How many people interviewed you?
Response Average | # Responders |
---|---|
1.61 | 270 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
Positively | 212 |
Negatively | 24 |
No change | 30 |
Response Avg | # Responders |
---|---|
3.30 | 264 |
Response Avg | # Responders |
---|---|
7.58 | 207 |
Response Avg | # Responders |
---|---|
7.56 | 188 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
In Person | 0 |
Virtual | 4 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
5 minutes | 0 |
10 minutes | 0 |
15 minutes | 1 |
20 minutes | 6 |
25 minutes | 15 |
30 minutes | 31 |
35 minutes | 32 |
40 minutes | 44 |
45 minutes | 83 |
50 minutes | 30 |
55 minutes | 3 |
60+ minutes | 26 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
At the school | 251 |
At a regional location | 8 |
At another location | 7 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
One-on-one | 218 |
In a group | 51 |
Response | # Responders |
---|---|
Open file | 262 |
Closed file | 4 |
Response Average | # Responders |
---|---|
1.61 | 270 |
"Tell us about yourself, your journey towards medicine, and why you are interested in IU?"
"Tell me about how you got onto the path of medicine? (Why medicine?)"
"What is a decision that you regret making and what would you do differently?"
"Why is a diverse healthcare system important and what diversity do you bring to IU?"
"Asked about one of my extracurriculars."
"Do you feel like you're part of a community?"
"Tell me about a time when a decision you made was criticized."
"Tell me about your journey here."
"Asked several questions about the various competencies and asked me to explain some of them (what I thought they meant, why they were important, give an example, etc.)."
"Briefly tell me why you want to be a doctor?"
"What have you been doing since you graduated last May?"
"What do you like to do in your free time?"
"Ethical Questions that that pertained to my file/ background"
"Tell me about a time when... you were witness to overt racism. How did you respond?"
"If you were to be accepted into all of the schools to which you applied, what would made you choose Indiana University School of Medicine?"
"(Had an illegal alcohol consumption ticket in undergrad) So did you even have 1 more beer after the incident and before you turned 21?"
"Softball ethical questions."
"Tell me about a time when you had to assert yourself."
"I was asked specific questions about my personal statement."
"Tell me about your family and childhood."
"Asked about my project for my Master's degree"
"standard why medicine questions but since my interviewer had thoroughly reviewed my file he basically told me my answer -- which sounds weird but was actually really comforting."
"Where do you see yourself 20 years from now?"
"If you had a patient who had TB (then explained the disease) and refused treatment, how would you handle it?"
"Tell me about your childhood."
"What is something that you have learned just for the fun of it?"
"Tell me about a time you had to make a difficult choice"
"What do you know about IUSM? (followed by, what else can you tell me about the school) - have a few points about the school you are ready to discuss!"
"How have you contributed to your community with your volunteer work?"
"What does professionalism mean to you?"
"What about yourself will you contribute to this medical school?"
"which of the 9 core competencies do you need to work on (what is a weakness in general)?"
"where I went to high school, class rank, SAT/ACT scores"
"Tell me about the curriculum's competencies?"
"Nothing hard at all. They asked about my SAT and ACT scores."
"Tell me about yourself"
"highschool class rank/ SAT scores"
"Why Indiana and why medicine?"
"Why IU"
"Have you always wanted to be a doctor?"
"Tell me about High School, groups you were involved in, SAT Score?!?!"
"What was your high school class rank?"
"What did you do in High School?"
"What was your high school rank, SAT score, GPA in high school?"
"What were your ACT and/or SAT scores?"
"What was your ACT score? (...really?)"
"What clinical experience would I tell my children about 10 years from now?"
"Talk about your social and volunteering activities the past couple of years."
"Tell me about your life up to this point."
"How do you define professionalism?"
"Something along the lines of: If you were out at a restaurant and saw a doctor with whom you have worked that was visibly drunk, would you say anything to him? Follow up: If you saw him at the hospital the next morning and he looked worse for the wear, what would you do?"
"why did you apply to IUSM?"
"What led you to MD?"
"Asked me about my research?"
"Why medicine, why IU? Play any instrument? Participate in any social work? Any student government association?"
"How would you increase diversity?"
"Is medicine a right or a privilege? "
"Are either of your parents in the health care field?"
"why IU beside the cheap cost (i'm in-state)?"
"Hmm asked the usual ethical, if you caught a friend cheating on an exam, what wld you do?"
"I'm a reapplicant, so they grilled me on how I had improved my application since last year."
"Elaborate on your AMCAS application."
"HS class rank/SAT score?"
"Why medicine? Why IU? Do you play any musical instrument? Tell us about your research in undergrad."
"Why was I interested in the school"
"tell me about high school activies..then college.. how you arrived to where you are now. wanted a chronological list of my schooling and employement"
"Where'd you go to high school, and how'd you do?"
"About high school SAT, class rank, size, activities."
"What is professionalism?"
"What are your ties to Indiana?"
"Questions about high school."
"Tell me about your family"
"How on earth did you find your way to medicine? "
"What do you think professionalism means?"
"Tell me about your parents"
"What high school did you go to?"
"Tell us about some of your high school activities."
"Define 'professionalism'"
"Tell me about highschool."
"If you could narrow your choice for medicine to one thing, what would it be?"
"What would make you choose IU over the other med schools that you have applied to?"
"What were your SAT scores/what extracurricular activities were you involved in during high school?"
"So, you're interested in medicine, and you're REALLY interested in business (so trying to sway me there...)...how do you plan on balancing both?"
"What would you do if you caught a fellow classmate cheating on an exam?"
"Why should we accept you?"
" The standard, why IU? why Indiana? etc"
"Why did I choose medicine?"
"why did you choose iu for undergrad and what did you do there?"
"Why did I choose IUSM"
"Tell us about highschool/class size/rank?"
"What did you do in high school? SAT, ACT, class rank & size. What have you done in college?"
"Describe some of your leadership experiences."
"would you consider D.O. school? (this came up in convo, it was not totally random)"
"Why IU? "
"talked about your clininical experiences"
"What would you do if you saw a member of your study group (a good friend) cheating during a test?"
"Why did you choose IU for undergrad?"
"What other schools did you apply to? Do you think you'll get into IU?"
"Tell me about yourself, research, clinical experience, etc?"
"What would you do if you saw another student cheating?"
"What did I think about the Amish school crisis being a PA resident? (Not specifically asked but talked about)"
"What would you do if you caught another person cheating?"
"high school class rank and SAT scores"
"What is professionalism"
"what's the most important characteristic a doctor should have?"
"Why IU and why Medicine?"
"You catch a student cheating in your med school class. what do you do?"
"Do you have any volunteer/service experiences?"
"Why IUSM?"
"where do you see yourself in ten years?"
"Tell me about your reasearch experiences."
"What was your class rank/GPA/SAT scores in high school?"
"Why medicine? What area of medicine are you most interested in right now?"
"How would you change the health care situation in New Orleans?"
"I was asked to explain a few of my activities from college."
"Name one of the nine competencies."
"What do you do to relax/in your time off?"
"I was asked about a B in my undergraduate anatomy class."
"Tell me about yourself. (I basically gave him a quick narrative about my entire life up to high school)"
"Do you plan on retaking the MCAT? Answer: No, because I do have an acceptance somewhere else (only took the MCAT once). Had that not been the case, my answer would definately be yes."
"9 compentencies"
"Tell us about your High School?"
"Define professionalism."
"why indiana"
"Tell us about yourself"
"Talk about your abroad experience."
"High school experiences (SATs, involvement in clubs and sports)"
"Describe what you do for fun."
"Asked about SAT scores, class rankings, and about my high school experience."
"Is lifelong learning important? Why?"
"Tell me about highschool. About half of the interview was about highschool."
"Tell me about your background."
"What was your high school class rank/ GPA/ ACT score?"
"why do you want to be a doc?"
"Describe a time when things did not go your way/a time when you failed. "
"If your best friend were cheating in class and you saw him, would you turn him in if he wouldn't turn himself in?"
"What do you see when you see pictures of Katrina aftermath? (socioeconomic issue/race/etc)"
"What is professionalism? Tell us about an experience with a doctor that was professional / unprofessional."
"In choosing a medical school, what exactly are you looking for in that school?"
"why IUSOM?"
"Why Indiana School of Medicine?"
"Tell me about your high school. Why did you go to [undergrad school]?"
"Hypothetical: If you are getting ready to perform a surgery and you smell alcohol on the breath of the doctor next to you, what do you do?"
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years?"
"When did you know you wanted to be a physician?"
"How do you deal with stress?"
"What was your high school GPA and class rank?"
"Have you ever cheated?"
"What one quality do you have that would make you a good doctor that the other applicants do not have."
"State two of your greatest strenghts. Name something you feel is not as strong and you feel you can improve upon."
"What are your main extra curricular activities."
"Where do you see yourself in 15 years?"
"Tell me about the Goldwater Scholarship."
"Let's go over your flaws so I can sell you better to the admissions council. "
"Why do I want to be a doctor?"
"Why IU?"
"Tell me about the class you did worst in and what you learned from that."
"If you got into indiana, some other schools, what would you do?"
"What would I do if I found a classmate of mine cheating on a test?"
"Drunk cardiologist question from above."
"Define professionalism"
"What would you do if someone you were working with in the ER was drunk?"
"Tell us the process of your decision to go into medicine."
"What was your high school rank? ACT/SAT scores?"
"What was high school like? Do you remember your class rank? What were your SAT scores?"
"You are a medical student, and you notice that someone besides you has pulled out a shhet of paper and copying from it.....what would you do?"
"SAT scores, wasn't asked class rank like I've heard people in the past have."
"Highschool GPA, ACT, and Class Rank"
"What high school did you attend? "
"Tell me about your high school expereinces--ACT, SAT, class rank"
"the highschool ranking, sat scores question. they ask this to everyone."
"You catch a fellow student cheating on an exam, what do you do?"
"Why Medicine?"
"High school GPA, ACT, Rank, did you play sports."
"HS GPA/RANK."
"Why [undergraduate institution]?"
"What was your HS class rank, SAT and ACT? What activities were you involved with in HS?"
"How do you think you're going to be able to manage medical school with two children? "
"Why do you want to be a doctor. "
"high school GPA and SAT scores."
"SAT scores/high school involvement seguewaying into what I do in college"
"What kind of activities were you involved in during high school? What was your HS GPA and ACT scores?"
"SAT scores"
"High School GPA and class rank"
"Why that school?"
"High school GPA and SAT scores, High school & college activities (namely community service.)"
"Positive and negative things about myself."
"high school gpa and sats"
"What was your highschool rank and SAT scores?"
"What was your most valuable volunteer experience?"
"High school rank and SAT/ACT scores. Standard, everyone gets this one."
"Describe an ethical situation you have been in and how you dealt with it."
"why doc? when was first experience you realized?"
"Tell me about yourself."
"Why Indiana? [read: how come you're applying out of state?]"
"Why did you major in X?"
"SAT/Class Rank"
"Why indiana?"
"Why get a MD degree and not a PhD (I am in grad school now)?"
"What was your H.S. ranking, SAT/ACT scores?"
"HS rank and ACT scores?"
"Highschool rank and SAT scores (what in the hell's this) It must be a required question because my interviewer seemed embarresed to ask me"
"highschool rank and SAT scores"
"the usual: why doctor"
"What did you do in high school (gpa, class rank, SAT)"
"What do you do for fun?"
"hs rank and sat scores"
"What were your high school activities and your SAT and MCAT scores? (look at my friggin application, sheesh)"
"Tell me about your high school statistics (class size, rank, AP classes, SAT scores, GPA, etc.)"
"Why do want to be a doctor?"
"What were your SAT scores, high school class standing, and HS GPA?"
"Where would you want to practice in the future?"
"Class rank in high school and SAT scores. "
"What was your class rank in high school and how many students were in your graduating class?"
"What was you high school ranking?"
"Where do you see yourself in ten or fifteen years?"
"What was your HS rank?"
"How would you handle the anthrax problem?"
"sat scores?"
"Do you enjoy reading? What where your favorite books?"
"Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"What is a difficult situation you have been in and how did you overcome it?"
"Describe a time when you were angry or frustrated, how did you handle it?"
