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- Jan 12, 2022
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I'm not an adcom, but I can tell you that adcoms love to see gap years for everyone, as evidenced by the fact that over 2/3 of applicants and matriculants have at least one. That said, what you described is surely one of the mildest versions of "cheating" that has been reported here. I don't think a gap year will make a difference one way or the other. It was over a year ago and you've learned your lesson.**First time posting!
I got an AI violation for opening an exam book early my fall sophomore year in orgo 1. I had a AI hearing with the professor where I acknowledged my mistake and I know to never do it again. I wanted to hear an ADCOM's perspective on academic integrity violations. I posted on reddit as well but found most of the advice was "if it's not on your transcript, don't report it". I don't want to take the risk not reporting because that is covering dishonesty with more dishonesty but rather I want to find the best way for me to still pursue my passion of becoming a doctor.
My biggest question would also be, would it help to take a gap year? I was originally planning on applying straight through but will ADCOMs like to see even more time between this violation and applying?
Thank you
You’ll be fine in the end. When you report it don’t make any excuses. Just state what happened and why you shouldn’t have done it and then don’t ever discuss it again unless askedHI! Thank you for the responses! I opened up the text booklet before the exam was supposed to begin and was reported by another student after the exam was over. I have a letter from my college and I believe it is an AI with an internal record that can be released to medical schools. Thanks for the insights!
When you said you opened the exam book early, do you mean you opened it before everyone else received their exam? So, a one or two minute head start? If so, this is a nothing burger especially if it was an honest mistake.I got an AI violation for opening an exam book early my fall sophomore year in orgo 1. I had a AI hearing with the professor where I acknowledged my mistake and I know to never do it again. I wanted to hear an ADCOM's perspective on academic integrity violations.