Interview Day – What should I ask?
By: Kaplan - posted Oct 28th 2009 at 1:21 PMBy Carleen Eaton, M.D.
The interview day tour is exciting. Walking the halls of the medical school, you really start envisioning yourself as a med student, short white coat swishing behind you (okay, so the short coats don’t “swish” the way the long ones the doctors wear do, but it’s a start.) The med student tour guide points out the anatomy lab, the library, and of course, the hospital cafeteria, encouraging the group to ask questions all the while. You figure you should ask a question and are about to go for it – when another applicant pipes up and “takes” the single good question you had ready to go.
The problem is, you spent all of your time preparing to answer questions and didn’t think about what to ask. After all, you just want to get in somewhere and aren’t too worried about the details as long as you get an acceptance letter.
However, there is something you might have overlooked:
You may get multiple acceptances.
This thought may seem truly amazing right now, since one acceptance seems nearly impossible. The admissions process breeds insecurity: thousands of applicants, much waiting and many rumors. However, if you are a strong applicant and applied to a wide range of schools, you could have some have some serious decisions to make and you are going to need the information you have gathered on interview day in order to make the best choice. Unless you fly around the country for a second look at the programs, interview day may be the only time you visit the schools. This means that you need to think seriously about what it would be like to spend four years at a school. Which one is going to the best place for you professionally and personally?
To figure this out, here are a few questions to ask yourself, the med students, your interviewer or the admissions office:
Do the medical students seem happy?
Is there a sense of camaraderie, or one of competition, among students?
Are med students assigned an advisor or mentor?
Is there a convenient, safe area nearby where students live?
Are the clinical sites busy enough that students can get plenty of hands-on experience?
How are students evaluated during the clinical years?
What kinds of support services are available to students?
Does the school emphasize primary care? Research? Particular specialties?
What settings are available for clinical rotations? Private hospitals, county hospitals, VA facilities?
And anything else that would impact your decision about where to go.
Besides giving you valuable information that will need in the near future, having these questions in mind will give you something else to think about besides “Will I get accepted?” as you stroll through the halls of the school. And one last thing - checking out the med schools can be pretty fun ( yes, I know “fun” and “applying to med school” don’t sound like they go together) so try enjoy yourself at least a bit!