What to do if you don’t get accepted into medical school
The first thing that you need to do is pull out a copy of your current application and take a long and objective look at it. Was your personal statement well-written and an accurate reflection of your goals in medicine? Did you illustrate strong extracurricular activities that showed your interest in your fellow humans? Was your undergraduate GPA competitive within the context of the schools that you applied to? Were your scores on the Medical College Admissions Test competitive within the context of the schools that you applied to?
What can you do about improving your application?
If you contemplate reapplying for next year, the first thing that you have to do is upgrade any and all things that were a liability for you in the current year. This might mean taking a course or re-taking the MCAT and making sure that your score is significantly higher. This means reworking your entire application including revamping your personal statement. If your application didn’t work for this year, it’s not likely that it is going to work for you next year. The major reason that people do not get into medical school is overestimation of their competitiveness within the context of the pool of applicants to the schools that they applied to.
The applicant pool
Every year since I have been working with medical school admissions, two things have been generally true. The undergraduate GPAs/MCAT scores of the applicant pool have been increasing and the number of application to my two schools have been increasing. We attribute the increase in the number of applicants to the generally poor economy and we attribute the increase in academic scores to both grade inflation (at some colleges ) and an increasing number of folks who use test prep companies for the MCAT. We are well versed in the undergraduate schools that practice grade inflation and we look very carefully at the patterns in the MCAT scores. Larger applicant pool and higher uGPA/MCAT scores mean that we are using much of the entire application to make our decisions as to whom we will invite for interview.
The URM myth
Both of my medical schools have about 1% URM representation in any given class. It is entirely a myth that being an Underrepresented Minority in Medicine is an automatic entry into medical school no matter what is on your application. We just don’t “hand out” seats in our freshman medical class for having a certain ethnicity. One of the prime forces for us is making sure that every student who is admitted will successfully get through four years of a very tough curriculum. The material to be mastered knows no color or ethnicity. In the past, with our admissions formula, we have been pretty fortunate in that our graduation rate in four or five years is greater than 99%. In general, those people who graduate in five rather than four years have some extenuating circumstances that have prevented them for continuing with their class not because they were not well-qualified in the first place.
Feelings that you are somehow inferior
This turns out to be a huge factor in whether or not a re-applicant will be successful on the second try. There are far more applicants than seats in medical school period. If you don’t get in, it is generally because you were not a good “fit” for the year in which you applied or you made some poor decisions in terms of the schools that you applied to again you were not a good “fit”. You can reassess you situation, change the things on your application that you can change and reapply stronger. There is very little difference in a student who is accepted and a student who is not accepted in any given year. You would be quite surprised to learn how close many “rejected” students actually came to an acceptance. Those folks who are wait-listed were definite acceptances but were a bit further down the list in terms of being offered a seat. They are definitly “alternates” but we just felt more strongly about the people who were offered admission.
Graduate school
In general, if you are NOT interested in graduate school, don’t undertake a graduate degree to enhance your application. If you have developed a passionate interest in Public Health or Business and you can complete your degree in one year or so, then obtain an MPH or an MBA but don’t look to these degrees to make you more competitive for medical school if your uGPA/MCAT was low.
If you elect to enter a Special Masters such as the Special Masters in Physiology (offered at many colleges/university), you can definitely enhance your chances of admission if you perform well in this type of a program. In addition, you will have some graduate training that can be used if you don’t enter medical school. These Special Masters generally have you taking the same coursework as medical students and can show that you are capable of handling a tough medical school curriculum. These programs are ideal for candidates who are just a bit below average (3.2-3.5) uGPA range or those who had a great deal of difficulty with the MCAT but higher uGPAs.
Retaking the MCAT
If you scored below that magic “30″ or had a severly lopsided score say 13 in PS, 12 in BS and a 5 in VR, then retaking that exam with solid preparation and remediation in your lower scoring areas might be a good idea. One of the things to consider is that you must shore up your deficiencs and be sure that you have done something major before you re-take this exam. Nothing can tank your application faster than several mediocre MCAT scores. While some schools will take your higher scores at each re-take and use a composite, most schools (includng mine) do NOT do this. If you retake, make sure that you are going to score higher period. Also remember that most people do not accomplish a higher score so you definitely need to do something different in terms of prep in order not to wind up with a lower score.
