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  • You've got to love the internet for providing vast reserves of useful information. But that

  • also comes with the cost of even larger reserves of misleading information from unqualified

  • keyboard warriors. Here is what medical school admissions committees care about most with

  • your medical school application, straight from the horse's mouth.

  • Dr. Jubbal, MedSchoolInsiders.com This isn't a complete and comprehensive list,

  • but are instead key factors and often unspoken truths that aren't recognized enough. This

  • comes not only from the Med School Insiders team's over 150 years experience on admissions

  • committees, but also from the scientific literature. No system is perfect, and medical school admissions

  • is no different. There are a variety of societal and larger systemic issues that medical schools

  • have great intentions of addressing, but unfortunately these efforts are often taken advantage of.

  • For example, many US medical schools, particularly public schools, want to serve the needs of

  • their local communities or states. Given the increased need in rural and urban underserved

  • areas, it makes sense for these medical schools to select individuals who are more likely

  • to graduate and practice in these areas with the greatest primary care physician need.

  • Some of these factors include growing up in a rural community, being a member of a group

  • underrepresented in medicine, or stating an interest in practicing in an underserved area.

  • As Evans et al discusses in their 2020 paper, most schools that are mission driven to target

  • students for rural, urban underserved, or primary care practice, primarily rely on stated

  • interest from students, with only about one quarter of schools including additional interview

  • screening. Only 5% of schools had different interview types or questions for these applicants.

  • It's not uncommon or surprising, then, that a large number of matriculating medical students

  • claim to be interested in primary care, rural medicine, or urban underserved medicine, yet

  • by graduation, only a small fraction have remained true to that commitment. After all,

  • if they believe it will improve their admissions chances, which the data shows it does at many

  • medical schools, then surely many stressed premeds will take advantage of this loophole,

  • even if it doesn't reflect their true long term interests.

  • You also see this happen with race, which is a difficult subject to even approach. Should

  • a student who is 1/4 underrepresented minority and 3/4 Caucasian have preferential treatment

  • in medical school admissions? What about if they were 1/2 or 1/8? Where does one draw

  • the line? How does the equation change if they grew up in an affluent neighborhood versus

  • an urban underserved community? If East and South Asians on average need higher GPA and

  • MCAT scores to gain admission, are they incentivized to downplay and underreport their Asian heritage?

  • Those funny photos of you doing a keg stand or using a beer bong for the first time may

  • be memories you and your friends cherish, but medical school admissions committees will

  • feel differently. As social media becomes even more ubiquitous

  • with each year, we see this becoming a growing problem. In some surveys, approximately one

  • third of admissions officers say they've visited an applicants' social media profile to learn

  • more about them. The majority of those who did ended up finding something that negatively

  • impacted the applicant's admissions chances, with "lewd images" and "unprofessional behavior"

  • as the two most common reasons. To mitigate this risk, you can change your

  • social media profile name to a pseudonym rather than your real name. You can also make your

  • profile private, but note that some of these images will still be viewable through Google

  • image search or other websites that archive photos. Even better, delete and remove any

  • suspect or concerning images from your social media profile as soon as someone tags you

  • or uploads it, or find friends who respect your desire to simply not post such things

  • online. There's a great deal of confusion about how

  • important your GPA and MCAT arethe two main objective measurements in your medical

  • school competitiveness. The first myth is that too high of a GPA or

  • MCAT is a bad thing, and indicates you must be socially awkward, not have interpersonal

  • skills, or otherwise have a lopsided application. This is nonsense. All things being equal,

  • stronger stats will result in a stronger application. The only way this would be detrimental is

  • if your pursuit of maximizing your MCAT or GPA resulted in compromising your attention

  • and energy to other factors in a well rounded application. And yes, sure, there are some

  • students who are very book smart yet painfully awkward, but them scoring higher on their

  • GPA and MCAT isn't used against them. It's simply their social skills and interview that's

  • holding them back. The second myth is a general misunderstanding

  • of how medical schools view these objective metrics. Every school will have a separate

  • process. Some schools have hard cutoffs, but more and more schools are moving toward a

  • more "holistic approach." Still, a low GPA or low MCAT will be used against you, as evidence

  • you are unlikely to be able to handle the rigors of a medical school curriculum.

  • But what about my friend with a 3.2 and a 503 who got into a top medical school? Here's

  • where the exceptions come into play. Schools may overlook or place greater importance on

  • other factors in certain circumstances. Yes, having family connections is a big one, and

  • no it's not fair. There are other situations too that may result in reconsideration, such

  • as being of an underrepresented minority, coming from a disadvantaged socioeconomic

  • background, or fitting into some other quota or mission that is important to the medical

  • school. The other major exception is when a student

  • presents with a highly compelling medical school application. Most applications are

  • boring and generic, more or less resembling the premed stereotype. They've checked the

  • boxes of doing X hours of clinical volunteering and Y hours of shadowing and Z hours of research.

  • They want to go to medical school because they want to help people and love science.

  • Yawn. When medical school admissions officers come

  • across rockstar applicants and look past a suboptimal GPA or MCAT, it isn't always because

  • the applicant is necessarily better than other applicants. It's actually often the case they've

  • crafted a better narrative to their applicationThe story that led the student to pursue

  • becoming a physician. Officers are moved by their experiences and exposure to the field

  • their trials and tribulations, struggles and obstacles, who they became in the process,

  • and the story that brought them to this moment, applying to medical school to become a physician.

  • When properly crafted, these narrative-focused applications cause the admissions officer

  • to root for your success. And at Med School Insiders, this is what we specialize inhelping

  • premeds craft the most effective narrative-based application to maximize their chances of a

  • medical school acceptance. Our Insiders are former admissions committee

  • members, combined with over 150 years of admissions committee experience. And with that comes

  • the expertise and understanding of nuance that makes the difference between getting

  • that sweet acceptance or facing the dreaded re-application the subsequent cycle. We understand

  • the importance of the MCAT, and our tutors can help you crush it. We understand how admissions

  • committees assess applicants, and our advisors can help finesse your personal statement,

  • application, secondary essays, interview, and any other part of the application process.

  • We've grown at an insane rate, with over 3,500 customers while maintaining an industry leading

  • 99% customer satisfaction rating. Learn more about why students and parents love us at

  • MedSchoolInsiders.com. Thank you all so much for watching! If you

  • enjoyed this video, check out my video about the 4 years of medical school explained, or

  • 6 common medical school application mistakes. Much love, and I'll see you guys there.

You've got to love the internet for providing vast reserves of useful information. But that

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