West Virginia University Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center School of Pharmacy Interview Feedback Summary
Morgantown, WV
Pharmacy Schools | Public Non-Profit
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Outstanding interview experience: exceptionally organized, highly professional staff, strong communication, and very low stress.
What was the stress level of the interview?
How do you rank this school among ALL other schools?
How did the interview impress you?
How you think you did?
What are your general comments?
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For the most part, the experience was great. Although, I had a hard time finding the pharmacy school until someone told me that it was where the emergency center is. Once I found it, the building is old but this is where other health professions have their classes. I talked to Dean Ridgway who was extremely nice and gave me the low down on the interview process and how the acceptance process is done. I also talked to a first and third year student and they were telling me about the school. I also toured their labs and their "mock" pharmacy which was extremely cool. All in all, I was very impressed with what they had to offer.
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Kind of laid back, kind of formal. The best advice is to dress nice, speak eloquently, use good manners and have a deep understanding of all things dealing with the profession of pharmacy.
Length, number, and type of interviews
WVU-PHARM-COMP interviews are an average of 38 minutes, with an average of 2.3 interviews. 100% of interviews are one-on-one, and 50% are closed-file.
What is one of the specific questions they asked you?
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What is one of your weaknesses?
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What careers have you considered other than pharmacy, and how did those choices lead to you choosing pharmacy as a profession?
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Why do you want to be a pharmacist? --> obvious
What was the most interesting question?
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Outside the field of pharmacy, what do you think is a major problem in society?
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What is the best thing you cook, and how did you learn to make it? (Essay question)
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What is your favorite book? (Essay Question)
How did you prepare for the interview?
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Got the list of questions they ask for the interview.
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Reviewed faculty information; reviewed list of possible topics on school's website.
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Nothing unusual.
What was the most difficult question?
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Do you think that your grades are necessarily a reflection of how you might do in pharmacy school?
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Imagine there is an extremely good class coming in, with academic scores higher than or around yours. Seventy-nine out of eighty have been selected for your class. You and five other people are given the opportunity for a second interview. Why would you make a better candidate than the other five?
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What is a major problem facing the profession of pharmacy today, and how can it be fixed?
What impressed you positively?
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Huge campus, great scenery, not as "small town" as I initially thought, awesome Rec center.
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The interview is two people, where one knows your grades etc and the other knows nothing about you. My one interviewer, who must have looked at my marks and didn't want me to try to use them as a talking point, told me that he was supposed to have looked at data but he chose not to and would leave it to the admissions committee. It didn't hit me until I was told "no, there's no way he can breach protocol like that!" later on, I actually thought that my entire interview was closed-file. Dr. Higa is very tricky!
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During the "Cross-examination" there were two interviewers, one knows your personal history, one doesn't. I thought it was a good way to get an unbiased tilt.
What impressed you negatively?
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Cold, lots of hills.
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I wish that we were given an opportunity to meet more of the faculty, asides from the two interviewers.
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The essay was written on a laptop PC equipped with spell check and grammer check.
What did you wish you had known ahead of time?
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Speed limits travelling to Morgantown are slow until you hit WV.
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They expect you to know about the profession. Know some of the problems with the profession (counterfeit drugs, pharmacists stealing Vicodin, the aging of baby-boomers, whatever), the types of job opportunities available (retail, community, long-term care, post-graduate, etc.), and so on. Having good depth of knowledge about the profession is essential - say something like, "I'm interested in drug research, so while the more traditional aspects of the pharmacy practice are what drew me towards the profession, I'm also investigating the possiblility of continuing on after receiving my doctorate to work on a Ph.D. in Medicinal Chemistry." They'd eat something similar to that up.
How do you rank the facilities?
How would you rate the Location and Cultural Life?
How is the friendliness of the admissions office?
How is the responsiveness of the admissions office?
What are your suggestions for the admissions office?
Airports Used
100% interviewees used PIT (PIT) .
What was your primary mode of transportation?
Most interviewees traveled by airplane to the interview.
Hotels Recommended by Other Interviewees
Most interviewees stayed at the Friends Inn (average ranking 6/10). (Top 1 displayed)
What was the cost and time spent traveling?
What is your in-state status?
Where did you stay?
Who was the tour given by?
How did the tour guide seem?
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