which is very different from how 90%+ physicians practice. The purpose of shadowing is that you see what the daily life of a physician is. Interacting with patients, the paperwork, the conferences, the business, the science, the art, everything. Most jobs working at a hospital don't fulfill that. I interviewed someone a few years back for medical school who had 3 years of experience working as a ER tech and then as a Rad tech. They wrote down that they had something like 2500 hours of "clinical experience", but after talking to them, it was clear that those jobs were just that, jobs. They did the job very well, but that means they showed up, did their job and clocked out, nothing more. I want it to be clear, there is nothing wrong with that inherently. But if you are going to try to double count hours that you were paid during, you better have gotten something actually out of them. This is like someone doing 'research' by washing glassware in a lab. Being in the hospital and being able to smell the patients is one thing, but actually knowing what physicians do is something else. You can't replace that experience. Are there people who get in without that? Of course. But, the vast majority of admissions committees want to know that you at least tried to figure out what being a physician is like.

Okay I applied this year to about 24 medical schools (22 MD and 2 DO) and didn't get a SINGLE INTERVIEW. Not one. I have a 3.48 science and 3.54 cumulative GPA (with 2 withdrawals, accidentally missed drop deadline) with a 38 MCAT (though my first attempt was a 30). Basically, I want to know if there is some GLARING error in my application that could have prevented me from being getting an interview. I had most of my secondaries done by the end of July if not earlier. I applied pretty broadly, only 1 or 2 top tier schools, most mid tier, some low tier.

Here are some more stats:
40 hours PACU volunteer
1500 hours clinical experience for ED scribing
100 hours volunteer at Santa Cruz county medical society
300 hours of KZSC radio disc jockey volunteer
100 hours as kzsc mentor/TA volunteer
80 hours shadowing experience with paramedics
NO RESEARCH EXPERIENCE attachFull188737
A ton of work experience (I pretty much worked during all of college) including:
Pet store employee
UCSC orientation leader
AVID tutor
Taco hell
Central Valley After school Foundation
And I'm probably about to get a job with Kaplan as an MCAT teacher soon
Intermediate Spanish speaker; native English.

Here are some reasons I would expect for not getting an interview:
  • Bad personal statement (I realized I used kind of a cliche intro in my PS, but would this really turn so many schools off??)
  • No research experience, which I am about to remedy (speaking with a lab PI tomorrow)
  • low GPA; however, I feel my MCAT is high enough to make up for this
  • need more volunteer hours (about to go to Chile for 3 months to volunteer teach English starting in April)
  • LORs, only one good professor LOR, the other two were probably meh. However, good LORs from docs I've worked with in the ED.
  • MAYBE lack of shadowing experience, though I feel my work as a scribe should cover this
  • I am white and well off, from California (not making an excuse! obviously rich white people from cali can still get in).

Let me know what you think please! I would love to be able to sit down and talk with a acceptance committee person from some medical school. Anyone have any ideas how I can make this happen??

Thank you,
Depressed Mr. MCAT

This is how I read your application:
3.48/38
Zero research
ER scribe
Zero altruism oriented volunteering
Below average personal statement
Below average LOR
Zero physician shadowing
Reasonable work history
ORM


Summary: Asymmetric academics, time outside of academics is largely spent working for pay despite not supporting family/others. No big unique factors.

3.48/38 applying widely and broadly is more than sufficient to get into medical school from an academic perspective. The fact that you had zero interviews indicates that something on your application stopped people from interviewing you. IAs/Criminal issues aside (assume that you don't have these), I think the biggest question for me is why should a medical school use a spot on you? What do you bring to the table that will help my medical school class. It is surprising that out of 24 schools, not a single one thought that your package outside of your stats was possibly what they were looking for. It is possible that a single something is holding you back, but those are usually pretty easy to suss out since there aren't that many that can do that.

If you have a lower GPA, you are competing with a lot more people. Your ECs have to be at a minimum cohesive and complete. Your personal statement and your LOR need to be at a minimum positive (not just saying, "He is a nice guy"). If you have an above average GPA/MCAT, the bar is a little lower, smaller deficiencies in an application are less magnified. You do NOT need some big unique thing to get you into medical school. But, you have multiple areas in your application that are sub-standard. When someone reviews your application for possible interviews, you have to either have something that draws them in and makes them say, "Ya, I want/need to meet this guy." or they have to say, "He is low risk enough that its worth getting him in here to see if he will fit."