"What excites you about our curriculum?"
"Tell me a time you used someone else's advice to make a decision."
"Why medicine"
"Tell me about yourself and why you are interested in medicine"
"What is one difficult thing you had to overcome?"
"Competency-related questions. This felt like the majority of the interview."
"How would you motivate a patient that doesn't want to lose weight?"
"Asked about extracurricular activities"
"Tell me about competency ___?"
"How did you end up switching from a Business degree to Philosophy?"
"Describe your shadowing experiences to us."
"Why did you decide to become a physician?"
"What competency do you think will be hardest for you to master?"
"When was a time that you made a poor choice?"
"Why Indiana University?"
"Asked how many times I had applied, where all else I had applied."
"Strengths/Weaknesses?"
"volunteer experience, clinical volunteering/shadowing, research (if you've done so), any other kind of weird hobbies that you're really into."
"What is unique about you/your background that will add to our school?"
"What has been your most important experience in college? (This led on to a thorough discussion of that experience and my role in it, so I'd make sure to have a lot to say about at least one experience.)"
"Why IU? Why MD/PhD? Why not just PhD?"
"What does "self-awareness" mean to you?"
"If you were a doctor with a female patient, whose religious beliefs do not permit the treatment that you recommend, what would you do?"
"What would you do if you realized that you prescribed the wrong drug to a patient?"
"Do you have any questions for me?"
"Which volunteer experience was most important to you?"
"Which one of the competencies stands out to you?"
"Why do you want to come to this school?"
"speak a foreign language?"
"They asked if I had any artistic talent. It wasn't that hard to answer, but I wasn't expecting it."
"Do you play any instruments?"
"SAT/ACT scores"
"Tell me about college, what groups you were involved in..."
"What do your parents do?"
"Have you done/would you be interested in Research?"
"What do you think about health reform?"
"Describe yourself...your childhood...your parents...? Describe some of your activities?"
"What or who exemplifies professionalism to you?"
"Young patient needs blood transfusion but his parents religious beliefs forbid this, what do you do?"
"activities in high school...."
"Would you stay in Indiana?"
"What I would tell my (grand)children 25 years from now about my 4 years in college."
"The M4 asked me a no-no question about politics which caught me off guard"
"What do you do if you pass a doctor who has alcohol on his breath?"
"What activities did you do in high school?"
"high school rank, sat, activities?"
"Nothing really hard, just lots of stuff off my personal statement."
"Why medicine, why IUSM, what type of medicine I may want to practice"
"Define professionalism."
"What does professionlism mean to you?"
"what was your class rank in high school? What was you SAT score? (I thought these questions were kind of unnecessary given the extensive AMCAS application)"
"A lot of questions about my activities, my grades in high school, class rank in high school, ACT score, MCAT, leadership and clinical experiences"
"Explain what you have done in college."
"Why IUSM?"
"What would you do if you saw someone cheating/if you realized a colleague was intoxicated on the job?"
"What did you do during high school?"
"Activities in college."
"Tell me about your volunteering"
"What do you see yourself doing with an MD in the future, because based on your activities you could really do anything?"
"If you discovered a gene which improved memory, and a couple came to you and requested that you implant this gene in their fetus, what would you do?"
"How do you feel about your MCAT? "
"If you saw your friend cheating, what would you do?"
"Tell me about your volunteer experiences."
"What else did you do in college?"
"Why IU?"
"The standard give three weaknessnesses and three strengths, but also what three traits I thought were most important for a physician to have and what my biggest weakness would be as a doctor. "
"Why IU, why medicine?"
"What kind of volunteer work you have done."
"How do you manage stress?"
"What do your parents do and where are they from?"
"What would you do if you had to present a patient with a colleague and you disagreed on the diagnosis?"
"Why did you decide to study engineering?"
"Flash forward 10 years...in what kind of environment do you see yourself practicing?"
"If you were a doctor and you smelled alcohol on the breath of a surgeon about to perform surgery, what would you do?"
"SAT, ACT, high school rank?"
"Why do I want to go to IU?"
"what is it about being a doctor that appeals to you the most?"
"Activities I did in HS/University"
"What would you do if you knew a student was cheating on an exam?"
"What would you do if you and a fellow third-year student were doing rounds together and had come to different conclusions about a patient? (Yeah, I had no clue how to answer this one)"
"Why medicine?"
"Where do you see yourself in the future?"
"Why medicine? Why IU?"
"Who are you, and what are you doing here? (just kidding)"
"what is professionalism"
"If you got into all the medical schools you applied to, what school would you got to?"
"talk about your research"
"What would you do if you smelled alcohol on the on-call surgeon's breath?"
"If you saw two of your good friends cheating on a physiology exam, what would you do?"
"Why didn't you apply for early decision?"
"Why did you take martial arts classes?"
"High school class rank, SAT scores"
"Everything basically stemmed from the Amish school shootings. The rest was an friendly conversation. (As sick as that sounds from the topic we started on)"
"What is my definition of professionalism? How does that relate to medicine"
"leadership and service experiences "
"Cheating?"
"does someone who's had medical problems make a better doctor?"
"High school activities, rank/college activities."
"you smell alcohol on the on-call surgeon's breath. what do you do?"
"How do you feel about the concept of fetal rights?"
"Name activities you participated in in high school and college."
"high school rank/act scores/activities"
"Give us some more information about your service work... (in specific areas mentioned on my AMCAS app)."
"Why IU/medicine?"
"I was asked a decent amount of information about high school (including SAT scores and activities)and my family, which caught me a little off guard."
"Define what you think professionalism means."
"Where else have you applied? Do you really want to stay in Indiana?"
"How do you deal with death?"
"Do you have any prejudices?"
"Tell me about the process that brought you here, in front of me, applying to medical school."
"Explain what you do/ areas you work in the hospital."
"What would you do if you saw a good friend of yours cheating?"
"My chronology... from test scores/class rank in high school... to my time spent in another career... to my activities since graduating."
"What are your two best points?"
"sat score"
"What would you do if you saw your friend cheating in your MD class?"
"What did I do in high school?"
"what is professionalism?"
"Tell us about the core competencies"
"Tell us what your strengths and weaknesses"
"What area of medicine are you thinking of?"
"Describe an experience that solidified your interest in medicine. "
"Tell me about your leadership and volunteer activities in high school."
"What are your hobbies, strengths/weaknesses, career goals, etc."
"Why do you want to be a doctor as opposed to nurse or physical therapist for example?"
"What activities did you do during college?"
"your response to student cheating on an exam? "
"why are you not considering md/phd?"
"Tell me about your high school and where you grew up."
"What was the best day of your life?"
"Where do you get your news - how do you make sure its accurate? (I replied by saying online)"
"Tell us about what you have done each summer since high school."
"Where do you get your news from?"
"What would you do if you saw student cheating on the boards?"
"What would you do if, during your first year, you notice two medical students cheating during an exam?"
"Drunk Surgeon Question"
"Tell me about your research. Why IU? "
"Define professionalism?"
"I what medically related experiences were you involved in?"
"WHAT PROCESS GOT YOU TO DECIDE THAT YOU WANTED TO PURSUE A CAREER IN MEDICINE."
"Where do you see yourself in 20 years?"
"What do you want to be doing in five years?"
"Who are you?"
"Things pertaining to my personal statement."
"Have you ever known anyone with depression and how did that make you feel?"
"Talk about 1-2 of your volunteer experiences. "
"What do you like to do to relax."
"What should I tell the admissions committee is the best thing about you as an applicant?"
"What is your strength? What is your weakness? (yeah, I know... pretty generic)"
"where have you traveled?"
"If I was working in the ER and the doctor to take over for me came in and I smelled some alcohol on him what would I do?"
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years?"
"Why medicine instead of religious studies? (i majored in religion and have had lots of experience in foreign missions)"
"Issues in Healthcare, uninsured"
"High school GPA, rank, ACT and SAT scores"
"See a classmate cheating on an exam, what do you do?"
"What is an ethical problem you have faced and how did you resolve it?"
"See above (interesting question)"
"What do you do for fun? What books do you like to read?"
"Describe an experience in which you demostrated leadership skills."
"Tell me about your extracurricular activites as an undergrad."
"It is your fifth marraige anniv. and your wife is waiting for your shift to be over and you promised to take her out for dinner. As you are handing over your patients to one of your close friends, you smell alcohol. What would you do?"
"Just standard stuff. Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"How did you prepare for the MCAT?"
"Ethical situational questions."
"where do you see yourself in the future? (note: no specific time in the future was determined)"
"What brings you back to Indiana?"
"Why IUPUI"
"Tell me about your college experience, did you play sports? What have you been doing since finishing your masters?"
"See above as well as why I'm involved in the activities I'm involved with."
"Is there a place for spirituality in medicine?"
"Question on how my experiences as a varsity athlete had prepared me for a career in medicine."
"Why did you decide to go into medicine now?"
"Tell me about _____ experience. "
"Tell us about your experiences during your semester abroad."
"Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"Why do you want to be a physician?"
"What is my support system and how do I take care of myself. What will I do in med school to relieve stress."
"Non academic activities in HS and college"
"How did I prepare for the MCAT?"
"Tell me about your family. "
"Why pursue medicine career."
"specific things about my travels and amcas app"
"If you looked over and saw your classmate cheating, what would you do?"
"What should we tell the admissions committee about you?"
"Tell me about some tough ethical decisions you have had to make."
"Are you applying to other schools?"
"high school rank, gpa, activities (had to think back on this one!)"
"What do you feel is the biggest problem facing medicine today?"
"What happened last year?"
"What was your high school rank, SAT scores, ACT scores?"
"Why would you want to go to Indiana, when you're a resident of Illinois? There are 7 schools in Illinois."
"What do you like to do for fun?"
"High school rank and GPA (first thing I was asked)."
"What activities did you participate in during H.S.?"
"Why Indiana?"
"Why didn't I get in to med school last year. ( I was waiting for the mono-rail to be finished)"
"what field of medicine?"
"why did i attend my undergrad school"
"What activities are you involved in at school"
"What one thing about medicine would you change?"
"why you want to be a doctor"
"Describe the research you have been doing."
"Why are you interested in medicine?"
"What is your support system?"
"What extracurricular activities are you in (both from high school and college)?"
"Why do you want to go into medicine?"
"What type of medicine I was interested in and why."
"What was your SAT score and what was the breakdown for the math and verbal section?"
"What was your SAT score?"
"What has been the high point of your life? The low point?"
"What did you score on the SAT?"
"Would you treat patients of other races differently? (the interviewer was african american and I am white)"
"high school gpa?"
"If you could step forward to the year 2025 and take a look at medicine, what would it look like?"
"What does Diversity, equity, and inclusion mean to you? How would you contribute to the this at IU?"
"What have you been doing since you graduated?"
"From your healthcare experiences, what are some of the challenging things about being a physician?"
"Where do you see yourself practicing?"
"Tell us about your research experience."
"why doctor and not NP/PA"
"When did you feel that you first became connected to your community?"
"Would you pray with another patient?"
"Do you have any questions for us?"
"Why do you wish to pursue a career in medicine?"
"Why IU School of Medicine?"
"Where would you like to see yourself professionally in ten, fifteen years?"
"Why did you even apply to Indiana University School of Medicine?"
"What challenges do you foresee facing in a career in medicine."
"Tell me about your volunteer experiences."
"When was a time where I had to put the interests of others ahead of myself."
"Which volunteer experience had the greatest impact on you and why?"
"why IU/what do you like about the school."
"Where else did you apply?"
"What has been your favorite college course?"
"What are three strengths and weaknesses?"
"Compare the U.S. and Danish health care systems (I studied abroad in Denmark)."
"I talked about my tutoring... so my interviewer asked how I handed situations when I felt like I wasn't getting through to my student."
"What did you learn about the culture of the underserved populations that you served that will help you be a better physician?"
"Why IU and what was my story for going into medicine?"
"Can you talk about a time when you have strugged or not reached a goal of your's?"
"What extracurriculars did you do in HS? college?"
"most meaningful volunteer experience"
"What field do you see yourself going into?"
"why wasn't I applying to MD PHD."
"What are you currently reading for pleasure?"
"what you think of obama's healthcare plan"
"Tell me about your undergraduate years and what type of activities were you involved in?"
