The Medical School Application Process from A-Z

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THE MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICATION PROCESS FROM A-Z David Verrier, Director, Office of Pre-Professional Programs and Advising, Johns Hopkins University Ellen Snydman, Pre-medical Advisor, Office of Pre-Professional Programs and Advising, Johns Hopkins University

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Transcript of The Medical School Application Process from A-Z

Page 1: The Medical School Application Process from A-Z

THE MEDICAL SCHOOLAPPLICATION PROCESS FROM A-Z

David Verrier, Director, Office of Pre-Professional Programs and Advising, Johns Hopkins UniversityEllen Snydman, Pre-medical Advisor, Office of Pre-Professional Programs and Advising, Johns Hopkins University

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A TO Z…

Applying to medical school is a long, arduous, challenging, and expensive undertaking. This presentation will focus on understanding the process of applying to medical school, the preparation necessary, and executing the details.

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SOME FACTS ABOUT MEDICAL SCHOOLADMISSIONS – APPLICATION YEAR 2010Allopathic Medicine¢ 130+ medical schools¢ 47,742 - applicants¢ 31,384 - first time applicants¢ 19,641 - accepted applicants¢ 18,665 - matriculants¢ 52% male applicants; 48% female applicants¢ 24 – average age of beginning med students¢ 3.66 – average cum GPA of matriculants¢ 3.60 – math/science GPA of matriculants¢ 30.8 average MCAT of matriculants

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SOME FACTS ABOUT MEDICAL SCHOOLADMISSIONS – APPLICATION YEAR 2009Osteopathic Medicine¢ 28 medical schools + branch campuses¢ 13,147 – applicants¢ 5,227 – first year enrollment¢ 52% male applicants; 48% female applicants¢ 73% are in the age range 23-25¢ 3.54 – average cum GPA of accepted applicants¢ 3.32 – math/science GPA of accepted applicants¢ 26 – average MCAT of accepted applicants

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SELF-ASSESSMENT:ARE YOUR “DUCKS IN A ROW”¢ Volunteer/community experience¢ Medically-related experience¢ Research¢ BCPM and MCAT¢ References¢ Personal Statement¢ “Why do I want to become a physician”¢ Are you realistic

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MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICATION TIMELINE¢ Early May 2011–AMCAS goes online. (Same with

AACOMAS.)¢ Early June 2011– First date that you can submit your

AMCAS application. (Same with AACOMAS.)¢ You will begin receiving secondary applications shortly

after you submit your AMCAS. Try to return these within a few weeks. This will increase your chances of getting an early interview slot.

¢ Interviews at most medical schools begin in mid-September and often continue through the following spring.

¢ While some medical schools will accept students on a rolling basis and notify them as early as mid-October, others wait to notify all of their candidates in March/April.

¢ May 15, 2011 is the last day that you can hold multiple acceptances to medical schools; however, you should withdraw your applications as soon as you know you are no longer interested in a particular school.

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MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICATION SERVICES

¢ AMCAShttps://www.aamc.org/students/applying/amcas/

¢ AACOMAShttps://aacomas.aacom.org/

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LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION

¢ Who should I ask? (choose recommenders carefully)

¢ How do I ask for a recommendation? What materials do I give to the recommender?

¢ What about waiving my right to see a letter?¢ What is enough recommendations?¢ How are my recommendations submitted?

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SENDING LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION

¢ AMCAS -- Most medical schools receive lettersthrough AMCAS. Evaluators submit letterselectronically directly to AMCAS, or through Virtual Evals, or Interfolio.

¢ AACOMAS -- Letters of Recommendation sent directly to colleges following the processes outlined by each college.

* You also may use your undergraduate institution’s Pre-Health or Career Services Office

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DECIDING WHERE TO APPLY

¢ Location!¢ How many?¢ State residency¢ How to choose in light of numbers and rankings¢ Cost¢ Mission and curriculum¢ Size and composition of student body¢ Research vs. clinical emphasis; Special programs¢ Prestige (all US medical schools have “prestige”)

Allopathic: Medical School Admissions Requirements (MSAR)Osteopathic: College Information Booklet (CIB):

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WHAT HAPPENS AFTER YOU APPLY?¢ In the Admissions Office -ó File created for application and credentials ó Huge backlog, do not expect a quick

notification about decisions¢ Some Schools Conduct Initial Review -ó MCAT scores and grades before sending

“secondary” applications to students above the threshold, and reject those below the threshold

¢ Other Schools Send a Secondary to All -ó May include guidelines to help students

determine if they are competitive

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WHAT HAPPENS AFTER YOU APPLY?¢ Complete and return supplementary applications

as soon as possible.¢ Be sure all other required credentials, such as

letters of recommendation, are sent to the medical schools.

¢ Possible Notification - receipt of application, what is needed, completion of application. Ultimately, you are responsible for all that is needed to complete the application.

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SCREENING

¢ After all items are received, one or more screeners fully review each application.

¢ Some schools may use a screening formula. ¢ Screening factors:ó Grades and MCAT Scores ó Most important factors during initial screeningó Letters of Recommendation ó Personal Essayó The Quality (vs. Quantity) of Activities ó The Interview – has the greatest degree of

weight at some schools

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THE MEDICAL SCHOOL INTERVIEW

¢ A BIG first hurdle, your chances of admission greatly increase, confidence builder

¢ Promptly schedule / confirm interview date; request change only if absolutely necessary

¢ Assessment and Recruitment¢ Learn about the school’s curriculum and resources¢ Be courteous to everyone¢ If invited to stay overnight – good way to learn about

school, get insight about student life¢ Interview day: usually a tour and lunch with students

and/or faculty¢ Meet other applicants as colleagues not competitors¢ One or more faculty interviews, possibly a student

interview¢ Chance to ask questions, learn more about a school

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HOW APPLICANTS ARE ASSESSED AT THESTAGE OF THE INTERVIEW AND BEYOND

¢ Social and communication skills¢ Clarity and flexibility of thinking¢ Evidence of motivation for a career in medicine¢ “Isms”: professionalism, humanism, altruism ¢ Probe Depth of Activities (e.g. research,

volunteerism, other areas that show talent)

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APPLICANT RIGHTS ANDRESPONSIBILITIES

¢ May 15 - deadline to reduce multiple acceptances to just one. Keep schools informed of your plans.

¢ Immediately withdraw applications, interviews, and acceptances from all schools you do not plan to attend.

¢ Be considerate to medical schools and other applicants, who may be desperately waiting for an acceptance.

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KEY RESOURCESMedical School Admission Requirements (MSAR), order

from AAMC website

Association of American Medical Collegeswww.aamc.org

American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicinehttp://www.aacom.org/InfoFor/applicants/Pages/default.aspx

Curriculum Directory to all medical schoolshttp://services.aamc.org/currdir/start.cfm

The Texas Medical & Dental School Application Service (TMDSAS)

http://www.utsystem.edu/tmdsas/

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KEY RESOURCES

The Costs of Applyinghttp://www.aamc.org/programs/first/facts/applyingcost.pdf

Generic FAQ for MD/PhD Applicants (University of Penn)http://www.med.upenn.edu/mstp/applicantfaq.pdf

AMCAS - The American Medical College Application Servicehttp://www.aamc.org/students/amcas/

AMCAS instruction booklet (full version)http://www.aamc.org/students/amcas/amcas2009instructionm

anual.pdf