I would examine your ECs. To me you are dominated by 'neutral' ECs. While by itself that is not a problem, it becomes one if you have sub-standard academics and nothing else on your application going for you.

Originally posted here: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/threads/should-i-take-next-year-after-junior-year-off.1113782/

Understand that what I'm about to talk about is a very fuzzy topic. I'm putting boundaries on things that really don't have boundaries and explaining a thought process that is largely subconscious... There are three broad categories of ECs. Leisure activities, neutral, and altruistic. There is nothing wrong with enjoying or doing any of them. However, there is a reason adcoms are looking for certain kinds of activities. Medicine is a lot of science, but it is by and large a people profession. It is also a profession that is dominated by the concept of helping other people. No, you don't have to be the next Mother Theresa, but a good part of your time will be in the service of others. If you can't handle that, you will be miserable. No, it does not make you a bad person. It just makes you a poor fit for what most physicians do every day. No matter how bad of a day I'm having in the hospital, virtually every single one of my patients is having a worse day, after all, they are in the hospital, seeing me. Certainly not every physician's practice is like that, but most physicians will have something similar to say about helping their patients.

  • Leisure activities are those that you do for yourself. The focus is on you. Most hobbies/sports fall into this category. I would say that if you could potentially scratch out an EC and it wouldn't negatively impact other people or your life, then it is leisure. We like to see people that have leisure activities. Being able to have fun and focus on non-academic things is important. Everyone wants to be around people with hobbies, it makes for a more interesting class.
  • Neutral activities are things that you have to do. For example, if you have to work because you are paying for school or supporting family etc. It is a limitation on your time that is just something that has to be done. This is something that needs to be considered when looking at GPAs or how involved people are in other activities.
  • Altruistic activities are things where the focus is on other people. Things that better the lives of others primarily. Things that demonstrate that you spend at least a small amount of your time thinking about the needs of others instead of your own. This is where the, "What % of your time do you spend doing different things?" comes in. I'm not saying that someone that devotes <1% of their free time to others can't be a good physician or get enjoyment out of it. But, everything else being equal, I'd strongly prefer someone that is much higher as I think that their chances of success are much higher.

Regarding productivity. Virtually any activity can be productive. It is more about what you do with an activity than what the activity itself is. For instance, if you are in research for 2000 hours, what did you produce? Conceivably, someone paid you or you got academic credits, or at the very least you invested your time into it. So, what came of it? What tangibly shows that you weren't goofing off and getting nothing out of it. The easiest to appreciate are publications, posters, abstracts etc. Strong letters of recommendation are another. I'm not talking about a good letter, I'm talking about, "It is tragic that none of his work was published because he has made significant contributions to our lab including X, Y, and Z." And more importantly in a LOR like that, what is your analagous Wins Above Replacement, compared to if the lab hired someone else. I'm not that creative, so I'll go through the applications sitting on my desk right now and pick out the single most "productive" things I can find that they did before medical school.

Restructured soup kitchen, tripled meals served by reallocating resources.
Top 3 rank, nationally fencing
2 years research, x1 first author in low impact, 2 presentations
2 years research, x2 non-first author publications, one in Cell, the other PNAS
1 year research, x2 presentations, x1 award from presentation
3 months fundraising and 3 months (Summer) digging wells in Kenya
5 years habitat for humanity from HS to present
2 Summers teaching English in a Lebanese refugee camp

Yes, I cherry picked from ~30 applications. There are certainly a lot of people with very good scores that played video games, worked on their hobbies and are perfectly good people. But, there are also a lot of pretty amazing people out there doing a lot of amazing things. Being productive is about dedication, passion, hard work and perseverance. ie. what we want from our medical students. I interviewed at most of the top 10 as well as several other more local places. Virtually everyone you meet on the trail is going to be a good student. Some better than others. But, it was very obvious when talking to other applicants at the top schools that I was a small fish in a very big sea of stellar applicants.
 