"what would your health care fix be"
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years?"
"What are your extracurricular activities?"
"What positive/negative experiences did you take away from your shadowing/jobs?"
"What are you doing with your year off?"
"Why Medicine, Why Indiana?"
"What was your high school rank? (seriously?)"
"Why medicine now, and why here?"
"What do you do outside of academic-related activities?"
"What are your strengths/weaknesses?"
"Something along the lines of: In 50 years, technology has gotten to the point where a complete physical work-up can be done w/out the aid of a doctor, and cheaply. Do you think people would embrace this or shun it? "
"leadership experiences?"
"What do you see yourself doing in 20 yrs?"
"It's supposed to be an open file. But one of the interviewers directly said, "So I haven't read your file yet, so tell me about yourself to get me caught up." Hmm where do I start....?"
"Tell me about yourself and why IU"
"A patient can't afford a $300 med you gave a prescription for but can get it for $50 in Canada. Do you write her a prescription for the Canadian meds if you really care? "
"journey from high school to interview? which campus would you choose? if you saw someone cheating, what would you do? explain bad grade."
"Look up stuff on ethical questions...heard some interviewees got some really tought one, e.g. working w a schezophrenic (sp?) doctor, doctor w alcohol on breath, etc etc. "
"What would I do if I blatantly saw another student cheating, and then after I answered, they asked how my decision would influence that person's career."
"What would you do if you caught another student cheating?"
"What else should we know about you?"
"One of the 9 competencies is lifelong learning. How does this competency apply to you?"
"What do you do to relax? How did you study for the MCAT? Did you think about retaking your MCAT? (took mcat like two years ago)"
"My interviewer was a urologist, I was asked if I knew anything about urology"
"Strengths and weaknesses."
"Why doctor? (as you can see, very typical stuff)"
"What did you get on the SAT/ACT and what was your high school class rank? (somehow managed to remember that one from nowhere)"
"Why are you interested in IU?"
"A few ethics questions about drunk surgeons and cheating on tests. "
"Why were your freshman year grades low?"
"Where do you see yourself in the future?"
"If you witnessed, but didnt participate, your friend defacing the dean's new sportscar and the dean saw you out of everyone and called you into his office the next day, what do you do?"
"What competency stands out with you?"
"Why medicine"
"What were your SAT/ACT scores?"
"In addition to the resident wanting a tattoo of a cross question, I got the ethics questions about euthanasia and cheating."
"What are your strengths and weaknesses?"
"Tell me about your commitment to becoming a physician."
"Why did you choose IU?"
"How have you paid for your undergraduate tuition? "
"What would you do if you caught a friend cheating on an exam?"
"What activities are you involved in now?"
"You're a poet?"
"What would you like me to know about yourself?"
"A recent law was passed in Michigan that abolished affirmative action. What are your views on this?"
"What types of activities did I do in high school and college?"
"if you see a doctor shooting up in a patient's bathroom, how would you handle it? what if he/she was your friend?"
"What characteristics make me a good doctor? What are my weaknesses?"
"Would IUSM still be your top choice if you weren't an in-state student and why?"
"Why IU? Why medicine?"
"What do you like to do for fun?"
"High school acivties, college activities, health care experience?"
"Surgeon with alcohol on his breath, cheating classmate: what to do?"
"drunk surgeon - what do you do cheating - what do you do pretty standard"
"Why medicine?"
"talk about a ethical situation I was involved in"
"Define professionalism."
"Were you active in high school? What activities did you do?"
"Describe a really rewarding clinical experience."
"What do you want to do with an MD degree?"
"Are you married, what does your wife do, do you have any family ties to Indiana?"
"Do you have a good support system?"
"Why IU, why Medicine? "
"where do you see yourself in 15/20 years"
"What do you think of our competencies"
"What set you apart in high school/class size & rank"
"What is your best quality."
"any disciplanary action?"
"Which campus would you be interested in attending?"
"A bunch of ethical questions- what would you do if you caught another student cheating? suspected another physician was stealing and using narcotics? a dying patient wanted to increase their pain meds?"
"what would you do if you were a first year medical student and saw a classmate cheating?"
"What is your general overall outlook on relationships?"
"Where do you think you'll be in 10-15 years?"
"What activities did you participate in during high school and college?"
"Why do you want to be a physician?"
"What would you do if you didn't get in this year?"
"Talk about the activities you were involved in."
"High school class rank, class size, SAT score"
"If you were forced to work in an underserviced area would you still become a physician?"
"What qualities are important for a physician to have?"
"How was the prosection program at IU that you participated in? I was never asked about high school activities, SATs, etc. (Just FYI)"
"Why IUSM?"
"She asked me several probing questions about medications I took during an illness. I was uneasy by this line of questioning because I am no longer sick, so it seemed less relevant to my candidacy."
"What is your weakest point?"
"other schools I applied to"
"What can you tell use about our core-values at IU?"
"How is my relationship with my parents?"
"if I saw a student cheating during an exam what will I do?"
"Do you think everyone can achieve the core competencies?"
"Tell us what your friends would describe as your strengths and weaknesses"
"What questions do you have?"
"Give a thumbnail sketch of why you are interested in medicine."
"Where did you grow up? Rural or urban?"
"Where do you see yourself in 20 years?"
"Very specific questions about my application, such as why I chose to study abroad, why I chose my major, etc."
"Why did you transfer schools?"
"Do you like football. (I'm serious. "
"What would you do if you saw the person sitting next to you cheating off the person sitting in front of him during a final exam where each person's grade affects the other?"
"What was your most significant/meaningful extracurricular activity in college?"
"questions on research"
"how would you pick which schools you go to assuming that you got into all of them?"
"Why do you want to come to IU?"
"Do you believe in an honor code for a university, and do you think professors are subject to an honor code the same as students?"
"How do you think you'll keep up with medical advances when you are a doctor, do you think it's important to do so?"
"What type of medicine do you want to go into knowing that it could change after more exposure in medical school?"
"What do you do for fun?"
"Lots of questions about activities during high school and college."
"How do you view medicine as a profession?"
"Talk about Hgih School"
"I had some mistakes on my AMCAS and he read through them, but we just laughed about it and he didn't seem bothered by it."
"Have you ever known seen cheating in the academic realm?"
"What do you do to deal with stress?"
"WHAT IS PROFESSIONALISM"
"Why do you want to be a doctor? Plus many other questions already posted (catch a student cheating, drunk cardiologist, high school rank and SAT, professionalism, etc.)"
"In your physician shadowing experience what did you like or not like about they way the doctor handled himself with patients?"
"Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"What would I do if an ER surgeon that was supposed to replace me was drunk?"
"Tell me about a time you were volunteering and experienced an emotionally stressful situation."
"High shcool GPA, rank, ACT/SAT scores, parents' occupations, talked about my sister (since she is also in medical school)."
"Where do you see yourself in 20 years."
"Why IU?"
"Why IU? Why Indiana? Will you practice medicine in Indiana? Why?"
"What does professionalism mean to me?"
"Did you look over our website? Did you read about the compentency based curriculum (see "Nine Competencies"), and what do you think about this?"
"Do you have any questions for me."
"Tell me about yourself, why Indiana?"
"Why I decided on medicine? (I started out as an art major)"
"What does professionalism mean to you?"
"Desribe your research."
"See immigrant question above."
"Why did you choose to pursue a career in medicine?"
"You are in a private practice and you notice that your partner has been filing falsified claims for medicare. What do you do?"
"More standard questions"
"Do you have any questions for me?"
"How did you prepare for the MCAT?"
"what are your hobbies?"
"Tell me about blank experience?"
"If I were to speak to the Admissions committee tomorrow, what should i tell them are your strenghts and weaknesses?"
"When did you decide you wanted to be a doctor?"
"Tell me about the Amish and Alzheimers disease (this question dealt with my research project)"
"If a fellow resident came in with alcohol on his breath, what would you do?"
"What do you think are the issues that will affect medicine in the next ten to fifteen years?"
"Describe a time when you had to make a difficult ethical decision. (Do most 20-somethings have to do this on a regular basis?)"
"What specialty do you want to go into. "
"What are your goals in medecine."
"What has your volunteer work taught you?"
"Why do you want to attend IUPUI?"
"Why biochemistry (my major) and why IUB for undergrad."
"Why are you looking at IU?"
"Where did I see myself in ten years?"
"What made you interested in medicine? "
"What is telemedicine?"
"ethics on abortion and being catholic"
"What would you friends say are the best and worst characteristics of yourself?"
"Do you have any questions for us about IU?"
"Why do you want to be a doc? How did you prepare for the MCAT? What are you most proud of? "
"What do you parents think about you going into medicine?"
"dealing with death, ethical dilemas, etc. any healthcare experiences to back it up? "
"Why medicine? (P.S. - the answer is not just "I want to help people.")"
"Tell me a little about yourself."
"Why do you want to become a physician?"
"Tell me about some of your experiences on the AMCAS."
"What questions do you have for us?"
"What can we do to convince students to come to IU?"
"Where do you see yourself in 10-15 years?"
"What ties do you have to the state?"
"How many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie roll tootsie pop? ( I went with the owl and said three. Consequently I was labled a follower)"
"biggest problem in medicine today?"
"why indiana"
"Explain Health Sciences (my major)"
"Do you like small towns better than big cities? "
"what questions do you have for us"
"Would you stay in Indiana after finishing medical school?"
"Where does IU rank on your list?"
"Why do you want to be a doctor and do you know what field of medicine you want to study and why?"
"Why do you want to go to Indiana U?"
"Why I had decided to finish my last year of undergrad as a part-time student."
"Tell me some of the things you were involved with during high school."
"How would you handle the India/Pakistan situation?"
"How much interaction have you had with minorities? How would you treat a patient if he/she was a minority?"
"What do you do to relax?"
"Why did you come to Indiana for undergrad? What makes you want to stay here and go to medical school? (I'm from IL)"
"tell me more about college activities"
"Do you have any ties to Indiana resedency?"
"Where do you see yourself in 15 years?"
"Discuss one of your most meaningful experiences."
"You're in your third year of med school in your surgical rotation and see the surgeon break the sterile field, what do you do?"
"Personal question about my application (the majority of the interview was relatively informal/conversational)"
"How are you able to see and have compassion and understanding for other cultures?"
"What is something that I don't know about you that would help me understand you more?"
"It was more like a conversation about my life and path to medicine"
"What do you do for fun when you have down time?"
"Name one time where your religion/spirituality came into question."
"None, they were all scripted. Interviewers had a printed list of questions to ask."
"IDK. None stick out."
"Would you ever cry with a patient?"
"What will you do if you don't get in this cycle? (they asked this as a segway into reminding me that they are one of the few schools that will give you concrete feedback on your application if you are not admitted)."
"Why IUSM?"
"Do you think you can make a prima facie case that a patient who isn't following medical advice doesn't "understand" it?"
"What do you think is the greatest challenge facing rural physicians today?"
"How would you create a clinical trial study on [...]?"
"Why are you interested in medicine?"
"None, this was by far the worst interview experience I have ever had. My interviewers did not understand the point of an interview. They spent the entire time 'grilling me' rather than getting to know me to see if I would be a good 'fit' for their school. Combative."
"What was something that you learned for fun."
"Ethical question about a husband leaving a wife due to her being diagnosed with epilepsy"
"What would you do if you were talking to a patient, and they thought they were telling you everything you needed to know as a doctor, but you felt they were holding something back? (Something like no matter what you said, they would not tell you any more information)"
"Explain a time where someone else made a racist remark and what I did to stop it. Seemed a little too specific, but luckily I had an example."
"What's the biggest problem with healthcare?"
"What will you do if you don't get accepted to med school this cycle? (What's your plan B?)"
"What do you think about the current changes in healthcare? (This was very open ended, but I feel it let me show that I was informed about current events in medicine.)"
"What do you do for fun?"
"Explain the problem and cause of patient non-compliance in health care."
"If you were a doctor with a female patient, whose religious beliefs do not permit the treatment that you recommend, what would you do?"
"Standard interviews."
"What did you learn about the culture of the underserved populations that you served that will help you be a better physician?"
"Can you talk about a time when you have strugged or not reached a goal of your's?"
