ECs for Medical School

<p>I know most of you may hate this question, but I have to ask. What kind of extracurriculars do medical schools look at when looking at an application? Yes, I do know that 95% of the process is just GPA and MCAT score, but I would like to boost my application as much as possible. Reading past comments medical school looks pasts the "filler activities" or the activities you simply do for the name. So in order to get into at least a top twenty medical school whats advisable? </p>

<p>Specifics would be how much would joining club rugby help me? Or any club sport for that matter? Should I try to start new clubs/activities/organizations? Should I try to become president of the AMS chapter, a multicultural group, or even student senate?</p>

<p>I would like to mostly know about club rugby, because I think I may be good at that, but would that help in my application? Or is just merely sticking to research, volunteering, shadowing, and maybe internships more than enough? Thing is I do not know if I am smart enough to do any significant research to be honest, time will tell though</p>

<p>Also in an attempt to not make another thread, can someone tell me the negatives of taking the easiest classes possible? I signed up for all the intro classes for my prerequisites for medical school, where I took an AP class instead and got a five. Does this inhibit my chances of getting research opportunities or anything? Can someone name the downfalls of this strategy?</p>

<p>1) The basics</p>

<p>To begin any pre-med resume, you have to have the things that most medical schools expect a pre-med to have done. They want to see that you have done community service, because this shows that you are interested in helping others and have compassion. They want to see that you have had leadership experience, because you will be in charge of a number of nursing, techs, etc, and good leadership is necessary when you are dealing with people’s health or lives. They want to see that you have done clinical volunteering, so that you have seen doctors and patients interacting and are interested in helping people medically. They want to see that you have shadowed doctors (less important than the volunteering but advisable), so that you have a better grasp of what you are getting yourself into. I personally would recommend at least one year of clinical work or volunteering. It would be best if you started this year no later than your junior year. If you do your year of volunteering at the beginning of your Freshman year, I would recommend that you punctuate the remaining years with shadowing and short term medical stuff like a blood drive or two, so you don’t have to explain why you suddenly stopped all medical related activities. The last “basic” is always useful, but only absolutely necessary when applying to heavy-weight research schools, and that is research. Off the top of my head I believe that 93% of acceptances at U of Michigan were given to students with research experience last year. Similar stats occur at other research schools. It doesn’t have to be medically related research, so long as you were part of the creation of new knowledge. Publications are nice, so I would suggest getting started on this early in your undergrad years.</p>

<p>2) Have something that will make your readers say “Gee, I want to meet this applicant!”</p>

<p>There is no such thing as a guaranteed acceptance. I know people who were accepted at Top 10 schools, only to be rejected post-interview from their state school that they were highly competitive at in terms of academics. A 4.0 and a 45T alone isn’t going to get you accepted everywhere, though I wouldn’t go so far as to say as it wouldn’t get you anywhere. For the rest of us mortals, though, extracurriculars are the best way to make ourselves stand out from the pack. As such, have an activity that is really unique, because these things can be quite strong selling points. For me, it was being involved in some post-post-post-post modern dance performances. You have plenty of time to pick up something that is off the beaten pre-med path, so have an interest that isn’t what you would normally find in a room full of scientists. There’s a reason that the top schools are always telling us how their students are marathon runners, Olympic competitors, composers, singers, and the like. For one, its just plain cool and impressive, and so those are the students they highlight. However, even the students who aren’t quite as stand alone as that will often have things that are still pretty interesting to hear about. This desire for interesting applicants occurs at every medical school, and an interesting activity might land you an interview at your dream school. I’m not saying that you should fill your resume with nothing but outlandish activities, but one or two ice breakers will be very helpful.</p>

<p>2) Combine your interests and talents with your activities</p>

<p>This goes hand in hand with my first point, but it can really improve your extracurriculars when you combine your activities. Say you go volunteer at the VA or at a hospice, and on the side you take violin lessons. Why not go play your violin at the VA or hospice? If you want to help out a community service, why not run in a charity marathon if you happen to be a runner? Avid painter? Teach a painting class to inner city youth, or paint a mural for a community center. Be creative, it will mean a lot more to the people you help as well as the person reviewing your application.</p>

<p>3) Represent your message</p>

<p>If you want to go into academic medicine, research, public health, etc, make sure that you can justify it. If you tell your interviewer that you absolutely love teaching, but you haven’t done anything teaching related (according to your resume), you risk making yourself look like you are trying to just be impressive. If you are interested in something and are going to state that it is part of your goals or beliefs, you should make sure that you are an active part of realizing them. If you are a staunch believer in helping the underprivileged, and intend to do so in your medical career, get out there and work at a soup kitchen or at a shelter. If you’ve never done anything to prove your interest in something, then how can the interviewer believe that you are telling the truth. This goes back to the whole point of having to justify that you are sure you want to do medicine by having medical experience.</p>

<p>4) Do things that are important to you, rather than simply trying to buff up your resume</p>

<p>You are trying to represent who you are, when you apply to medical school. A lot of medical admissions is just based on feel and fit. If you seem to connect well with the school and student philosophy, you are much more likely to get in. It is tempting to try and just pick out things that you feel will increase your competitiveness, but in the end you aren’t doing yourself justice. I truly believe that my dancing was a bigger influence on my admissions cycle than most other things. I’m passionate about it, and it has let me do a lot more than simply clocking hours at community service event that I have no interest in. Speaking of community service, the majority of mine is education and inner city related, because I’m passionate about those things. Passion is your strongest ally on the application path. The admissions committee wants to see what you are really made of, what really makes you tick. You will do better at activities that you love doing, and you will be making yourself well rounded. As a doctor, the more well rounded you are, the better you will be able to interact and relate with your patients. A well rounded list of activities that are not entirely cookie cutter pre-med will do you more good personally and career wise than a bazillion hours of volunteering. Show your individuality and show your passion. If there isn’t some kind of medically related experience that you can find that fits into your passions, you probably are in the wrong field.</p>

<p>^^^I wish there was a “like” button for the above post!</p>

<p>mmm- outstanding post #2, you did an excellent job conveying the ‘why’ behind the what.</p>

<p>mmcdowe-wow thanks was not expecting such a detailed and informative response such as yours it helps out greatly. I think what I learned most from your post is I need to find what defines me and find a way to place an emphasis of that in my application, which will probably be hard for me. </p>

<p>Well now that I have the first question answered can anyone answer the second? Just are there any cons in picking the easiest classes, other than boredom? Does it greatly limit my chances for research since the professor thinks less of my ingenuity or something?</p>

<p>I think curmudgeon addressed that point quite succinctly in this post</p>

<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/pre-med-topics/1073439-perspective-gpa-gamesmanship.html?highlight=easy+class[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/pre-med-topics/1073439-perspective-gpa-gamesmanship.html?highlight=easy+class&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Thanks for that wayoutwestmom, that really makes me question my course selection even more. Basically this first semester I am taking in college is just fulfilling the prerequisites for medical school, such as English, Calculus, and Chemistry. I took what I think is one of the lower calcs (it was recommended for SAT scores of 650-680), the higher chemistry (while most biology majors are taking a lower chem I have been told by my advisor), the English was the only one available, which I am still questioning whether I should use credit to skip a semester and take a humanities class or some kind of class with writing credit which grabs my interest (something about bioethics maybe?). I really do not know how to finalize my schedule, I think I will remain in easy calc, but really try to get into depth of my major, so take all the hard classes there?</p>

<p>a 45 and 4.0 WIll get you acepted at MOST places. Let’s face it…</p>