Not knowing you at all, but just from what you wrote here --

A very high MCAT (like yours), combined with a low GPA (like yours), especially one containing lots of B's, suggests to me that you're very bright but lazy and unmotivated. Reading between the lines that you're from a relatively wealthy family, I might also wonder if you're not also perhaps a bit entitled.

That's the very blunt bad news, and if there are things in your PS or LORs that strengthen this impression, that could be what sunk you application. And if that's the reason your app sank, then a 3-month stint in Chile probably won't help a bit. (Sorry, but that's the kind of activity rich kids do -- Foreign vacation!)

IF that's what went wrong, then what I'd want to see to combat that impression would be "humble, get your hands dirty" work, sustained over a longer time frame. Change your Chile stint to one in the CA Central Valley, teaching English to the children of migrant farm workers. Work in a soup kitchen or homeless shelter. Volunteer in a nursing home, or working with people with developmental disabilities.

And of course, if you're still in school, some Straight A's semesters to show you're serious.

My post was already getting way too long, but I agree with this summary and advice about going forward.
 
Some excellent advice so far. I'm sorry that things haven't worked out for you so far. Although med schools are enrolling more students than ever before, over the past few years, we've been setting new records for number of students applying to medical school. The reality is that things are very tough, and you need to do everything you can to optimize every component of your application.

There are many applicants who fail to secure admission to med school even with high grades and/or MCAT scores. In your case, your MCAT score is great. Certainly, you would like to have done better with your GPA. Several years ago, in a study done by the AAMC, approximately 8% of applicants with undergraduate GPAs and total MCAT scores of at least 3.8 and 39, respectively, failed to gain admission.

To add to what my fellow SDNers have commented, your personal statement needs to be assessed carefully. You need to know if it's compelling from a content standpoint. Then you need to know if it's compelling in terms of flow, readability, etc.

Suboptimal letters of recommendation can certainly affect your chances of securing interviews. You can improve the quality of these letters by developing stronger relationships with letter writers and making it as easy as possible for them to write strong letters. Unfortunately, some letter writers have no idea how to write effective letters for med school applicants. It always bothers me to see these letters as part of an application in an applicant whom I believe has much to offer. You may have to rethink your choice of letter writers when you apply again.

The description section for each of your experiences listed in the AMCAS application must be done well. I have read hundreds of these applications, and I can't tell you how often I encounter underwhelming descriptions. In many of these cases, students have done some remarkable things but the words they use to describe the experience fails to make an impact. Again, flow, readability, and grammar are all important in this section.

In your secondary application, you obviously have to tailor your application to the school's mission, philosophy, etc. Sometimes, people think they've done this well but it may be that your secondary apps are lacking in this respect.

I would encourage you to meet with admissions officials at some of the schools where you have been rejected. Not all schools will allow you to have such meetings but they may be able to shed some light on the issues holding you back. If you can't meet with these officials, look to your contacts in medicine to see if they know anyone who is on the med school admissions committee or has been on the committee. You may find that you are 1-2 degrees of separation from someone with considerable experience in admissions.
 
It all depends on what you are doing. Being an ER scribe does not replace doing shadowing. As an ER scribe, you are performing a job, which in this context is a negative because it makes your focus performing a task, rather than learning about what you are getting into. You are exposed to the emergency room and health care administered there, which is very different from how 90%+ physicians practice. The purpose of shadowing is that you see what the daily life of a physician is. Interacting with patients, the paperwork, the conferences, the business, the science, the art, everything. Most jobs working at a hospital don't fulfill that. I interviewed someone a few years back for medical school who had 3 years of experience working as a ER tech and then as a Rad tech. They wrote down that they had something like 2500 hours of "clinical experience", but after talking to them, it was clear that those jobs were just that, jobs. They did the job very well, but that means they showed up, did their job and clocked out, nothing more. I want it to be clear, there is nothing wrong with that inherently. But if you are going to try to double count hours that you were paid during, you better have gotten something actually out of them. This is like someone doing 'research' by washing glassware in a lab. Being in the hospital and being able to smell the patients is one thing, but actually knowing what physicians do is something else. You can't replace that experience. Are there people who get in without that? Of course. But, the vast majority of admissions committees want to know that you at least tried to figure out what being a physician is like.