"I guess asking my SAT/ACT scores was interesting, good thing I knew it was coming and called my high school guidance department before the interview to look them up"
"The interviewer and I talked a lot about our musical experiences"
"They started by asking how close I was to my family. Weird way to start, but it does the job of relaxing you."
"Ethical Scenario: 2 patients on a liver transplant list, and only 1 liver available; what factors do you use to decide who gets the liver?"
"If you could present yourself to the admissions committee, what would you want them to know."
"high school ranking/test scores"
"When it comes to our competency-based curriculum, why do you think its good, bad or otherwise?"
"What would you do if you caught to students cheating on an exam..."
"Started with classical "what would you do if your classmate cheated?" But then he switched it up on me and asked what I would do in the professor's position if I caught one of my students cheating."
"What are you impressions on healthcare reform?"
"What are you doing with your year off?"
"Where do you get your news from? I didn't expect that one =D"
"The interview was more of a conversation than questions."
"Classic what would you do if you caught a student cheating... etc."
"An ethics question related to Michael Jackson."
"What is your single greatest strength that you can bring to our school?"
"We spoke for a while about the current state of health care and possible solutions. It was interesting to hear the opinion of a practicing doctor instead of a politician or news analyst."
"We talked at length about the technology issue, there are some very interesting possibilities to consider."
"nothing interesting. all pretty standard questions"
"the whole interview was pretty conversational."
"How I ended up at my college? (I'm an int'l student)"
"If I could change one thing about medicine, what would it be and why? (Assuming I had all the power, money, etc., to make it happen)"
"How would you promote diversity"
"If we want doctors to continue to learn because that is a competency, how do you make sure doctors actually continue their education?"
"Nothing too out of the ordinary."
"Nothing really, for the most part, the interview is low key"
"They wanted to know "the things I did" in college, which gave me a good opportunity to talk up every point I wanted to make."
"None really."
"Nothing...just know your HS class rank and SAT. The interview was more of a "chat" then an interogation."
"If you caught a class mate cheating on an exam, what would you do?"
"None, all I was asked about was my activies, leadership, etc. "
"n/a. pretty standard questions"
"N/A"
"What is professionalism?"
"In regards to previous volunteer work, how would I respond to people who reacted negatively towards my volunteer work?"
"Tell me about your relationship with your family."
"Tell me about your family - I was not expecting this question!"
"Nothing that was exceptionally interesting, I was asked a lot of questions about the various activities I have done, many of which are pretty unique."
"If you discovered a gene which improved memory, and a couple came to you and requested that you implant this gene in their fetus, what would you do?"
"If you only had 5 minutes per patient, how would you deal with that?"
"What did you do in high school (it's not all that interesting of a question but I didn't know they cared that much what my class rank, GPA and SAT were!!!)"
"If prior to surgery, your patient denied being possibly HIV positive, and then during surgery you cut yourself, then found out a week later at lunch that your patient lied, tell me step by step what do you do when you find out. "
"In regards to pharmacists refusing to fill Plan B prescriptions, what are your thoughts on that issue?"
"In regards to the bridge collapse in Minnesota, how would you go about inspecting bridges around the nation and what would you do if they were deemed unsafe?"
"How did your parents meet?"
"They were pretty standard questions."
"Will you be upset if you are not first in your class in med school? What do you think will be the hardest part of medical school?"
"Where did you go for your high school education"
"Tell me about your level of commitment in becoming a physician."
"All questions were pretty standard, nothing out of the ordinary. The interviewer just read them off a list."
"''I don't want to change this about you becuase you seem pretty relaxed right now, but how do you react in a stressful situation ?''"
"What would you do if you saw a friend cheating on an exam?"
"What extracurricular activities were you involved in during high school?"
" ''Bassoon!'' <not really a question, referring to my lapel pin> ''What's up with that?'' <no joke>"
"If the president gave you unlimited funds, how would you use them to improve healthcare in the United States?"
"Ideas surrounding compassion, empathy, etc."
" None were interesting questions. The person interviewing me was reading off the page."
"What was my SAT, ACT score, and my high school class rank"
"nothing out of the ordinary. i got the ''if you saw a doctor shooting up drugs'' question"
"Questions were pretty standard"
"What percentage of medical students admit to cheating at some time during their medical education(after they have graduated)? The answer was high, like 60%"
"Would you cry with a patient?"
"Where do you see yourself in 20 years? What kind of role in medical leadership do you anticipate?"
"What is the difference between a physician who cures patients and a mechanic who fixes cars? They are both providing service to people."
"Why did you pick San Diego as your first marathon?"
"There have been widely varying published reports on the death toll in Iraq. Why do you think this might be? If I put you in charge of finding out the real number, what would you do?"
"''are you sure you wanna do this?'' - im wondering if this is protocol or because im non-traditional? - it almost seemed insulting - i mean i obviously wouldn't have come this far if i was not sure!!!!!"
"If you got into all the medical school you applied to? What school would you go to?"
"asked about about a ticket I received while in college "
"What's Plan B (if you don't get into medical school)?"
"What kind of books do you like to read?"
"Two people start out at the same spot. One person walks 3 miles east and four miles north. The other person walks 4 miles west and 3 miles south. How far apart are they?"
"Do you not like things you're not good at doing?"
"How many schools have you applied to?"
"Where else did you apply, and why?"
"What did I think about the crisis at the Amish school? (Since I am a PA resident)"
"Tell me what you did in high school that made you stand out."
"to explain the research I have conducted"
"What would you do if you saw another student cheating? (That was the only prepared question I think I was asked, the rest just stemmed from my application and conversation). "
"None."
"Have you ever cheated?"
"What would you do if you saw a student cheating on a test?"
"Define professionalism."
"I was asked a question regarding the rights of a fetus."
"If one of your residents wanted to get a tatoo of a huge cross on his neck, what would you say to him?"
"How do you blow off steam?"
"What I thought I would be doing in 15 years if I wasn't doing what I originally answered?"
"none, really, the interview was really just a real easy-going conversation"
"Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"Describe your 2 best qualities and 1 that you think you could improve upon."
"Why I did not continue certain activities from HS into college, and how I decided to follow new ones once in college."
"If you and another resident had differing ideas as to the plan of care for a patient, how would you resolve the discrepency?"
"How do you deal with death?"
"If there were a group of people rolling a boulder up a hill, where would I be?"
"Tell me about the circumstances that brought you to the United States"
"I was asked a lot of public health-related questions because I'm currently working on an MPH. Would you recommend BCG vaccination for all infants? (I mentioned my interest in Infectious Disease)"
"If I thought it was possible through the integration of the 9 competencies to teach people how to be compassionate to patients."
"What have been the happiest and most depressing things that have occurred in your life?"
"I voiced an interest in pursuing a joint M.D./M.P.H. with a professional focus on public health and community-based prevention. My interviewer asked me the other schools I applied to, which included several bigger name private medical schools. She asked if I would go to a private school over a public school, given that my interests were in public health. I missed the boat with this question... I thought she was asking me whether I needed a private university for the sake of a prestigious name (which is not of concern to me), when she really wanted to impress upon me that it might be better to pursue a public health focus in a public institution (although I don't understand why that has to be the case)."
"Would I treat a patient if they were not able to pay for the services"
"If you saw a student cheating and you were the Dean of the MD department, what would you do?"
"Where did I see myself in 20 years?"
"IF I am about to perform a surgery with another doctor whose breath smelled of alcohol?"
"How do yout think we would teach someone these core competencies?"
"They had me discuss my experience with doctors when my mom was dying from cancer"
"Talk about your experience in Cairo. (my abroad experience)"
"Why IUMS and not somewhere else?"
"Can you discuss the competencies with us?"
"If a patient came in and demanded to be treated in a certain way that was not consistent with your chosen method, what would you do?"
"All questions were pretty much what you would expect..."
"What would you do if you knew one of your coworkers (a phlebotomist) was drawing blood directly from the patients' hearts?"
"What activities did you do during high school?"
"my transition to the U.S and difficulties"
"If you saw one of your colleagues whos your senior fudging Medicare forms, what would you do? if you said you would confront him, he could tell you that you wouldn't be working for him anymore, what would you do?"
"Do you think study abroad programs should be required for medical school applicants?"
"How would you control the cost of health care?"
"If you were at Bush's right hand, how would you tell him to deal with Katrina effects?"
"I see that you have also studied biomedical engineering. Why do you want to be a doctor opposed to an engineer?"
"If you got into Medicine, what is one aspect of it you would want to change?"
"What would you do if you saw another doctor stealing morphine in the ER."
"As a doctor practicing international medicine you may find yourself working over 70hrs/week. How would you find time to balance family and professional life as well as keeping up to date with the latest innovations in medicine?"
"If your friend scrubbed in (surgeon) and smelled like alcohol, what would you do?"
"Where is Swaziland? Then the guy really quizzed me on my research, but it was in a nice way. Then, at the end, he asked: "Is it more important to be committed to your cause, or to have a cause to be committed to?""
"I was asked the mascot of my high school."
"If you and I were to in front of the admissions committee right now, how would you convince them to admit you into the medical school?"
"An 89 year old patient that you have told that they have three months to live and is under so much pain asks you to help them pass to alleviate the pain, what would you do?"
"I was interviewed by an anesthesiologist, and we had an interesting conversation about my family history of malignant hyperthermia."
"Questions about my volunteer experience in Honduras on a mission trip."
"He gave me a geometry problem."
"If you caught someone cheating on the board exams what would you do?"
"If you had to present yourself to the admissions committee instead of me, what would you say?"
"How do you think that the dinosaurs became extinct?"
"Do you know any other languages? How about musical background? the arts?"
"What would you do if you saw your best friend cheating?"
""At the admissions meeting, I will have 3 to 4 minutes to present you to the committee. If you were in my position, what would you say?""
"Where do you see yourself in 15 years?"
"In one of your letters, a reference stated that you have changed over the years. How do you think you have changed?"
"Why do you think Kenyans are not supporting President Kibaki? (the interviewer helped start the IU-Kenya project and knew I lived in Kenya for a while)"
"Do you think opera should be translated?"
"If I was working in the ER and the doctor to take over for me came in and I smelled some alcohol on him what would I do?"
"All of the questions that I was asked were standard: Why IU, why medicine, and specifics about my application. I was not asked any ethical or hypothetical questions, although students who interviewed the same day but with different committee members said they were asked some ethical questions (pregnant teenager who wants an abortion, an ER doctor is drunk, etc.)."
"Do you know any Swahili?"
"Pretty much standard."
"What my high school mascot was"
"Nothing really interesting asked, just typical questions."
"What is an ethical problem you have faced and how did you resolve it?"
"If you saw a collegue of yours lying on paperwork to treat an illegal immigrant in the ER what would you do?"
"Since I spent a month in Italy studying Italian, I was asked if I ever had a dream in Italain."
"An illegal immigrant comes to you and asks for treatment, he has no way to pay for it. Do you fudge the forms a little so he appears to be a legal immigrant and can receive care (paid for by the federal gov't)?"
"Tell me about high school. (This one was a weird one for me because I graduated from high school eight years ago, so it seemed kind of random to ask about it. Asked what my SAT scores were and what my class rank was.)"
"Where I went to high school, which was quite a while ago for me"
"Mostly ethical questions..... see below"
"None of the questions were very interesting. Mostly ethical questions concerning patient-doctor relationships were asked. "
"I wasn't asked many interesting questions at all. "
"What would you tell a friend who didn't serve a mission?"
"What was my high school rank- like I remember I just know that I wasn't first and I wasn't last"
"Why does clinical science (i.e. medicine) appeal to you as opposed to research (i.e. bench) science?"
"what do your parents think of you applying to medschool?"
"You are on duty in the Emergency Department when you evaluate a patient with acute appendicitis. The oncall surgeon arrives and after a while you notice they are drunk. What do you do?"
"None.....It was all the regular get to know you stuff"
"Pre-interview question: After the MD commented that he had Subway for lunch and was asked by the PhD if he had had an Atkins Wrap, the MD asked me what I thought about the Atkins Diet."
"I am and HIV/AIDS educator and in my school's state there is an abstinent education only policy so knowing this they asked my how we get around this fact and teach safe sex (which we do)? "
"Did you do better than your parents in college?"