Timing
It is definitely true that the earlier you apply, the better your chances. Meet and exceed every deadline and in the case of reapplication, be early period. You can’t procrastinate on this one. As soon as you have decided to reapply, start getting your materials together for an early submission of your application. Most of the time, the difference between waitlist and acceptance is the timing of the application. Resolve that you are going to be proactive about getting your application done and that you are going to upgrade everything that you can upgrade within the time frame that you have between application cycles (this is not an infinite amount of time)
Reapplication time is also a good time to explore other career opportunities outside medicine especially if you are well below the averages for accepted students. One has to be realistic about their chances of acceptance if you are sitting on a uGPA of 2.9 or an MCAT score of less than 28. Sure some students in the past have gotten into some schools with those scores but most applicants with these numbers are automatically “screened out” of may medical schools. The other thing is that everyone is NOT going to become a physician no matter how great the desire. There are just too many applicants for seats.
Also do not make the mistake of thinking that you will become a Physician Assistant or enter Nursing as a substitute for medicine. While these are great careers, they are not the “same” as medicine. These careers can be extremely rewarding and satisfying but enter these careers because you have decided that they are a good “fit” for you and that you will enjoy them. Getting into Physician Assistant school is quite competitive and not a stepping stone into medicine. It is far likely that if you were not competitive for medical school, you are not going to be competitive for PA school.
Above all, if medicine is your dream, you will do whatever it takes to accomplish it but you need to be sure that you are upgrading your application with each reapp and that you are being realistic in terms of you competitiveness. Just reapplying does not increase your chances of acceptance in itself. Most people who reapply do something significant to upgrade their application. Make sure that if you elect to reapply, you do the upgrade.
18 Comments »
Leave a comment
-
Archives
- July 2009 (1)
- May 2009 (1)
- April 2009 (2)
- March 2009 (1)
- December 2008 (1)
- November 2008 (2)
- October 2008 (1)
- July 2008 (2)
- May 2008 (2)
- March 2008 (2)
- February 2008 (1)
- January 2008 (3)
-
Categories
- academics
- age
- aneurysm
- application
- autopsy
- biochemistry
- caffeine
- cholecystectomy
- choosing a medical school
- colorectal surgery
- computers
- difficulty in medical school
- emergency
- failure
- failure to get into medical school
- first-year
- general surgery residency
- graduation
- Gross anatomy
- Histology
- hypothermia
- intern
- Match Day
- MCAT
- MCAT preparation
- medical boards
- medical school
- medical school admission
- medical school admissions
- medical school coursework
- medical school interview
- Medical school interview travel.
- medical school preparation
- medical school reapplication
- medical specialty selection
- medical student.
- medicine
- Microanatomy
- on-call
- organic chemistry
- organization
- orientation to medical school
- osteopathic medical school
- Pathology
- Pediatric respiratory therapy
- pediatric surgery
- Physician Shadowing
- physiology
- pre-matriculation programs
- pre-med courses
- protein folding
- relaxation
- residency
- Short-Media
- snow
- stress reduction
- study skills
- success in medical school
- summer school
- Sumo-Omni
- surgery
- surgery clerkship
- teaching
- trauma
- Uncategorized
- uninsured
- USMLE
- USMLE Step 1
- vascular surgery
- Women's studies
- Young women in science
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
Hello. I interviewed at Drexel in late January and was told to wait for the decision for 6-8 weeks. However, it has now been longer than that. When I called the admissions office I was told that the decision has not been made yet and I have to wait at least two more weeks. I am scheduled to leave the country at the end of the month and won’t be able to return until late July. Is there anything that can be done to speed up this process? I hate being too pushy and this is my top choice school but I am split between my departure, resignation from my job, and this decision.
To Roman:
There isn’t much you can do to “speed up” the process. You can be sure that someone at home checks your mail (e-mail and snail mail) and can contact you at any time. I promise you that every medical school applicant in the country wants their decision “speeded up”. In this process, it just doesn’t happen.
Thank you for your suggestion. A friend of mine who is a second year there told me to email their admission chair and explain her the situation. He said that she is a very straight forward woman. Should I go for it? Ultimately, if I let it go and don’t do anything then waiting is my primary option by default. Appreciate your response.
