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Accepted to state school.
My guesses are:
1) Downward trend GPA, had a 3.85 going into senior year, but got 1 C and 3 B's senior year which brought it down.
2) PS/Essays just weren't put together well enough
3) Bad LOR
4) Too little clinical volunteering/shadowing
Note: I'm not bitter at my post-ii decisions. Had slipups at my top10 interviews. I just thought I'd get more II's, especially from the top 50 schools I applied to.
Any thoughts on what went wrong? Is the downward trend GPA that alarming or could it be something else?
First time poster here but longtime lurker. My application cycle has goon extremely poorly and I was wondering if any of you could point out what could be wrong in my app cycle.
Applied to 15 schools. Mostly Top 20 schools, a few top 50 schools, and 1 state school (top 70).
Received 3 II at top 10 schools, 2 top 50 school II, and 1 II at my state school.
Accepted to state school.
WL at 1 top 10 and 1 top 50 school
Rejected at 1 top 10 school
Still waiting on the other top 10 and top 50 schools.
Rejected pre-ii everywhere else.
3.79 sgpa and cgpa, 39+ mcat, HYPSM grad, 3 publications ( 1 first author), strong/interesting ECs + leadership experience, 120 hr clinical volunteering, 50 hr shadow, 1000+ hrs in interesting nonclinical volunteering
My guesses are:
1) Downward trend GPA, had a 3.85 going into senior year, but got 1 C and 3 B's senior year which brought it down.
2) PS/Essays just weren't put together well enough
3) Bad LOR
4) Too little clinical volunteering/shadowing
Note: I'm not bitter at my post-ii decisions. Had slipups at my top10 interviews. I just thought I'd get more II's, especially from the top 50 schools I applied to.
Any thoughts on what went wrong? Is the downward trend GPA that alarming or could it be something else?
Or something caught the eye, only to disappoint when followed up in the interview.Best guess, you are not nearly as interesting as you think that you are.
I think you put your finger on it, PS/Essays weren't put together well, little clinical exposure.First time poster here but longtime lurker. My application cycle has goon extremely poorly and I was wondering if any of you could point out what could be wrong in my app cycle.
Applied to 15 schools. Mostly Top 20 schools, a few top 50 schools, and 1 state school (top 70).
Received 3 II at top 10 schools, 2 top 50 school II, and 1 II at my state school.
Accepted to state school.
WL at 1 top 10 and 1 top 50 school
Rejected at 1 top 10 school
Still waiting on the other top 10 and top 50 schools.
Rejected pre-ii everywhere else.
3.79 sgpa and cgpa, 39+ mcat, HYPSM grad, 3 publications ( 1 first author), strong/interesting ECs + leadership experience, 120 hr clinical volunteering, 50 hr shadow, 1000+ hrs in interesting nonclinical volunteering
My guesses are:
1) Downward trend GPA, had a 3.85 going into senior year, but got 1 C and 3 B's senior year which brought it down.
2) PS/Essays just weren't put together well enough
3) Bad LOR
4) Too little clinical volunteering/shadowing
Note: I'm not bitter at my post-ii decisions. Had slipups at my top10 interviews. I just thought I'd get more II's, especially from the top 50 schools I applied to.
Any thoughts on what went wrong? Is the downward trend GPA that alarming or could it be something else?
No need to be bitter. He wasn't gloating.What exactly do you want people to do? Feel sorry that you didn't get any acceptances to top 10 schools? You got six interviews and an acceptance. Enjoy your success.
What exactly do you want people to do? Feel sorry that you didn't get any acceptances to top 10 schools? You got six interviews and an acceptance. Enjoy your success.
First time poster here but longtime lurker. My application cycle has goon extremely poorly and I was wondering if any of you could point out what could be wrong in my app cycle.
Applied to 15 schools. Mostly Top 20 schools, a few top 50 schools, and 1 state school (top 70).
Received 3 II at top 10 schools, 2 top 50 school II, and 1 II at my state school.
Accepted to state school.
WL at 1 top 10 and 1 top 50 school
Rejected at 1 top 10 school
Still waiting on the other top 10 and top 50 schools.
Rejected pre-ii everywhere else.
3.79 sgpa and cgpa, 39+ mcat, HYPSM grad, 3 publications ( 1 first author), strong/interesting ECs + leadership experience, 120 hr clinical volunteering, 50 hr shadow, 1000+ hrs in interesting nonclinical volunteering
My guesses are:
1) Downward trend GPA, had a 3.85 going into senior year, but got 1 C and 3 B's senior year which brought it down.
2) PS/Essays just weren't put together well enough
3) Bad LOR
4) Too little clinical volunteering/shadowing
Note: I'm not bitter at my post-ii decisions. Had slipups at my top10 interviews. I just thought I'd get more II's, especially from the top 50 schools I applied to.
Any thoughts on what went wrong? Is the downward trend GPA that alarming or could it be something else?
I think some of you are being a little too harsh on the OP. Given the app that is listed, OP was likely expecting more than 1 acceptance out of 15 applications. Sure, 1 state school acceptance is more than what many people have, but there is nothing wrong with expecting more with the application OP has listed. Telling the OP that they are "ungrateful" is along the lines of telling someone that went through medical school/residency/neurosurgery specialization and ended up receiving an attending position that paid only 100k/year that they should be grateful and not ask why they didn't make more. Sure, 100k is more than what a lot of people make - but it is on the lower end of what other neurosurgeons with similar training make and one would rightly wonder why.
The quote below sounds like good and accurate adviceY'all are being really annoying and obnoxious to OP. He asked a simple question. Maybe he was expecting more, but we don't need 5 posts in a row whining about the post, using words like "d-bag" and "*****." Seriously?