"What do you think are the issues that will affect medicine in the next ten to fifteen years? It led to a interesting discussion of medical economics and tort reform."
"An incredulous--"You went to law school?""
"You know the whole euthanasia issue...what is your opinion on it?"
"Have you ever done Third World medical work? (This was followed up with the comment, "When you come here, you should go to Kenya with my group")"
"What do you consider your greatest accomplishment?"
"Ethical Question: You tell a family you believe their baby has Down's Syndrome and send off the appropriate genetic tests. Then, you discover that the baby also has a disorder where the esophagus is not correctly attached and the baby cannot eat. Surgery is necessary, but not urgent; however the baby will die if you never do surgery. Along with this disorder often come heart and lung defects as well. The parents are young and only want healthy children. They tell you not operate until the results of the genetic test are returned. If the test is postitve for Down's they do not want you to operate, and instead wish to let the baby die. "
"Is genetic engineering of plants ok? Why might this be ok and genetic engineering of humans not be ok?"
"Describe a moral or ethical dilemma you have encountered."
"In USA how can we fix the problem of providing medical care to those who are not insured? Should seniors receive prescription medicines at reduced cost or free?"
"an ethics question on abortion and being catholic"
"If you were in the ER doing a residency and were about to go off shift with a major trauma coming in, and your relief resident came in smelling of alcohol, what would you do?"
"What would you do to improve medicine in the next ten years? "
"Many new doctors tell me that narcotics are overprescribed for pain relief. What do you think? He is a rheumatologist who treats a lot of arthritis patients in mucho pain."
"Describe an ethical situation you have been in and how you dealt with it."
"with the rising hispanic population in indianapolis, is it the doctor's responsibility to know spanish or the immigrants to learn english. (this is an increasing health issue in indianapolis)"
"What do you like to do for fun?"
"Why Indiana?"
"Nothing interesting was asked. None of the questions was thought-provoking. All were pretty standard questions."
"What would you like me to know about you that is not in your file."
"What is your high school rank and SAT scores?"
"What do you know about Apoptosis, did you hear the recent news on it?"
"If I would be interested in joining the Gary pistol team (I was commenting on how well my undergrad institution' s pistol team was doing. My other interviewer literally almost fell out of his chair laughing, which is a great indication of how nice and laid back my interviewers were.)"
"none"
"where do you see yourself in 10 years?"
"what high school did you go to?...I'm from NJ, so there's nooo way that they would have ever heard of my school! :) "
"it was very conversational, nothign to worry aobut at all"
"What can we do to convince you to come to IU?"
"What is the one thing about medicine that you would change?"
"Nothing interesting or out of the ordinary"
"Nothing especially interesting. The questions were mostly about my experiences and achievements. Nothing about ethics or world affairs......phew"
"none really"
"What is your support system?"
"If you had an 87 y/o patient that had a terminal illness and was in a severe amount of pain, and she asked you to help her die quicker, what would you do?"
"They were all pretty general. He asked me about my high school experiences, whether I like college (and why)."
"Tell me about things that you have done that are non-medically related and what do you like to do for fun. This is an open-ended question which allowed me to direct the topic of the interview. After this point I began rambling about my passions and then I had the chance to tie it to medicine. The interviewers really seemed interested in getting to know me and their attentiveness was very much appreciated."
"How would you handle the India/Pakistan situation?"
"What were my activities in highschool?"
"As a physician, how would you handle the anthrax situation?"
"what were you sat scores and high school gpa?"
"Two ethical questions: You have a 56 year old male patient with extremely high blood pressure who has told you he stopped taking his BP medication. What do you do? AND You are a 3rd year medical student and you see the attending surgeon break the sterile field. What you do you?"
"Who do physicians have to work with on a daily basis and why is interdisciplinary medicine important?"
"What role should physicians play in regards to medical legislation?"
"How can a physician lead changes in the healthcare field?"
"What would you do if your friend told you they felt bad because they had cheated on the last exam?"
"You have an elderly man dying of cancer and he asks you not to tell his daughter about his diagnosis. What would you do and why?"
"What would you do if a patient had an incomplete history and you could not obtain any further information? (No specific situation was indicated, just the general idea)"
"I wasn't expecting some of the competency questions so some answers I gave weren't great"
"N/A"
"Why not nurse/PA?"
"How would you handle a case in which you feel the need to post a patient's information on social media?"
"What have you been doing during your gap year?"
"When did you realize that you wanted to pursue a career in medicine?"
"Where would you like to see yourself professionally in ten, fifteen years?"
""Well what would you do as a medical student (question asked angrily by the interviewer) if your very best friend's family; his mother, father, brother, and sister were all killed in a fiery car crash by a drunk driver. And he couldn't deal with it so he went drinking that night and the next day didn't come into rounds because he was hungover. And he texts you asking to cover for him. What would you do?"
"What is the biggest problem in healthcare today? (Once I had answered) What would you do to fix it?"
"I was asked if I consider medicine a business and if so is the patient a customer. If they are the customer does that mean we don't serve them if they can't pay?"
"What is your biggest regret?"
"What is professionalism to you? Have you ever encountered someone acting unprofessionally, and how did you deal with it?"
"What would I do if I resuscitated a DNR patient."
"Nothing too difficult--the ethical question was very straight forward."
"the question about experiences with people who were different from you culturally, how their culture made them difficult to work with, and how you overcame this. just kind of weird phrasing overall."
"Why not become a dentist?"
"If you weren't going into medicine, what would you do? (I had prepared for a different form of this question, i.e. if I didn't get in, but the way it was phrased made me have to come up with something on the spot.)"
"They were all pretty straight-forward."
"Nothing difficult."
"What did you learn about the culture of the underserved populations that you served that will help you be a better physician?"
"What kind of practice setting interests you most?"
"Which of the 9 core competencies do you need to work on the most?"
"really nothing difficult-I was all prepared to talk about the competencies, ethical dilemmas, healthcare, but they really weren't trying to stump you with a question like that"
"Do you see yourself practicing medicine back in your home state? (im oos)"
"They didn't ask me any. I was expecting some ethical questions, or questions about health care, but I didn't get even a single one! All they asked me about was my ECs."
"How would you define professionalism?"
"I had 3 ethical scenarios and had to answer what I would do in any given situation, these were the most difficult."
"What do you think your weaknesses and strengths of your application? Wow, I did not really expect that one!"
"What happened on your MCAT?"
"If you could be anything, what would you be? Hard to know how to answer this one, because I still have a childish dream job in mind that would never pan out, and I do want to go to med school."
"What would you do if you were a professor who caught the two students cheating..."
"I kinda floundered a bit on my extra curricular. Have a clear understanding of which ones to talk about before you get there."
"Moral dilemmas concerning the field of medicine I am most interested in."
"What do you think about health reform? "
"What is one change you would make to our healthcare system?"
"What would your solution be to the health care crisis?"
"Why medicine? (mostly because he already made up his mind about why I pursued medicine and tried to make me agree with what he discerned from my application instead of accepting my response)"
"What would I propose with regard to health care reform?"
"None really."
"Summarizing my life in a brief, interesting answer was challenging, mostly because I wasn't expecting it. "
"Talk about the healthcare crisis"
"The patient needing blood was somewhat difficult to answer, but always think patients first!"
"about 10 minutes after the interview, the interviewer asked me "do u have any questions for me?" which caught me surprised.. but after i asked one question, he went on interviewing me..."
"Surprisingly I didn't get any ethical questions. None"
"What I would do if I caught a friend cheating on the final exam. What I would do if I smelled alcohol on the breath of the on-call surgeon."
"The question about politics which should not have been asked"
"You pass an elderly man in a hospital. He falls down, isn't breathing, so you bring him back only to find out this man had a DNR. He is only alive on a ventilator so what do you do now?"
"What would you do if you caught someone cheating? What would you do if you caught another doctor with alcohol on breath?"
"Nothing difficult. It was more of a conversation than an interview."
"Nothing really.. Oh yea, look up the core competencies (like everyone says), and other stuff about the school. Make sure they know that you'd LOVE to come there..really.."
"Where I see myself in 10 years- they kept wanting me to be more and more specific, and wouldn't let it go when I thought I had given a good answer"
"Some ethics questions: What would I do if I caught a peer cheating?"
"None of the questions were difficult. "
"If one of your subordinates took bribes from pt; what would you do?"
"justification for my MCAT score?"
"If you saw two people cheating on the first test, what would you do?"
"Typical Jehovah's Witness parents, child needs a blood tranfusion to live, which obviously they don't believe in... what do you do?"
"What did you do differently to prepare the second time you took the MCAT?"
"Some ethics questions about disease and research. "
"A few ethics questions about research. "
"You are in front of the entire admissions committee and have two minutes to sell yourself. Ready? Go!"
"No difficult ones, really, mostly conversational."
"Why my freshman year science grades were low. The interviewers *seemed* satisfied with my explanation, but it's hard to say..."
"If you discovered a gene which improved memory, and a couple came to you and requested that you implant this gene in their fetus, what would you do?"
"Nothing was hard, just basic high school/college activities and why I want to pursue medicine."
"If you saw two students cheating in your first med school exam, what would you do? (And then I was asked with follow-up questions based on my response)."
"The HIV surgery question"
"What would you do if you smelled a strong scent of alcohol on a surgeon who was taking over your patient?"
"Let's say your an attending, and one of your residents wants to get a big tattoo of a cross on his neck. What do you tell him?"
"Define 'professionalism' "
"Tell me about your level of commitment in becoming a physician."
"It wasn't difficult, but I got asked about seeing a doctor putting narcotics in his pocket. "
"What do you think of IU's curriculum?"
" A hypothetical about end-of-life issues for a cancer patient. I struggled through a response, stating that my mother had just died two weeks prior due to cancer. Yeah, a bit rough."
"What did you do in high school?"
"You are from the northwest, you are a white male, and you are unlikely to serve in an underserved community. Why should we accept you? You are exactly what we are not looking for."
" None. They were all boring, standard questions"
"nothing difficult, it was all basically straight from my file so i had answers."
"Ethics questions: What would you do if you saw a student cheating/What would you do if you smelled alcohol on a surgeon's breath"
"Define professionalism (its harder than you think to come up with a succinct answer on the fly, prepare for this one)"
"What is professionalism?"
"What was the high point of your life? What was the low point?"
"A boy comes into the ER and he has a bruise on his head. You realize he has bruises all over his body, he is being beaten. What would you do? Then you come to realize that the mother's boyfriend is responisble for this. What would you do? Then you notice the mothers bruises. What is your role as a physician and when should society's role begin? "
"If you got in to every school you applied to, how would you make your decision?"
"Do you know if any U.S. states provide health care for all its residents?"
"''what do you know about the 9 core competencies?'' i was not sure if i was supposed to repeat them all at this point or what? i didn't remember them all anyways, so i just mentioned one that i remembered and thought was important"
"Why do you want to come to Indiana?"
"nothing really"
"Why did you indicate yourself as disadvantaged?"
"If you get into Indiana and a few other schools, how will you decide where to go?"
"What type of situation frustrates you?"
"Is it worth cutting down on residency hours so doctors can get more sleep?"
"If you get multiple acceptancies, what will make you choose Indiana University over other schools?"
"What would you do if you saw another student cheating? If you were the dean and this got reported to you, what would you do?"
"Amish School question"
"Tell me about your extracurricular activities in college?."
"what will you do if you dont get in"
"What would you do if you saw another student cheating? "
"Questions about High School"
"What other med schools did you apply to/how will you make your decision if you're admitted to more than one school?"
"Where do you see yourself in ten/twenty years?"
"Rights of a fetus question"
"same"
"Why IU?"
"Describe an ethical situation I was involved in."
"If you saw two students cheating during an exam, what would you do? "
"If you could do one thing to change the current health care situation in New Orleans, what would it be?"
"How do you think that we (Indiana University) could assess whether or not our students are learning all the aspects of our competency-based curriculum?"
"Nothing really out of the ordinary."
"What would you do if you saw another student cheating? "
"So what do you know about IUSM? (Just felt like I didn't get a whole lot of experiences to fully talk about their campus and facilities, tour was minimal and after my interview)"
"Why didn't I get accepted the first time."
