Why this is "Professional" School
- This is the first phase of your medical career. Thinking ahead, your letters of support for residency will be based on your overall performance in medical school.
- You will begin seeing patients FAST. They will look to you as a medical professional.
- Issues of ethics, morals, cultural competency, etc. will be discussed often. You need to handle the discussions with depth and maturity.
- We do not know you well—we look to your applications for signs of professional behavior.
Exhibiting Professional Behavior in the Application Process
Pre-Application
Working with the Health Professions Office
- Be respectful, courteous, and on time. Failure to show for appointments reflects very poorly.
- Be responsive to feedback.
Be Thoughtful in the Application Process
Don’t rely on rankings alone.
- Think about your values—what do YOU need in a medical school?
- Research Schools
- This is an Evidence-Based Process…saying you “know you can” do something isn’t the same as already having proven it.
AMCAS and ESSAYS
Don’t rely on rankings alone.
- Never leave someone guessing about your health, your sanity, or your commitment to medicine.
- Send secondaries back quickly.
- Proofread—not just spell-check. Check your grammar, context, etc. no excuses for errors.
- Have someone who does not know you read your essays.
- Use professional language at all times.
Application Process
Make Commitments and Fulfill Them
- One month here and there doesn’t work.
- Don’t stuff your application with future activities pre-interview.
- Never over-exaggerate.
- Do not abandon post-graduate programs after one year.
Deadlines
- Apply early
- Anticipate that which you can’t control.
- Keep track of application on status pages.
- Do not assume that the timing of your application is inconsequential if a school is not rolling admissions.
- No excuses
Email Correspondence
- Never start with “hey”—this is a professional communication and it will be entered into your file.
- Use Titles, not first names—when in doubt use “Dean” or “Dr.”
- Although email can be casual among friends, we are not your friends. Use proper punctuation, complete sentences, and capitalize importantly. And use the right medical school name!
- Add your AMCAS ID number to EVERYTHING you send to a school.
- Have a professional email address (and voicemail message, too!) and clear junk filters.
Accept Responsibility
- Don’t whine. Ever. Not about grades, not about advice you have received, and not about why you were not able to do what was asked of you.
- We have over 7800 applicants. Some schools have more.
- No one is perfect. There will be times that each of us messes something up. We need to say we were wrong, apologize, and set it right.
- Stay in touch with any changes to your contact information.
Scheduling/Canceling Interviews
- Respond to interview invitations ASAP.
- Ask EARLY if you need to coordinate visits, but recognize this is not always possible.
- If you need to cancel due to health, weather, emergency, let us know ASAP. Take both our phone numbers and our email addresses with you to the airport/train/etc.
Interview Behavior
- Do a mock interview at your school if at all possible.
- Plan Ahead—check where the school is in relation to the airport, train station, etc. Plan flights early.
- Read EVERYTHING we send you—we tell you everything you need to know!
- Purchase or borrow appropriate attire.
- Be polite to everyone, starting at the airport.
- Be prompt, and introduce yourself.
- Be sensitive to body language as well as actual words.
- Be flexible and go with the flow.
- Write a thank you, but SAY something in it.
Withdrawing
- Communicate ASAP.
- Do not simply no-show for an interview.
- Think about your friends who are still waiting for interviews/offers.
Social Media/Studentdoctor.net
- Do not have anything in a public place that you would not want us to see.
Post-Admissions Decision
Revisit/Second Look Weekends
- You do not HAVE to attend.
- You are still “on”—all interviewing rules apply.
Financial Aid Decisions
Revisit/Second Look Weekends
- Be responsible and prompt.
- We know it is confusing—ask questions.
- Understand how to manage competing offers.
AAMC Traffic Rules
- Know them, follow them: AAMC Traffic Rules webpage
Written by Joni Huff , Director of Admissions at University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine. Used by permission.