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What to Expect from Medical School Interviews

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Lauren DiProspero

Written by Lauren DiProsperoon August 25th, 2020

Lauren DiProspero has worked in both undergraduate and medical school admissions offices throughout her admissions career. She became interested in college admissions during high school when she used the Fiske Guide to help her friends identify colleges that were a good fit for them. Her professional admissions career began at Stanford University on the Diversity Outreach team, assisting the admissions officers in coordinating diversity events and outreach. From there she earned her MA from Columbia University’s Teachers College and began reading applications for Columbia’s undergraduate admissions office. She then joined Columbia’s College of Physicians and Surgeons as Director of Admissions, overseeing the entire admissions process, including recruiting, application review, interview days, and admitted student recruitment and events. After relocating to the West coast, she became the Director of Enrollment Management at the University of San Francisco, also recruiting and reviewing applications for the undergraduate admissions team. Most recently Lauren was Senior Director at Stanford Medicine, where she oversaw the entire admissions process. Lauren majored in political science at Bryn Mawr College.

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Congratulations! You have been invited to interview at a medical school. Making it to this point is a big deal. No applicant is admitted to medical school without an interview and most applicants do not receive an invitation to interview. Each medical school decides their interview structure. This means that your interviews will not necessarily be consistent across the medical schools at which you interview. The medical school will inform you of what to expect in advance of your interview day. This year many medical schools are making the switch to virtual interviewing. There are four types of interviews that you may experience: Multiple Mini Interview (MMI), group, panel, and a traditional on-on-one. Multiple Mini Interview (MMI) The MMI is an interview format used by some Canadian and American medical schools. It entails a series of short interviews designed to measure competencies like oral communication, social and non-verbal skills, and teamwork. It is also designed to understand your cultural sensitivity, maturity, empathy, and reliability. Schools that use the MMI believe, based on research, that it can reduce interviewer bias and will allow applicants to showcase their skills throughout the interview. They also point to studies that have shown how an applicant’s score on the MMI is predictive of performance later in medical school. By design, it is a hard interview to prepare for since it does not test specific knowledge and is an unusual format. The best way to prepare is to practice expressing yourself in a timed environment. Group Interviews Group interviews will often have three or more applicants in a group with one or more admission committee members conducting the interview. The purpose of a group interview is to see how the applicants conduct themselves with peers and to test their ability to handle a higher level of stress. Group interviews will often ask only a few questions overall, but applicants may build on another applicant’s response or lead a discussion. Panel Interviews Panel interviews can include a few admission committee members from the medical school and may also include a third- or fourth-year student. Panel interviews give applicants individual attention from the panel and an opportunity to demonstrate their readiness to handle an atmosphere that is more demanding than the typical one-on-one interview. One-On-One Interviews The one-on-one interview is what it sounds like: You will be interviewed by one person at a time. You may just have one interview or a series of interviews throughout the day. This can feel less stressful than the other types of interviews. No matter which interview format you experience, do not forget to send a thank you note! For the MMI, you can simply send your thank you note to the Dean of Admissions and it will make its way into your admissions file.
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