Medical School Admission Interview
September 2004
Below are the highlights of a medical school
admission interview chat transcript with Ramin Rafie, MD of
AdmissionsConsultants.
Dr. Rafie graduated from UCLA with a degree in neuroscience and then attended
University of California Irvine College of Medicine. Perhaps most importantly to
our readers, he also served on the admissions committee at UCI-COM. These
medical school admission interview chat highlights are provided courtesy of
medschoolchat.com.
Which is more important in the admissions process: the MCAT or the GPA (or both)?
I would say both.
Are
there set standards that schools look at?
Each
medical school really has its own formula/admissions committee and hence what
they ultimately decide on as a committee but usually, the GPA and MCAT scores are
punched in a formula. People above the cutoff score will receive a secondary and
have passed the first rounds of elimination so to speak.
Is not having research experience fatal to one's
application, especially if one is clinically oriented?
I don't think not having research is fatal at all. Having done research and
actually being published goes to prove to admissions committees you are rather
scientifically inclined and understand the rigors of research and publication. I
think publications go to show true dedication as much research does not
eventually get published. However, research is only one category of many
admissions committees examine. They also look at clinical experience for
example.
Some applicants have very little or no clinical
volunteer work. How is that viewed?
Clinical
experience is essential as the medical school admissions committees want to know
what you really know and have an
idea of what you're getting yourself into and that you know what it's like to
work around sick people and a clinical environment for much of the time.
What
kinds of letters of recommendations stand out the most and do you have any
advice for undergrads who need to know how to ask their prospective recommenders
for a letter?
LORs are important if they are very genuine, meaning if it's written by someone who really
knows you as an individual and can describe your character and work ethic, especially in
comparison to their experience with prior people. Most people have generic LORs
they can give to people they don't genuinely know. These are obvious. It is better to
have a genuine LOR than a generic one from a Noble Laureate. You can not demonstrate
your work ethic in an academic course. Of course as far as work ethic, I meant
clinical LORs or work experience. The military is one example.
How does one know if a professor will write a good LOR?
It depends on your repoire with that professor. Do you know and trust that
person well?
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