"Where do you see yourself 10-20 years down the road?"
"How would you prove that computers are associated with fewer errors in healthcare? Is the current plan to control Bird Flu adequate?"
"What the difference was b/w nursing and medicine. I though it was tough b/c I didn't expect this question at all."
"What do you think is the biggest problem affecting health care today and how would you fix it?"
"My interviewer pointed out that I was lacking in recent, long-term volunteer experience. It was hard to explain my reasoning for that without sounding like I was making lame excuses."
"What would you do if you knew a group of students was cheating in your class?"
"What were my high school x-tra curicular activities"
"I got a DUI when I was younger so it was hard having to discuss the situation."
"If I say a student cheating on a test, what would I do?"
"What was my after school activities in High school?"
"Tell us about a situation where you felt like you saw a doctor needing improvment"
"Why do you want to be a doctor?"
"What can you tell me about the competencies?"
"Define professionalism."
"Where I would be in 10 years. I don't know why I have a hard time answering that question."
"If you had a magic wand, how would you fix the U.S. healthcare system?"
"Why Indiana?"
"Let's say you have a patient who's eighty-nine years old and is dying of cancer. You have determined he has three months left to live, and he tells you that he thinks he's lived a good enough life and that the three months do not make a difference to him. However, he does complain about the pain and tells you he doesn't want to go through three more months of it and wants to know what you can do for him."
"none...but an uneasy situation when I had to explain my midsemester grade report!"
"nothing really difficult. some of the questions were the same as posted in the forum."
"Medical ethics versus legal ethics for a case in which the parents refused a blood transfusion for their young daughter because of religious beliefs."
"What was the worst day of your life?"
"As an out of state applicant; why IUSM? (my interview was early in the morning before all the information sessions)"
"In 20 years, why would you tell your child to attend your Undergraduate Institution? (I hated it)"
"If you could only save 4 people from a flood, out of a family of 8, who would you put in your boat."
"As a doctor practicing international medicine you may find yourself working over 70hrs/week. How would you find time to balance family and professional life as well as keeping up to date with the latest innovations in medicine?"
"None really"
"What are the nine competencies? What are three of your weaknesses? "
"To explain the institutional action that is on my record."
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years? I know it always shows up but for some reason it was difficult to answer. Another: what is professionalism? I would answer and the second interviewer would say "ok but what else can you add?" by the way, we can find different answers in one of the school's brochure that they send you ahead of time: i saw it a week after my interview!!!!!!!!"
"If you caught a classmate cheating on the boards exam, wha twould you do? "
"From your shadowing experiences, what did you like or not like about the way the physicians interacted with their patients?"
"Why do you think you your MCAT scores did not improve much the second time you took them?"
"If a patient's mother was refusing a blood transfusion due to religious reasons for her child's life-saving surgery, what would you do?"
"If you don't get into medical school, what will you do? What is your backup plan?"
"I did not get asked any real difficult questions."
"None, they were all pretty standard."
"If you are a Texas Resident, why opt for $60K/yr tuition instead of $20K/yr? (then he subtly implied I should stay in Texas)"
"Who should make ethical decisions in medicine?"
"What is the biggest problem with healthcare today?"
"Nothing was difficult to answer because most questions pertained to my own application or desires to attend medical school."
"What character trait will be your biggest stumbling block in medical school?"
"if you were a student and noticed that a patient was wheezing and the resident came by and brushed the patient off, claiming nothing was wrong, and something ended happening to the patient, what would you do?"
"What does professionalism mean to you?"
"You notice the attending cardiologist is drunk after he works up a patient, what do you do?"
"Define professionalism"
"See above."
"No difficult questions"
"Same as above, only that a colleague of yours is fudging the documents. Do you intervene? What do you do?"
"No difficult questions. We just basically went through my file in chronological order, starting from high school and covering why I chose my undergrad school, why I chose my majors/minors, extracurricular activities, work experience, grad school, why medicine...up to the present day."
"Nothing to hard, just the usual. Why do you want to be a doctor? What made you decide you were interested in medicine? Where do you see yourself in 10 years?"
"None really...we started off with ...."So what brings you here"....I am out-of-state so I knew this question was coming.....next was as usual "Why medicine and why now" ... I am non-traditional so I knew that would be asked too...."
"Not a single halfway difficult question was asked."
"Same as above"
"Ethical Q, what would you do if you saw your close classmate cheating on an exam"
"Where I see the future of health care."
"have you been in a situation that challenged your morals/values? describe it."
"What was your high school college entrance exam scores?"
"Where do you see yourself in 20 years...thats like when i am 40!!!! i dont know....in a living room eating doritos and screaming at the 10 kids 'I plan to have' to keep it down.....???"
"High School GPA, ACT and Class Rank. I was ready for this thanks to SDN."
"None really..."
"If your (medical practice) partner was defrauding Medicare, what would you do?"
"See most intersting question"
"The committee is interested in knowing more about how students deal with ethical situations...describe a time when you've had to make an ethical decision."
"The euthanasia one."
"What were your activities in high school. . . Like I remember!"
"What does the word "professional" mean to you?"
"Lately, many physicians have decided to change their profession because they do not enjoy the field of medicine, how do you know that this will not be the case with you?"
"Ethical question above"
"The engineering quesitons."
"Do I believe in the fact in USA major diseases occur because people have poor nutrition, such as eating fast, fatty food and do not exercise, e.g. diabetes and heart problems?"
"nothing was really too hard, but i was asked about different global health initiatives and what i thought could be done globally to improve healthcare"
"If you were about to leave for the night and one of the patients you had been caring for took a turn for the worse, what would you do? Take into consideration that you have already worked the mandated 80 hour work week and if you stay you may jeopardize the hospitals accreditation."
"What would you like us to tell the admissions committee? (1st question asked)"
"The above narcotic question was the hardest,but all of the rest were routine with no surprises. I did hear one applicant complaining because her interviewer showed her a slip of paper with about 10 fractions written on it and asked her which was the smallest fraction. After a few seconds she couldn't come up with an answer and he took the paper away, then continued with the interview. She said it totally threw her off."
"Are you applying to other schools?"
"why did you ask us about PBL? (it was one of my questions at the end)"
"None of the questions I was asked were that difficult, although a couple of friends mentioned getting questions about their views on abortion/euthanasia/gene therapy."
"So what happened the last two years [w/respect to grades]?"
"What should I tell the admissions committee that is not apparent in your application?"
"High School rank....... I had to make it up"
"None really. The interviewer spent most of his time praising my application."
"Above"
"I have learning disorders, so my interviewers grilled me on things such as "Why should we think you will succeed in med school?""
"My High School class rank....I was never given one so I had to guess..."
"Do you have any leadership experience? (Yeah, watch this)"
"What other schools are you considering? I'm still not sure of the best way to answer that one!"
"See above"
"If you had not decided to go into medicine, what would you be doing?"
"Where do you see yourself in ten years"
"The questions weren't difficult, although I felt there were definitely right and wrong answers. Being from Indiana, I was asked if I would stay in the state after medical school. They obviously want their students to remain in Indiana, and answering the question was difficult to do while still be honest."
"No real difficult questions -- one very easy ethical problem"
"see above most interesting question"
"None. It was more like a casual conversation."
"What was my solution to the lack of medical insurance problem?"
"Why did you choose to apply to IU? What interest do you have in IU? This was a difficult question for me because I am an out of state resident."
"How would you handle the India/Pakistan situation?"
"If I had a majic wand, how would I fix the problem in the Middle East?"
"The questions were all straightfoward. It was a very chill interview."
"Name a difficult time in your life and how did you handle it?"
"none"
"Basic questions (why IU? why medicine? tell us about yourself?"
"SDN, reviewing personal statement, mock interviews"
"Practiced the basic questions (Why medicine, greatest strength and weakness, background information, hobbies, extracurriculars, etc.). Additionally, I researched the school beforehand and watched the YouTube videos they have posted online. Overall, the interview was very conversational and my preparation did not help much in this instance (other than "why medicine")."
"Mock interviews, practice questions, thinking about what led me down this path, etc."
"Researched competencies, school curriculum, went over app, and looked on SDN, reviewed certain scenario/ethical questions related to medicine"
"Researched the school's research and curriculum, mock interview"
"Reread primary app, researched the school, did some practice questions"
"Lots of mock interviews. Reviewing my application. Knowing my mission, vision, and values."
"PreMed Playbook, reviewed my application, mock interview"
"Other interviews, reading online questions, mock interviews."
"Mock interview, practice questions from here"
"Looked over competencies, new curriculum, structure of the program and the various campuses."
"Reviewed their competencies."
"Looked over my file the night before, read SDN, and got some good sleep."
"Reading SDN and speaking with students who had previously interviewed."
"Looked at the website & reviewed my file."
"Rehearsed by myself, had friends ask me questions, set a mock interview with old admissions committee member."
"I read articles online which gave possible lists of questions that could be asked in interviews. I also tried to come up with situations I've been in that could fulfill questions such as, "Tell me a time when you overcame adversity/helped someone/etc., ...""
"Read SDN questions. Read about IUSM online. Practiced answers to typical questions."
"Burpees."
"Researched the school, met with an advisor."
"Read over the school website, SDN interview feedback, reviewed my primary app since they don't have a secondary"
"Reviewed the school website"
"Look at these questions on this website, find ways to talk about my volunteer experiences"
"Reviewed my app."
"Looked over interview feedback on studentdoc, read some questions from a book, watched a mock interview on youtube :)"
"read sdn, reviewed my file, practiced basic questions a little bit to make sure i felt comfortable with the "easier" early questions in the interview."
"Read SDN, studied competencies, reviewed my application"
"Practicing answering questions on SDN and other sources (beware though, a lot of the questions more than a few years old on here don't seem to be used anymore, at least for me, e.g. define professionalism, if you saw a classmate cheating, etc.), Reviewing my application, Know some general info on curriculum (I wasn't asked directly about this, but I was given an opportunity to show that I knew some of the competencies)"
"Read this site"
"reading SDN and thinking about common questions"
"Reading the interview feedback here, reading over my primary and secondary, reviewing my pubs. Reading about the school."
"I went over my application and went over questions I read on sdn"
"SDN feedback, read about competencies, read IU's website, AMCAS"
"Learned certain things about the school (comm. service and international opportunities, etc.)"
"read the IUSM website thuroughly, read through my application, read this website."
"SDN, admissions site, mock interview with friends, over-preparing"
"Looked at the website and read the feedback from here"
"I reviewed the SDN interview feedback and read up on the news and current topics."
"Practice questions, SDN, reading up on IUMed and making sure I know why I truly want to go there."
"mock interview with my pre-medical advisory staff"
"IUSM website, studentdoctor.net, and reviewing my AMCAS application. "
"SDN, sample questions"
"Read over AMCAS, SDN Feedback"
"Mock interviews at undergrad, previous interview"
"SDN, lots of medical related books, reviewed my app"
"SDN, going through questions, reading my application, talking to 1st and 2nd year students"
"Read a medically relevant novel, to give me something to talk about (P.S. that worked)"
"just read over my application, and figured out ways to explain my activities"
"SDN interview feedback, mock interview with some friends, looked over my AMCAS app."
"This website; also, I had a friend hold a mock interview with me."
"SDN, student host (was awesome!), IU website"
"Read over feedback here, reflected on my motivation and purpose and got ready to answer the basics."
"SDN, Books."
"Reviewed personal statement, reviewed school info (philosophy, mission statement, etc), practice interview with my undergrad faculty."
"SDN, Read my AMCAS, Read over their website"
"SDN Interview feedback, read up on the schools website, friends who interviewed previously. Make sure you know you SAT scores!"
"SDN, school's career center with MOCK interview"
"sdn, mock interviews"
"SDN, Health-related articles, AMCAS app, current IUSM med students"
"Read SDN interview feedback"
"Read this website. Read a little on the core competencies. I felt that they liked that I knew a little about the curriculum and the different regional campuses. Have a good reason for why you want to attend IU, whether you are IS or OOS."
"Practice interview"
"SDN and school website."
"Reviewed school's website, SDN forums, mock interview."
