The Complete Guide to Being Premed at Monmouth College
Contact Information
Matthew Simonson
Biochemistry Major
Monmouth College 22'
Phone: (309)371-5673
Email: msimonson@monmouthcollege.edu
Introduction
This serves as a rough guide for anyone looking for more information on the long process of working towards applying to medical school. In the various sections below are links to my strategies and activities that I feel made me competitive for matriculation into medical school in no specific order. Hopefully this guide serves as an asset to help you navigate the premed process and make connections at Monmouth College.
Basic Overview
Getting into medical school is very competitive. Most people take a gap year or two, but it is possible to matriculate right after college. Regardless, you will need a wide variety of interests to show admissions you are well rounded, some of which should be clinically related and relevant in order to provide support for your interest in medicine. These experiences should be longitudinal and of high quality so that you will be able to write insightfully about them. Of course this is secondary to being academically proficient as indicated by GPA and MCAT score. It is also important to remember that you will need exceptional letters of recommendation. Keep this in mind as you develop relationships with potential letter writers.
My Experience
The Foundation
This information is ultimately going to play into where you should apply. Grades and test scores are the foundation of your application. If they were a part of a cake, then these "stats" would be considered the bread portion of the cake. Below are the classes I took as an undergraduate and which ones are prerequisites for most medical schools as well as my strategy towards tackling the MCAT.
I highlighted all of the classes I took as an undergraduate and differentiated which ones served as my Biochemistry major requirements and Liberal Arts education requirements and which ones satisfied prerequisites for medical school.
The sole purpose of the MCAT is to show you have critical thinking capabilities that extend upon being a good student (evident by a high GPA). The MCAT also serves as a reliable way to compare students who attended different institutions by using their standardized test scores. Hopefully looking at my strategy will help you personalize and organize how to prepare for such a stressful test.
Why you and not somebody else
AMCAS Work and Activities Section
Most medical schools are pretty chill, and try to keep the interviews light hearted. For some schools, the interview is a formality while others use it as a way to further differentiate candidates. For instance, University of Illinois accepts a large percentage of students who interview (600/750) while New York University accepts a much lower percentage (200/1100). The interview is ultimately your final chance to address the elephant in the room ... Why you and not this other similar applicant (what makes you a good fit for us?) Regardless, different schools conduct interviews in different ways. Below you will get a good idea of the traditional interview process as well as the MMI process.
Results
Below are my results after the four year marathon of preparing for and applying for medical school. This is when the cake gets eaten . . . hopefully it tastes alright.