best way to present
themselves to the interviewer.
When it is over, the inter-
viewer usually writes a report
which the admissions com-
mittee considers along with
the application.
Sending thank you notes to
interviewers is common.
After completing over three
years of premedical work, the
primary application, the sec-
ondary application and the
interviews, the exhausted
premed now has only to wait
for word from the medical
schools. Eventually, after
many weeks of running to the
mailbox, a letter will come.
The schools accept, wait list
or reject the applicant. Since
wait listing means different
things at different schools,
the wait-listed applicant
should let the school know if
he is interested.
If the applicant has been ac-
cepted at more than one
school he must decide where
to go. Aside from the mate-
rials sent by the school and
interview impressions, the ac-
cepted applicant has several
options: revisiting schools,
talking with professors and
premedical advisers about the
strengths and weaknesses of
the schools, and/or speaking
with students enrolled at the
schools. In the end, it is a per-
sonal decision which may in-
volve weighing many factors
or just going with a gut feel-
ing.
❑
Sheri Fink, a West Bloomfield
resident, will be entering the
combined M.D.-Ph.D. program
at Stanford University
Medical School this fall.
7
The Right
Questions
Frequently Asked
Interview Questions
What was your major? How
did you choose it? What
science courses have you had?
What did you do with your
summers?
What were your extracur-
ricular activities in college?
What do you think is the
biggest problem facing med-
icine? How would you solve it?
Where else did you apply?
Did you do any research?
Name two people, living or
dead, with whom you would
most like to meet and have
dinner.
You have one organ and
three people who need it;
whom do you choose?
How do you plan to finance
your medical education?
Psychologically, all Jewish
poetry is a translation from
the Hebrew.
—Philip Max Raskin
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