Hi. I’ve applied to a number of MD schools, and am now in the process of applying to DO schools. I’m worried that I won’t be getting in anywhere, and I’m more nervous because I have already graduated from college and am basically not doing anything academically right now. Do you have any suggestions for what to do during my down time so as to boost my application? Also, is it safe to assume that if I haven’t heard from any MD schools at this point, I am not going to get in?
To Ana:
The interview cycle is far from over for this year. Most schools are interviewing though March and some into April. With that being said, it does not hurt to work on a “Plan B” which, is what you will do if you are not accepted into medical school this year. Unless you have an acceptance in hand, it makes sense to work on an alternative plan.
Do you anticipate applying next year? If so, then you need to take an objective look at your application, figure out what you can upgrade and get that upgrading done. Do you need postbacc coursework because your undergraduate GPA was low? Do you need a retake on the Medical College Admissions Test? Do you need more volunteer/shadowing experience? Does your personal statement need a complete overhaul (you need to do this anyway for reapplication)? In short, be objective and be through in your review of your application and get the work done.
If you need employment, you need to look at what you are qualified to do and get some resumes out there. The summer research positions are interviewing now and you may be able to parlay a summer position into a bit more. The earlier you jump on these positions, the better. Places to look would be NIH, universities with research labs and private research labs in places like pharmaceutical companies or organizations like the American Red Cross. In short, if this is the route that you need to go, then get moving.
Only you know where you stand in terms of your competitiveness. You know what the averages are for matriculants (3.7/31) and you know where you stand versus those averages. You also have to be aware of where you stand in terms of the pool of applicants to the schools that you chose. Plenty of students who would have opted for other careers such as business and finance are flocking to apply to medical school because they look to medicine as a sure means of money (not a sound choice but a fact).
Does this mean that you give up hope? No, but it means that you keep on doing things that make you more competitive for medical school and prepare for the event that you don’t get into medical school on the first try. There is nothing wrong with having an elaborate and complete alternative plan that you don’t have to use.
You need to take MCAT again and over 30.atleast 35.
Hello UVAMedicine,
I have heard that medical schools look at GPA first, then MCAT, then the application. I was told this at an MCAT prep course. Is it true?
I have not heard from any of the schools I have applied too. I submitted my application (TMDSAS) in the early summer, but my references, done by my University Review Committee, sent in my packet 3 days before the deadline! I have a 3.97 GPA and an MCAT of 25.
I am continuing to wait for a call, letter, or email, but I am beginning to realize my chances are slimming. I have started the process of revamping my application. I am joining different committees withing my church, and researching doctors within my area that I can shadow. I will have trouble studying for the MCAT, because my last collegiate semester will be very busy.
When do medical schools stop contacting people for interviews? Do medical schools prefer payed or volunteer medical experience?
Any guidance is appreciated
-Jonathan
To Jon:
When reviewing applications, it isn’t a first, second, third… We review the entire application. I can tell you that your MCAT score(if that 25 is accurate) is going to present a problem. If I were reviewing your application, my first take would be tremendous grade inflation coupled with some test-taking problems. My advice to you would be to get some retired MCAT exams and do some serious “damage control” with plans to retake once you are sure that you know you can
significantly
raise that score. Your GPA is not going to offset that MCAT score but likely will make it more forbidding. If you can manage to retake and score significantly higher (better than 31), you could say that your first MCAT was due to illness, nerves, a fluke etc.
I would strongly advise you to retake but do significant preparation and practice before you retake. With your uGPA, that MCAT is going to hold you back significantly. You likely don’t need any more volunteering (unless you have none) but you NEED a retake. In terms of this cycle, we are more than 1/2 way through and many schools have filled most of their interview slots. The slots that are opening up are largely due to cancellations etc. At this point, you may want to look at reapplication with a higher MCAT score. After you have solved your MCAT problem, you can look at upgrading anything else that you can upgrade but you looking at volunteer work at this point is like trying to stop a major hemorrhage with a band-aid.
I have a GPA of about 3.5 now through university of Phoenix online. I have been a musician traveling the world for the past 5 years and am stopping to transfer to a University to get my pre-meds. I have already started volunteering for an orthopedic surgeon once a week. It is a great learning experience. What are the main things I need to do in order to be competative so I can be accepted?