Well, that assumes I didn't bother picking the brains of the physicians I have worked with. 😛

In the military system, the medic - physician relationship is a bit different than on the civilian side. We worked very closely with the docs... at least at the facility I worked in. I learned quite a bit from them.
 
Well, that assumes I didn't bother picking the brains of the physicians I have worked with. 😛

In the military system, the medic - physician relationship is a bit different than on the civilian side. We worked very closely with the docs... at least at the facility I worked in. I learned quite a bit from them.

I think that this is my point exactly. When you are a rad tech or scribe, your are there to do a job. On your own time, you certainly can learn stuff about being a physician by asking questions and observing, but that isn't a part of your job. When you are working, you are working. Every experience is going to be different and dependent on the facility you are at. I certainly can not speak to military experiences as I have very limited exposure. But, again, I caution that the majority of these experiences are on the civilian side and the vast majority of these positions are not going to get you the same exposure you would get when you shadow. My gut says that military experiences are going to be better overall as far as exposure because there is a greater sense of taking people under wing and exposing them to things.
 
Well, that assumes I didn't bother picking the brains of the physicians I have worked with. 😛

In the military system, the medic - physician relationship is a bit different than on the civilian side. We worked very closely with the docs... at least at the facility I worked in. I learned quite a bit from them.
Yup...coming out of a year of scribing, I could tell you the pay structure and daily/weekly schedule (including call) of several completely different physician groups - ER, private practice, hospitalist, etc, not to mention all of the 'up front clinical experience' bits that I have gone into in other threads.
The docs very much regarded us as a part of the team. I was expected to know everything about all of the patients we were carrying, in case they had to give information to a phone consult when we were away from the computers. If they put an order in, they explained the reasoning behind it 80% of the time.
 
This is how I read your application:
3.48/34 (average of 2 MCATs)
Zero research
ER scribe
Zero altruism oriented volunteering
cliched boring personal statement
boring LORs
Zero physician shadowing
Reasonable work history
ORM


This application would get no traction at a upper tier school.
 
*cough* he escaped Wash U undergrad without doing research. That itself is amazing XD.
I dunno, for some people full 15-18 credit WUSTL premed courseload with good grades + part time job + major leisure EC seems to fill plenty of time without adding 10-12 hours of research, though considering your own inhuman work ethic you probably find the excuse "I had no time, I wanted at least 3 hours of sleep a night!" to be pretty pathetic 😛

But seriously, my adviser told me over 80% of bio majors do research here, certainly a minority
 
Honestly, I think the odds are that you were torpedoed for either your personal statement, your recommendation letters, or your secondary essays. Your GPA is a tad low for an elite school, but you would obviously be a shoe-in at a low-tier and most mid-tiers. I think you rubbed some people the wrong way with your essays or letters, most likely. If you want to know for sure, I'd call or email a few offices of admission once things settle down to ask for their opinion. I wouldn't be surprised if you had an unfavorable LOR.

Also, it's worth noting that your 38 was on a second attempt, with the first a 30. So you're likely considered the equivalent of a 36 or 34. Still very good, but it's not going to knock anyone's socks off.
 
Well, that assumes I didn't bother picking the brains of the physicians I have worked with. 😛

In the military system, the medic - physician relationship is a bit different than on the civilian side. We worked very closely with the docs... at least at the facility I worked in. I learned quite a bit from them.

Yeah, I think military life is just a little more teamwork-centric in general. Perhaps that's due to the somewhat lower case volume and the fact that we all have to suffer through deployments together. I definitely had several people "shadow" me in my previous job, although others with less direct involvement may have gotten a slightly misleading perspective.
 
Let's be honest: that GPA isn't going to cut it these days at MD schools. The average is a 3.7 and he's way below that. Every school on his list probably had enough 3.7s to fill every spot five times over, and then they had another 10x the available seats worth of 3.6 applicants, and then, down with the 3.5s, there's him. The MCAT score is pretty solid, but it doesn't address the weak academic record overall.
 
Longitudinal activity: scribe for 2 years now. But yeah I get it, that is something I am missing. I never stuck with anything for too long. Hopefully me going to Chile for 3 months will show some commitment on my part.