"SDF, reviewed my AMCAS, reviewed school's website"
"SDN, review primary"
"Sdn, indiana website, pretty much. "
"SDN, went over my application, studied the competencies and their definition of professionalism, practiced my answers to common questions outloud"
"Looked at SDN, Reviewed my AMCAS, Looked over info sent by the school"
"SDN, IUSM website"
"Pray, SDN, primary and secondary applications, school's website; practice"
"I didn't do any extensive prep. I reviewed my personal statement and AMCAS application."
"IU website, SDN, Primary app review"
"SDN, AMCAS, Princeton Review book"
"SDN, looked over primary application, looked over some ''generic'' interview questions, looked over core competencies"
"sdn, mock interviewing, used wikipedia for basic info on health care system and issues"
"Read over my AMCAS, read over their website"
"SDN, read over AMCAS app., mock interviews with friends, IU's website"
"Went over my AMCAS, transcript, IUSM's website, and SDN interview feedback"
"Read through SDN feedback, though I was not asked any questions about ethics. I suspect this is because they were more interested in using the time to talk about my life experiences."
"sdn, website, msar"
"SDN feedback, re-read my AMCAS, read the newspaper"
"Read their website, looked at my AMCAS application, talked to a friend who's a first year there to get advice, and watched the IU competencies video online (make sure you mention that you know these!!!)"
"I read over my amcas application, looked over the most recent interview feedback on sdnet and wrote up answers, caught up on some current events, browsed a medical ethics book"
"Read the IUSM website and conducted mock interviews."
"SDN, reread secondaries, mock interviews with friends and advisors"
"Read over AMCAS, looked at school's website, looked at SDN, practice videotaped interview"
"Read SDN feedback and IUSM website"
"Reviewed my application, read sdn feedback, and looked over the school's website"
"SDN, their website, nine core competencies"
"I studied the IUSM Core Values and Guiding Principles. This is a big focus of the school. IU is really emphasizing professionalism. Most everyone I spoke to had something related to this theme."
"SDN, online material, IU's website, reviewed my personal comments, and a couple mock interviews."
"SDN, practice interview questions, and school website"
"web-site mostly"
"SDN, asked current students for advice, reviewed bioethics book"
" Being my first one, I may have went over-the-top: Aside from SDN, reviewed AMCAS and several essays from apps and my History of Medicine seminar, FeedForward, practiced interview questions with Steph on the drive down."
"I did not."
"SDN, IUSM website, MSAR."
" SDN, primary, IU website"
"SDN, read over IUSM website."
"sdn, read over my amcas"
"SDN, amcas, reviewed IUSM website"
"SDN, reread personal statements"
"Mock interview, read through IU website, read over any health issues in the news."
"Read SDN boards and talked with physicians."
"SDN, AMCAS Application, IU School Of Medicine website"
"reading these reviews, IU website"
"SDN, checked out their website"
"sdn, amcas, talking to people that interviewed here earlier in the year, going over ethical and global health issues"
"Go over AMCAS application, the school website. I also prep up on contemporary issues in modern medicine (abortion, stem cell research, etc)."
"SDN, IU website, reviewed my AMCAS application"
"SDN, practice interview, IUSM website"
"Read SDN, looked over my application, and mock interviews."
"Read my application The interview is very converstional so I don't think mock interviews (which I didn't do) will help"
"SDN, AMCAS, browsed internet for interview questions."
"Read feedback on here, read IU website"
"SDN, School's Website, reviewed my AMCAS application"
"Read SDN, read IU's brochures."
"reviewed my application, school website, this website"
"SD.net, read IU website"
"SDN, school website, ran through prototype answers"
"SDN, mock interview, read IU website "
"SDN, reviewing AMCAS, review website"
"studentdoctor.net, read over my application, looked over the website"
"IUSM website, reviewed my application, practice interview with spouse"
"read my apps, sdn, the schools website, kept up to date with current health issues"
"snd interview feedback, reading my amcas, sdn forums"
"Reviewed my AMCAS and secondary app materials, studentdoctor.net, looked over general questions/expectancies regarding interviews"
"Looked over almost all of the feedbacks from SDN and went over the info from the school."
"SDN Interview feedback, IU website "
"Read my application and the school website."
"student doctor net, reviewed AMCAS, read the morning paper, talked to a first-year student"
"Went to the IUSM site, went over AMCAS, talked to students who had already interviewed there."
"SDN, reviewed competencies and core values, school website"
"SDN, www.medicine.iu.edu, learn the competencies/values, peers"
"Practice interviews with friends and professors."
"Read over the AMCAS and kept up with current events and issues in medicine. Read through SDN feedback also."
"Went through the StudentDoctor.net questions, talked with friends who had already interviewed, reviewed my high school & college activities/SAT scores/HS GPA (none of these were ever discussed)"
"SDN, IU website."
"Studentdoc, school website, talking to friends who have interviewed."
"IU Med School website was very helpful. I read lots of other StudentDoctor.net reviews, but I was not asked ONE SINGLE QUESTION that was listed on this website. (So don't be fooled... be prepared for anything...). I also read "Health Care Meltdown" by Rober LeBow before the interview... this book was IMMENSELY helpful in putting some current challenges of the U.S. Health Care system into context."
"Reviewed IU website, brochures, and other info; googled interview questions; studentdoctor.net"
"Reviewing my file, studentdoctor.net, the school's general information"
"SDN. Online data."
"Web site, other student, brochures, etc."
"read the website, personal statement, and SDN"
"SDN (!!!!!!!), IU Website, CNN, Peers who had interviewed"
"reading SDN, thinking about my motivations"
"SDN, IU website"
"SDN, IUSM website, re-read personal statement, IUSM brochure, practice questions"
"SDN Feedback Brochure from School"
"looked at SDN questions (IU interviewers are very consistent in the questions they ask), IU med school website"
"Read over the website, a book on medical schools, my application, and many issues of Time magazine (hey, it helps to know about the world)."
"Looked at the school's website and brochures, anticipated interview questions, read over AMCAS application"
"Ieviewd AMCAS and reviewd secondary application."
"read over AMCAS, mock interviews, read over other essays I've written, and SDN"
"Reviewed ethical issues in medicine, SDN, school's career center website, IU's website"
"AMCAS application, SDN interview feedbacks, interview workshop, mock interview"
"Read curriculum info, watched CNN, read AMCAS application"
"I reviewed my AMCAS application and information about IU."
"read sdn, went over amcas app stuff, breathed deeply"
"Read school site, looked over my AMCAS application, re-read my research papers"
"Read SDN, AMCAS app, school website"
"school's website, Admissions Ambassadors website, studentdoctor.net"
"sdn,msar, amcas app"
"SDN, looked over school materials, MSAR, and my AMCAS"
"Read SDN, School Lit, talked with people, read my application"
"SDN, went over common questions, school's website"
"Read through my AMCAS application, the secondary essays I wrote for other schools and current topics."
"I browsed the SDN and IU websites and did an informal mock interview"
"AMCAS,SDN, AND ENOUGH REST"
"SDN, school's website, read through my app"
"I just tried to be prepared for any basic questions they might ask, I looked at this site for questions other people had been asked, and I tried to be relaxed."
"read the website and my AMCAS app"
"This site, school's website"
"SDN, AMCAS, practiced answering common questions"
"Read up on IU, looked over their website, looked over this website."
"looked on here at posted feedback, looked at the school website, read over my AMCAS application, prepared answers to anticipated/common questions"
"IU website, read over my application, mock interview"
"Read feedback here, and read over the website."
"Read other interview experiences on SDN and read my primary app"
"AMCAS ID, IU website,Studentdoctor.net,"
"prepared answers for common questions, looked at the IUSM website"
"SDN, looked at my AAMC application, prepped common questions asked, and looked at their website."
"Read this website, looked over the school's website (take a look at IU's "Nine Competencies" portion of their curriculum)."
"SDN, read AMCAS app and essays from other apps, read about the school"
"nothing really"
"this website, amcas, iu website, caught up on news"
"Looked at interview feedback, read my AMCAS application, mock interview."
"read website, reviewed amcas, meditated"
"Read AMCAS, Read ?'s off this site, read over the cirriculum on the IU website"
"Read over my app, read Time magazine, SDN"
"Read SDN, read up on some current medical issues, just relaxed."
"Read IU brochure and website; thought about how I would answer questions that were bound to come up like "why medicine" and "why IU.""
"Looked at the school website, went through the aamc 31 questions I wish I had asked list. Went over my answers for common questions"
"This site, went over other standard questions, and extensively searched Indiana website.....They were pretty impressed with the "in-depth" questions I was asking about curriculum and school."
"school website SDN"
"Went over my application. Surfed IU's website for information. "
"Read this site."
"Usual"
"Read interview feedback on Student Doctor Network, University's website and printed bulletin."
"read my honors thesis, amcas application, this site, tried to have answers to all questions posted here. "
"internet, SDN, IU alumni, friends"
"SDN website, IUPUI Brochure."
"SDN, IUSM Website extensively, talked to current students, prepred questions to ask, watched the news, read two books, and focused on being out going."
"This website and my AMCAS application"
"Read SDN, school website, read through standard questions."
"SDN, IUSOM website"
"I tried like crazy for over 2 hours to get thru Indianapolis traffic/construction! Between the construction and the wrecks on the interstate, I was doomed from the beginning. (typical day in Indy)"
"Visited IU's website, SDN..."
"Reread AMCAS application."
"I really didn't prepare for this one"
"I read their website and compared it with other schools and I read this site."
"I read views from other interviews."
"Student Doctor website, IU's website reread my AMCAS"
"Reread amcas essay, read the websites, read the catalogue."
"SDN, reviewed common interview questions"
"Make sure you know what the cureent trends in medicine are. Go through AMCAS, IUSM website, etc........"
"read AMCAS, read their website, SDN"
"I didn't prepare at all."
"IU website, SDN, reviewed my AMCAS "
"Read this site and school's website. Read up on their campuses and curriculum."
"SDN, kept up on current events, IU's website"
"made up some business cards, got a leather folder to write questions in, read the website, brochures, etc."
"Read the information sent to me by the school, looked at school's website, reviewed AMCAS application, talked to othre friends who had already interivewed at IU."
"Looked on feedback site, reviewed my application for strong points, worked on explaining my GPA, read their website."
"This site, school's site"
"Relax"
"SDN"
"Predental.com questions"
"read over AMCAS, looked at professors that I would be intersting reasearching with."
"caught up on current events in both the world and in the medical field, reviewed questions that other applicants had been asked at IU"
"Read AMCAS and their website."
"Drank beers with dad and thought about stuff"
"read the school's website, read this site, read over my AMCAS."
"read sdn, read up about health care although i was never asked about it"
"Talking to friends who'd already interviewed at IU; this website; went over my AMCAS and all high school activities"
"Read this site and current issues"
"read my application and any info i could find on school"
"Browsed their website."
"read their online brochure, read interview feedback"
"Reread my file and essays. "
"I read over other feedback about their interviews and read information about the school"
"Looked at their website."
"Re-read my application and essay and make sure everything was still accurate."
"Not much.....read the SF chronicle that I brought with me on my flight and I watched CNN in the morning as I was getting dressed for the interview. However, I did not get a single question abotu current events. Go figure."
"Read the school info online and read over my AMCAS app."
"Browsed the IU internet site and read tips on the internet from other students. "
"Read my application. Kept current with the news."
"read IU website, read over amcas. went to the campus the day before to check things out."
"read over amcas"
"Interviewers were very friendly."
"Very nice and personable interviewers"
"Everyone was extremely kind and transparent. The interview itself was very conversational and the first thing my interviewer did was introduce themselves in-depth and do some ice breakers. Overall, very kind people at the admissions committee."
"The interview was extremely nice. She had very open body language, and was very receptive of every answer that I gave."
"The student panel was an M1, M2, and M3 so you had many perspectives. They also emphasized that they wanted this to be as stress free as possible, and they are really trying to see if you are a "normal" person and can get along with others"
"Honesty of the interviewers"
"Both interviewers gave fantastic, in-depth answers to my questions about the school."
"Both interviewers were very warm and welcoming."
"Facilities, community of the school."
"They were nice."
"Student interactions and feedback."
"Notre Dame Campus, Research connection, student clinic."
