Junior
The junior year may be the toughest for a premed student who plans to
apply in the summer. If this is the case, have all the materials
required by the Pre-Professional office ready by March of that year.
This is so that you can get an interview with one of the committee members
and have the committee letter written by the end of the spring semester.
If you are planning on taking the MCAT in April, find out the deadline
for registering and obtain an MCAT package either from the Pre-Professional
office or the Premed Club. You will have to send a passport picture
of yourself with your application, and you can have those taken in Genovese
at 68 St. and 2nd Ave. for $5.
Studying for the MCAT is a time consuming task. Many students
prefer to enroll in one of the courses offered in the area (some of them,
such as the Princeton Review and Dr. Blank Review take place at Hunter
College) while others, who don't happen to have an extra $1,000 study by
themselves. Either way, you should allocate a substantial number of hours
a day for a couple of months for studying. This is not an easy task
for students who have to support themselves as do many of us in the public
school system, so plan on a light spring semester.
After having taken the MCAT you should start working on your AMCAS application.
The AMCAS application can be sent in 2 formats: electronic and paper.
The electronic application (AMCAS-E) can be downloaded from the AAMC website,
while the paper version can be obtained from the Pre-Professional Office.
The electronic version is much more convenient to fill out and is recommended.
June 1st is the date you can start send you application to AMCAS for
processing, so you should complete your application by that date. The most
time-consuming part of that application is the personal statement.
Treat it very seriousely. Finding a friend who can read it and give you
feedback may be beneficial. In particular have a person who speaks English
as a first language read your paper and correct gramatical errors and spelling
mistakes. The application itself should be free of spelling mistakes
and errors. Review it carefully before sending. You might want to wait
for your MCAT results to come back (around mid June for the April MCAT)
but don't delay your application for too long, since medical schools consider
applicants on a first-comes-first-served basis.
Deciding which schools you wish to apply to is a a time consuming task
as well. Once you have your MCAT scores you can go over the school listings
in the Medical School Admissions Requirement (MSAR). The MSAR is
a book which is published by the AAMC and which contains the listings of
all the medical schools in the US and Canada. The statistical information
of the applicants to each school is available in the book, and you'll be
able to estimate to which schools your chances of acceptance are higher.
The Average applicant applies to about 15 schools, but I've heared of a
person applying to as many as 89 schools at a time. The processing fee
increases as you apply to more schools and you'll probably take this into
account as well.
In addition, contact the non AMCAS medical schools if you wish to apply
to such schools, and request their application. These schools include NYU
School of Medicine and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
in New York as well as foreign medical schools.
After sending your application you should provide the Pre-Professional
Office with stamped envelopes labled with the addresses of the medical
schools you applied to. These envelopes will be used to send the
committee letter to the various schools as part of your secondary application.
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