Would you guys recommend I do a post-bac?

I woudn't recommend a post-bac or Chile. I'd focus on figuring out why your application was rejected from most schools, and cover those weaknesses. A gap year is not a bad thing, many kids do them voluntarily these days. If you want/need more classes, I'd just graduate and then take them at your local university as needed. No need for a formal post-bac, unless your science grades really suck.
 
Let's be honest: that GPA isn't going to cut it these days at MD schools. The average is a 3.7 and he's way below that. Every school on his list probably had enough 3.7s to fill every spot five times over, and then they had another 10x the available seats worth of 3.6 applicants, and then, down with the 3.5s, there's him. The MCAT score is pretty solid, but it doesn't address the weak academic record overall.

3.5 GPA has a 36% chance of acceptance for a white guy. 62% with a 34 MCAT (average 30 and 38). It's not stellar, but it's not terrible. That 62% chance is technically well above average (45%).
 
3.5 GPA has a 36% chance of acceptance for a white guy. 62% with a 34 MCAT (average 30 and 38). It's not stellar, but it's not terrible. That 62% chance is technically well above average (45%).

But 4 out of 10 white guys with a 3.5/34 are going to be empty handed at the end of the cycle and it appears that OP is one of those four.
 
To follow-up on some of the excellent feedback you've received, here's what our own LizzyM has to say about volunteering (and do heed this):
"Service need not be "unique". If you can alleviate suffering in your community through service to the poor, homeless, illiterate, fatherless, etc, you are meeting an otherwise unmet need and learning more about the lives of the people (or types of people) who will someday be your patients."

Examples include: Habitat for Humanity, Humane Society, crisis hotlines, soup kitchen, food pantry, homeless or women’s shelter, after-school tutoring for students or coaching a sport in a poor school district, teaching ESL to adults at a community center, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, or Meals on Wheels. Get out of your comfort zone and get off campus.

Not all volunteering needs to be in a hospital. Think hospice, Planned Parenthood, nursing homes, rehab facilities, crisis hotlines, camps for sick children, or clinics. Check out your local houses of worship for volunteer opportunities.
 
Honestly, I'm pretty shocked that the OP didn't get any interviews if they applied to low/mid tier schools. I'd see if there were any red flags.

Also, if you've done anything notable in the last few months it might not be a bad idea to send schools update letters.
 
Are we sure we're all operating with the same definitions of high, low and mid-tier schools here? Not sure if this is your issue, OP, but I've heard from some people who consider anything not named Harvard to be "mid-tier" and cheat themselves that way with a skewed application list.
 
Also when did you apply and when did u turn in your secobdaries? Timing is very crucual
 
There are 63 applicants on MDApps with a MCAT between 36 and 40 and a cGPA between 3.5 and 3.6. 50 of them received at least one interview.
 
Honestly, I'm pretty shocked that the OP didn't get any interviews if they applied to low/mid tier schools. I'd see if there were any red flags.

Also, if you've done anything notable in the last few months it might not be a bad idea to send schools update letters.

At this point I doubt the OP would be receiving interview invites, but I suppose it could be worth a shot given the circumstances.
 
At this point I doubt the OP would be receiving interview invites, but I suppose it could be worth a shot given the circumstances.

It's still possible. I received two new invites in the last two weeks alone. My app was about on the same level as OP's, stats wise. I had unusually good EC's and LOR's, however. Of course my first interview invite was way back in Nov, finished secondaries in Sep-Oct (mostly).
 
Are we sure we're all operating with the same definitions of high, low and mid-tier schools here? Not sure if this is your issue, OP, but I've heard from some people who consider anything not named Harvard to be "mid-tier" and cheat themselves that way with a skewed application list.

Yeah, a school list would be helpful.

At this point I doubt the OP would be receiving interview invites, but I suppose it could be worth a shot given the circumstances.

What does the OP have to lose? I'm sending a bunch of updates into the ether, I had some researchy stuff come through though.

It's still possible. I received two new invites in the last two weeks alone.

Shooting for this myself. Good luck!
 