If I was met with this much hostility on a supposed help site, I'd get off immediately.
Please, write something constructive or don't write anything at all.
Lol, top 70...
OP, you probably came off as too pretentious at your higher tier interviews. You came off as a bit of a prestige chaser here, that probably rubs off a bit in person too. Maybe you came off as arrogant care of the way you carried yourself, who knows. But work on it, and use this as a life lesson so that when you're applying to residency you don't make the same mistake again.
The quote below sounds like good and accurate advice
Well his overall application was clearly not above average for top 10 schools regarding that medical school application process factors in things like PS and LOR which OP said was not good and also his interviewing ability. His numbers where good enough but if it was all down to that medical school applications would be alot more predictableI was previously under the assumption that SDN was full of gunners and top-notch students. After reading the comments on this thread, it's quite clear that SDN is populated with those who have the mentality of being thankful for participation trophies. They tell you to be grateful you got into your safety school when your application is above average for the top 10 schools. They'll probably tell you to be grateful you matched into your bottom-ranked residency program when you have a 270+ Step I and junior AOA from HMS. They'll also probably tell you that mediocrity is fine, and that nobody should have the audacity to demand more for themselves.
"Got into your state school? Withdraw from all your other schools and crawl on over to their admissions office and thank them for accepting you!"
"Someone's talking about how they got into a top 10 school? How dare they bully me, I only go to a top 88 school and now I feel inferior because they're talking about an accomplishment of theirs."
You all say "prestige *****", "prestige chaser", and yet you still apply to the same top 10 schools and know the list by heart.
I know (not personally) an individual who has three degrees in Biochemistry, Neuroscience, and Chemical Engineering (U.S. News rank 4 since you seem pre-occupied with prestige) with a 3.91 GPA and "equivalent" MCAT of 37. His clinical experience outweighs yours by a factor of 5-10. He was a three time re-applicant to medical school due to a downward trend in GPA just like you, and he posted that he literally cried when he received an acceptance to one of his state medical schools (U.S News rank ~50) a month and a half ago. He recently also received an acceptance to Indiana (U.S. News rank 47).
This is a 3 time re-applicant with a stronger academic record (with a more diverse and expansive suite of degrees) who cried about a top 50 acceptance. Yet here you are disappointed about a "poor" cycle when you were accepted the first time around. Absurd.
I was previously under the assumption that SDN was full of gunners and top-notch students. After reading the comments on this thread, it's quite clear that SDN is populated with those who have the mentality of being thankful for participation trophies. They tell you to be grateful you got into your safety school when your application is above average for the top 10 schools. They'll probably tell you to be grateful you matched into your bottom-ranked residency program when you have a 270+ Step I and junior AOA from HMS. They'll also probably tell you that mediocrity is fine, and that nobody should have the audacity to demand more for themselves.
"Got into your state school? Withdraw from all your other schools and crawl on over to their admissions office and thank them for accepting you!"
"Someone's talking about how they got into a top 10 school? How dare they bully me, I only go to a top 88 school and now I feel inferior because they're talking about an accomplishment of theirs."
You all say "prestige *****", "prestige chaser", and yet you still apply to the same top 10 schools and know the list by heart.
Love this post. 👍
Several sociologists and psychologists have called millenials the "generation of entitlement", a title which has rarely been more clear than this post. There are literally tens of thousands of applicants who get in NOWHERE each year and hundreds of thousands who dream of getting into medical school but changed paths because they were bad at Ochem or went to no-name universities where there were zero research options for undergrads or any one of a dozen other reasons.
I am an applicant looking at a potential FOURTH cycle. I would do ANYTHING to be accepted to the 135th ranked school.
If you didn't get in, you weren't good enough, period. There's more to a top-notch applicant than numbers.I was previously under the assumption that SDN was full of gunners and top-notch students. After reading the comments on this thread, it's quite clear that SDN is populated with those who have the mentality of being thankful for participation trophies. They tell you to be grateful you got into your safety school when your application is above average for the top 10 schools. They'll probably tell you to be grateful you matched into your bottom-ranked residency program when you have a 270+ Step I and junior AOA from HMS. They'll also probably tell you that mediocrity is fine, and that nobody should have the audacity to demand more for themselves.
"Got into your state school? Withdraw from all your other schools and crawl on over to their admissions office and thank them for accepting you!"
"Someone's talking about how they got into a top 10 school? How dare they bully me, I only go to a top 88 school and now I feel inferior because they're talking about an accomplishment of theirs."
You all say "prestige *****", "prestige chaser", and yet you still apply to the same top 10 schools and know the list by heart.
Not quite the same since after residency+fellowship, a neurosurgeon can pretty much go to any location in the country and get a job (some paying a lot more than avg and some that aren't). Getting into med school is one of the major bottlenecks of this training path - so yes getting one acceptance warrants that the OP should be grateful. Many will not get an opportunity to go down this hellish path and become physicians.
I was previously under the assumption that SDN was full of gunners and top-notch students. After reading the comments on this thread, it's quite clear that SDN is populated with those who have the mentality of being thankful for participation trophies. They tell you to be grateful you got into your safety school when your application is above average for the top 10 schools. They'll probably tell you to be grateful you matched into your bottom-ranked residency program when you have a 270+ Step I and junior AOA from HMS. They'll also probably tell you that mediocrity is fine, and that nobody should have the audacity to demand more for themselves.
"Got into your state school? Withdraw from all your other schools and crawl on over to their admissions office and thank them for accepting you!"
"Someone's talking about how they got into a top 10 school? How dare they bully me, I only go to a top 88 school and now I feel inferior because they're talking about an accomplishment of theirs."
You all say "prestige *****", "prestige chaser", and yet you still apply to the same top 10 schools and know the list by heart.