Hello,
I am currently in the process of applying to medical school. I graduated from Brown with a relatively low gpa (3.31u, 3.45 sciences), and a solid MCAT (37Q). I felt that my extracurriculars were strong, as I was a four year varsity baseball player, and I completed a neuroscience research-based thesis. My secondaries were completed on time, but most were submitted in November. I applied to a wide range of schools, but have only heard back from one. I am currently a biology teacher and coach at a New England boarding school, and I need to decide within the next two weeks whether or not I am returning next year to teach for a second year. I was hoping to be accepted into a school by now, but now I am unsure if that will even happen.
With my credentials, is it likely that I will not be admitted to any schools during this application cycle? And if I were to reapply, would it be safe to say that raising my GPA with post bacc work would make me a much more attractive candidate?
Any help would be much appreciated.
Thanks so much, Peter
To Peter:
Your uGPA is low by today’s standards even though your MCAT is high. Take some post-bacc courses (as many as you can afford both time-wise and money-wise) and get that uGPA as high as you can before reapplication. Your MCAT will be good for another year or two so get busy ifyou don’t get in this cycle. If you find that you need to reapply (and the year’s not done yet), be sure that you apply to all of your state schools, some schools with a national reputation but lower uGPA averages and a couple of dream schools. Stay positive even though it’s getting later in the cycle. There are no crystal balls in this process and it’s not over until it’s over. Good luck!
GPA need to as close to 4.0.
Hello,
I am currently a Junior and I’m in the process of applying for medical school (application for class of 2011). I would like to know if my extracurricular activities are good, enough, or still need some progress.
- I’ve done about 80 hrs of volunteering at a hospital, approx. 30 hrs of shadowing, some more hours of community service and I was a peer leader (T.A) for one semester. Plus, I’m planning to apply for a research program this following summer 2010.-
I have an overall GPA of 3.74 and a science GPA of 3.7.
I’m giving myself 3 months (january-March) to prepare for the MCAT. I decided to take only 8 credit hours and pay for the princeton review course during that time (january-march).
From my information above. What else would you recommend me to do to be a good candidate for medical school? I would really appreciate your help. I feel stressed and confused if my plan for the MCAT is a sufficient preparation.
Regards,
Walter
To Walter:
You have plenty of ECs and shadowing. Your reseach should enhance your application too. A strong MCAT score will help you in addition to your uGPA. Taking time to prepare thoroughly for this exam is a sound plan. Take your course, set yourself a good study schedule and stick with it. Cross things off a list as you get them done so that you can see some real progress. Solid prep will help with the stress as will keeping up with a good physical activity schedule too (20-30 minutes of brisk activity per day).
Your prep plan is fine if you complete it and stick to a good and disciplined schedule. Keep on track and apply to a good cross section of schools (your state schools and some private schools). There are no “slam dunks” in this process but your performance is on track at present. You just want a strong MCAT (more than 31) and a well-written application with good LORs and personal statement. Good luck!
Hi,
I am currently a junior at UC Davis. My current gpa is relatively very low ~ 2.68. That’s the issue I am having right now but I am trying my best to raise it up above 3.0 by the time i graduate. I feel that even though I manage to get it up, it’s not going to be as competitive as other applicants. After my freshman year of college, I manage to get a 3.7 but my sophomore year screwed me up. I was involve in a variety of problems such as friendship issue, family issue and a health problem. I was involved in a sport and injured my knee terrible. I continued to re-injured my knee and never had it fixed because my family thought it was nothing until I felt something extremely wrong. During those times, I have seen a doctor and told my parents what the doctor said but they didn’t want me to have a surgery so I postponed it until the end of the year when I think something went extremely wrong.
I haven’t taken my MCAt yet but I am planning to used my junior year to study for mcat along with taking kaplain courses and then take my Mcat by my senior year.
As for extraciricular activites, Over the summer of my first two years I volunteered about 90 hours which includes shadowing a physician as well. I was able to see what the physician do and was responsible of preparing the materials for the procedure. It was a great experience for me.
Along with that, I have been highly active in Badminton (where my injury came from). I love playing this sport alot. I also join Pre-med Amsa (a club for pre-medical students). In order to stay active in that club, each member have to satisfy 1 general meeting, 1 community service event and 1 workshop or another general meeting.
Also, I worked in the entomology department as a lab assistant. Although it wasn’t related to my field as a pre-medical student, I worked there to get some extra cash and also to gain laboratory experience. I worked there for an entire year doing things like sorting, pinning, labeling the species.