Shooting for this myself. Good luck![/QUOTE]

Thanks! I turned both of those down, however. I've already been accepted to the school that I intend to go to. Hopefully that'll free up some spots for the rest of you guys. 🙂
 
OP,

We have the same GPA/MCAT stats nearly identically -

I'm the most average white guy
first-time 30 MCAT and improved to a 38
around a 3.5 GPA.


As far as ECs go -

I have 2 first author pubs
shadowed 2 physicians and an optometrist
have worked in a retirement home for several years in HS and early college (this is where I discuss my clinical exposure and want to attend medical school)
basic volunteering (non-clinical)


I've had -

3 interviews
1 acceptance
1 wait list
1 pending response to MD/PhD programs
1 interview remaining in the coming weeks.


So, with my mediocre GPA I managed to convince adcoms I was motivated enough to attend medical/graduate school for 8+ years. I'm thinking it's not your stats... on the plus side changing ECs / attitude / essays is easier than statistics.
 
*cough* he escaped Wash U undergrad without doing research. That itself is amazing XD.
It's actually easy to do that since research is not required for graduation. Also, every premed adviser and a WUSM professor/ER attending said "you don't need research to get into medical school." Guess what? I'm living proof that their advice is true.
I dunno, for some people full 15-18 credit WUSTL premed courseload with good grades + part time job + major leisure EC seems to fill plenty of time without adding 10-12 hours of research, though considering your own inhuman work ethic you probably find the excuse "I had no time, I wanted at least 3 hours of sleep a night!" to be pretty pathetic 😛

But seriously, my adviser told me over 80% of bio majors do research here, certainly a minority
And it's a minority that I don't mind being in. I never took more than 16 credits either. No need to do that when you only need 120 to graduate and I already had 15 from AP's. I could have been more productive and gunner-ish with my time in undergrad. But for what? A small chance to get into a "top school"? Not worth it. The goal of most WUSTL premed students is to get into ANY medical school. It doesn't matter where, just as long as we get to become doctors in the end.
 
Low GPA - high MCAT doesn't completely offset low GPA.

LOR's that aren't "good" or "great" or "strong" will not help you.

Your PS may have raised some eyebrows?

Lack of cold hard shadowing experience (scribe doesn't count) is usually an app killer.

You don't need research to get into med school (I got accepted without any research experience), but you do need to show longitudinal commitment to a few activities.
Not shadowing is definitely not an app killer. I can attest to that. lol
 
No research for me either. Was definitely a negative in interviews, but not a huge one.
 
No research for me either. Was definitely a negative in interviews, but not a huge one.
Did your interviewers actually give you a look of disdain or did they just simply ask, "Why did you not do any research during undergrad or your time off?" I understand you are a non-trad, right?
 
Research stuff honestly depends on the school and person interviewing you.

At a state school that wants people to match Primary Care? No big deal. At a research school, yeah... they're going to ask...

An attending I work with told me that I needed to be careful talking about research experience since he thought talking about it too much can make interviewers think that you're not interested in patient care. As with everything else, there's a balance.
 
Did your interviewers actually give you a look of disdain or did they just simply ask, "Why did you not do any research during undergrad or your time off?" I understand you are a non-trad, right?

It was more like "Any research experience?" and I'd respond with something like "No, I would like to have, but I didn't have the time due to [compelling reasons] X, Y, and Z." I mean, they know we're not super human, and can't do everything.
 
These stats have to be taken with a huge grain of NaCl because they're skewed by state schools which highly favor their own, like LSU, U MO or Mercer.

3.5 GPA has a 36% chance of acceptance for a white guy. 62% with a 34 MCAT (average 30 and 38). It's not stellar, but it's not terrible. That 62% chance is technically well above average (45%).
 
Let me start by saying that when I was pregnant sometime in the last century, I had little respect for What to Expect When You Are Expecting. That said, the book really emphasized "Best Odds" the things you should do to have the best chance of the most desirable outcome.

Can you have a healthy baby even if you smoke? Yes, it can happen. Drink one cocktail once a month? Yeah, stories have been told of someone who did that and still had a healthy baby. and so on.

Same with med admissions. There are people who have managed to do well despite not having research, not having shadowing, not getting a 10 in verbal on the MCAT but the fact remains that the odds of getting admitted are much better if you do that stuff.
 
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