I was planning to do a research in the near future but seeing that my GPA is relatively low, I decided to spend at least a quarter just taking classes and try to raise my gpa up then by summer of my junior year, I am going to talk to the advisor about finding a research area.
I know exactly what I want to be now that I did a few more research. It was hard for me to chose a specific area like cardiovascular, neurology, sports medicine and etc. I am interested in all fields of the medical department so I decided that Internal Medicine works best for me because Internal medicine also referred to as internist deals with the internal organs of the entire body.
Since my gpa is so low, I was thinking if I don’t get into medical school the first try, I am going to go to my alternate route which is going to a 1 year public health school with an emphasis in Epidemiology because epidemiology deals with a variety of illness and disease such as cardiovascular, cancer, stroke and some of these disease are the top ranking cause of death among the world’s population. I want to be able to study these diseases and learn how to prevent them so our death rates will be lowered.
Do you have any suggestions on my plan? If my gpa is really a problem what do u think I should do? Would it still be a problem if I am able to raise it up from a 2.68 to over a 3.0 like a 3.25? I think that’s the highest I can raise it up considering that I only have about 2 years left of college to go before I start applying to medical school. What Mcat score do I need?
Thank you.
Duyen
To Duyen:
Yes, that uGPA is going to be a huge hurdle for you. My suggestion would be to take the MCAT, do your best and apply to Special Masters Programs for credentials enhancement if you want to have a shot at allopathic medical school. While these programs are quite expensive, they do offer you a chance to show that you can perform at a high level in a rigorous medical school curriculum. The downside is that you have to do extremely well in one of these programs or you will wind up killing your chances of acceptance.
There is no MCAT score that is going to offset that low uGPA. At this point, your low uGPA with you and won’t rise by much because you have too many hours to overcome. This is why getting into an SMP (best case is one with automatic linkage if your perform well), is a good shot for you. An SMP would give you a chance to show that you have overcome your previous academic difficulties and show that you would be a top medical student in spite of your academic difficulties. Just be prepared to devote every fibre of your life to high achievement in this type of program. You have to be on top, “full-court press” and “take no prisoner” in terms of every minute of this program to achieve success.
Public health is not going to make you more attractive for medical school. If you want to spend the rest of your career in public health, then go in that direction but don’t enter an MPH program with the idea that it’s going make much of a difference in you getting accepted into medical school. It’s a great alternative career but it’s not an entry into medical school under the best of circumstances.
Your other option is to look into osteopathic medical schools because they allow retakes to be substituted for the original grades. This means that by retaking your coursework, under the osteopathic medical system, you can wipe out your previous low grades. If you want to become a physician, this is another viable option for you. Unlike osteopathic schools, retakes are averaged for allopathic schools which are likely going to be out of your reach with a uGPA below 3.5 (and a battle at 3.5). good luck and look into some options.
Thanks Uvamedicine,
What is the difference between osteopathic schools and allopathic schools? I decided to go to Public health not only will it enhance my chance of getting into medical school but also because it has something to do with my future career as an internal medicine. I highly believe if I study epidemiology, I will learn a lot more and it will help me towards that path.
Is there anything else I can do like extra cirricular activities and such? I know my low gpa will be a hurdle for me and since time is limited there’s no way I can raise it up to 3.5 and higher.
Because of this low gpa, it’s holding me back to do things that I extremely like and wanting to join a research program because most research programs requires a gpa of 3.0 and higher.
At this rate, all i can do now is try my best to perform at the top to raise my gpa up as high as I can (at least over 3.0) to get accepted into the special masters program. Then re-apply the next year.
Hi Uvamedicine,
I have researched about osteopathic and allopathic schools but I don’t understand what’s the difference between getting a D.O. degree and an MD degree. Both of these school’s training are pretty much the same except the difference in their degree.
At first I thought you said SMP is public health but then I realized I was wrong. I looked up some SMP schools listed at my school’s website but I was wondering when can we apply to it? I know my grades won’t make it to medical school my first year so I was thinking of applying to SMP instead. Can I apply as early as my junior year? That way I can start right after I get my degree?
Do you suggest I should apply to medical school anyways even though I think my chance of getting in is very slim?
Duyen