"Most people were friendly"
"I very much like their new curriculum setup. Especially making the first 2 years pass/fail to reduce stress levels and competition between peers."
"Lax of interviewers. They wanted to get to know me."
"The faculty were friendly and the medical students at the regional campus really enjoyed being there."
"The facilities and the camaraderie between the faculty/staff and the students."
"Curriculum, Interviewers were nice, Other students on panel (and otherwise) were friendly as well."
"The interviewers, the regional campus' dean, a community physician, and a lecturer, were very kind and answered many questions that I had. The dean was also very honest about how difficult classes were and that many professors might try to put students "on the spot" which is stressful, but helps them learn material effectively. Also, I love the fact that I can choose among nine campuses, all of which have different benefits."
"Nothing. Unbelievably atrocious interview experience. This school should be ashamed of its admissions process. I am absolutely disgusted by their treatment of pre-medical students during the interview day. I'm sure my experience would have been completely different had I been interviewed by a decent, reasonable, intelligent person. Unfortunately that was not the case. Good luck everyone."
"Facilities were all nice and new"
"Everyone was very friendly and laid back."
"The opportunity to have many different experiences within one school because of all the regional campuses."
"Amount of locations."
"Interviewers themselves"
"Interview day was short and sweet."
"My interviewer was extremely friendly and made me feel comfortable right away. I'd heard that IU has pretty relaxed interviews, but everyone says it depends on your interviewer. My interviewer was phenomenal and conducted a very conversational interview. I was really relaxed, and she talked to me too (instead of just firing questions at me with no feedback). I was very impressed with my interviewer. Also, the med students there were really friendly and mingled with us, answering questions and giving us advice/insight. They were extremely helpful and candid."
"The science building was very nice and the medical students all seemed really happy and nice."
"Getting to see the campus, Friendly interviewers and staff, Gained a lot of valuable info from the sessions"
"Everyone is friendly, the facilities are huge and nice, there are many campus options"
"The attitude and enthusiasm of the interviewer. Intrigued by the regional campuses."
"the students that spoke at the info session had a lot of positive things to say about their experiences, which was nice."
"My interviewer was nice and attentive even after being on call all night!"
"The current students."
"The interview was very laid back, very conversational. My interviewers were more interested in getting to know me than in making the interview difficult."
"Very laid back, very nice interview, big campus full of medical facilities"
"Interviewer was an MSIV and extreeemly friendly. My faculty interviewer barely spoke."
"my interviewers were really open and chatty. I felt comfortable the whole time."
"Compared to other interviews I have had, this interview was great. It was really just a conversation and they both had read my file and were prepared to ask me insightful questions."
"The size of the campus and amount of resources available for students"
"The whole day was very laid back."
"Very conversational type interview, good campus."
"All of their hospitals were, literally, on campus. Also, I stayed with a student host and he had nothing but great things to say about the school. Above all, what was really impressive is that you can select which campus you want to attend. IUSM has 1 main campus is Indy, and 8 satellite campuses throughout the state. Each campus constructs their curriculum off the same format, but each campus have differences when teaching the material. In general, Indy campus is more problem-based learning, while South Bend is more group oriented (group base learning). "
"facilities and Riley hospital were great. the student tour guide was enthusiastic"
"Diversity of teaching and learning methods. Nice facilities. Many hospitals on location. Financial Aid rep was very helpful and straightforward. "
"VERY laid back interview, non-stressed, totally casual"
"Interview was friendly. More of a conversation."
"Amount of extracurricular activities including trips to underserved countries through the school"
"I live in Indy, so the location is great"
"numerous affiliate hospitals and the excellent board scores at all campuses. The med students, even the random ones we talked to on our tour, seemed to like the school a lot."
"The interviewers were very passionate about their jobs, and were also very encouraging."
"Facilities, students, my host, board scores"
"State-of-the art facilities; very welcoming staff, faculty, and students. "
"Interview format was VERY informal. It felt more like a conversation than an interview!"
"The interview was very low-stress and had a conversational feel. My interviewer was friendly and seemed interested in what I had to say."
"Great hospitals all very close to the campus or on campus"
"The admissions staff and current medical student guides were very friendly and helpful."
"the down-to-earth students (the majority) and faculty"
"the chihuly in the lobby; how friendly the docs, staff, and residents were"
"The school is affiliated with a lot of hospitals! The interviewers were really nice, and they were genuinely interested in me."
"Absolutely great campus area, it's hard to find an area with so many highly rated hospitals all together"
"The interview itself went well. The tour was OK, though the group was around 15 people so sometimes it was hard to hear the med student."
"The buildings are all very new and the med students were all nice except for the one interviewing me (well i'm sure he is nice too, just not professional)"
"Medical students you met."
"Lots of hospitals, people were all friendly, current students all had positive things to say."
"the number of hospitals affiliated with the school"
"Hmm good question..lol jk...its a good school, and the core competencies thingy is a step in the right direction. Cost of living is really cheap in Indianapolis The fin. aid session was kinda long in my opinion...but everything else was nice n quick! Thats how I love it. Seems to be lots of medical opportunities in the city. And yea, the students do amazing on their Step 1..."
"The facilities are awesome, Indy is a perfect city (good things to do without the crazy traffic and crime of other large cities), IU's amazing board score and match stats"
"The facilities were all relatively new, there was construction going on"
"Everyone was VERY friendly. The interviewers were extraordinarily nice.."
"The interviewer was super friendly and laid back. Everyone I encountered was very nice."
"The facilities were really nice."
"Hearing about the competency based curriculum and seeing the facilities. "
"nothing"
"The amount of facilities close to campus, and the enthusiasm of the staff."
"The campus is pretty nice and compact, which I find nice since it's not directly IN the city. There are some amazing hospitals that you would get to be a part of as well."
"Most of the students I met were very nice, and the school is so big, so there are soooo many different opportunities and places to learn and rotate."
"The faculty were all very friendly and helpful. The students seemed to really enjoy going to school here. Overall it seemed as though everyone was very approachable. "
"The facilities and the wide array of options for rotations and the proximity of all the hospitals. The friendliness of the students was almost surprising. They were very helpful and encouraging."
"The interviewers seemed friendly and genuinely interested in what I had to say. We had lunch with three med students if different years, and we could ask them anything about IU, med school, life as a medical student, residencies, etc. "
"The facilities and the enthusiasm everyone has about the Kenya program."
"although the student body was large, it was very tight-knit"
"The interviewer put me at ease"
"Everyone was really friendly. The tour guides were enthusiastic. Their facilities are great. They had a record-high USMLE pass rate for this past year's second year students. They just got streaming video to re-watch lectures online."
"The facilities are awesome. Riley's hospital is wonderful. The clinical experience seems very worthwhile because your exposed to many different hospital settings right on campus. "
"I enjoyed the amenities available to students (student center, nice medical science building). Wide range of opportunities to rotate through several excellent hospitals."
"The faculty was really interested in the prospect of meeting and educating new students. It seemed like they take a lot of pride in making sure their students are well prepared for residencies and medical careers."
"Lance Armstrong was treated there, 6 hospitals on campus, two level-1 trauma centers, anatomy lab"
"Students and faculty are very enthusiastic about the school. "
"Everyone I talked to seemed really nice. I like the hospitals, especially Riley, and how close they are to campus. I liked that they focus on the human aspect of medicine...I don't think the competencies will actually teach people to be compassionate, but it's nice to know that they think it's important. "
"It is a very big school (3rd largest medical school in USA). There are many hospitals located within the school and nearby."
"The students were friendly and very realistic. They were positive about the school and gave honest and helpful advice. Dr. Beckman was friendly, professional, and interested in me as a person. I really feel that he is an advocate for his prospective students."
"The facilities are certainly great; most of them are quite new, the school is expanding in size. The students that I met there are very enthusiastic about the school."
"Students were really enthusiastic, and my interviewers were really laid back and joking around during my interview. My interview did not seem like it was 45 min long at all. "
"Campus, facilities, "
"the facilities, students' opinions"
" Indianapolis: city is tight! Great restaurants and mall area; all entertainment is within walking distance of campus (if you're not lazy); there's a Shula's (best cheesecake ever). Riley is lovely - I got to meet with an endocrinologist the night before my interview; he gave me a tour of the clinics/neonatal ward/etc.; specialty departments at least at Riley seem to have NO understaffing problems. IU: expanding...eventually will be largest medical campus in U.S. Facilities, with exeption of the cadaver lab, are top notch, including library system. The ''skywalk to everywhere'' is nice. THE most organized MD/MBA program I've encountered is at IU. Personnel/interviewers: Friendly. Very nice receptionist in the microbio dept. Interviewers were a couple of jokesters...good attitudes, kept it relaxed, no complaints at all."
"My interviewer was one of the coolest guys I've ever met. The Indy campus is an impressive facility, especially if you're interested in pediatrics since Riley is right there."
"The facilities are amazing. They are not only brand new, but new ones and improvements to old are under construction now."
" The facilities of the school are awesome. "
"My interviewer was really, really nice; not scary or mean or anything."
"the students were helpful and encouraging. i interviewed with dr beckman and he was one of the friendliest people i have ever met. it was just a good atmosphere."
"Facilities were amazing, people were very friendly, med students were very helpful"
"The facilities were beautiful and well equipt. The student giving the tour was very excited about IUSM."
"The enthusiasm and encouragement of the current students."
"The friendliness of the students and staff, including those not actively involved in the interview day activities."
"IU Medical Center, good resources available for medical students (5 hospitals), students seemed enthusiastic and happy to be there."
"admissions staff were friendly and the students were down to earth and helpful."
"Facilities are really nice/new. Other interviewees seemed pretty cool."
"everyone was pretty friendly and atmosphere was super low stress"
"There is a lot of construction and new building on campus including clinics, research buildings, hospitals, ect. I also like how there are so many hosptials in close proximity to the campus. Lastly, the people at IU are super nice. They have that welcoming midwestern attitutde. "
"facilities and "
"Students were all very nice and outgoing and the facilities were impressive (minus the construction)"
"Everyone was very friendly and willing to answer questions. There were a lot of medical students around willing to give their opinion and answer anything."
"All of the students were really nice and said they loved IU."
"Nice facilities Good cell reception"
"Growing campus, new facilities, growing reputation of the school."
"All the buildings seem new. School is in the city but there is actually a campus with grass."
"The number of facilities and the location of the campus"
"The facilities and the clinical approach."
"the number of hospitals available for clinical practice to MD students"
"The students seemed to love it there."
"Amount of facilities and opportunities"
"the changes and improvements the school is making in all areas"
"The facilities, positive student attitude, all the new buildings on campus."
"every student there loved the program. the doctors who interviewed me were extremely friendly and positive."
"Facilities were very nice and close proximity of the hospitals"
"The students were all really enthusiastic and the facilites were really nice- alot of different hospitals in one area."
"the students were very enthusiastic about iu, there are many hospitals around the medical school campus"
"Enthusiasm of the med students, great facilities, kindness of interviewers."
"It is really cool that there are 4 hospitals within about 100 yds of eachother on the campus"
"The curriculum, student satisfaction/happiness, the clinical training, the hospitals and how close they all were to campus"
"The facilities and hospitals were fabulous and very up to date. The students were helpful in answering questions and were interested in trying to answer them."
"Everyone was very helpful and welcoming. The facilities were great and the students seemed to be happy and non-competitive."
"All the resources the school has to offer, the students all seemed to really like IUSM, nice facilities."
"Facilities"
"So many hospitals so close together with a lot of opportunities."
"I liked the campus. Very new facilities."
"The facilities were very nice."
"The admissions committee members that we met were very friendly and helped me relax."
"The diversity of students that were interviewing."
"All the facilities are very nice, all the students I interacted with were very willing to answer questions. There was a reception for underrepresented minority students that was very nice."
"Every student I spoke with was VERY positive about the school. The interview was with a physician, in a casual atmosphere. There is a large focus on expanding IU's research capability, which should increase the prestige of the institution in the near future."
"Enthusiasm of the students. Most that I met were third year and just beginning clinical rotations. They absoluetly love it. Very inspiring."
"The resources the school had and their overall program offering"
"The Indianapolis campus is large and has lots of nice facilities."
"I loved how close the hospitals are to the campus."
"Everything looks new and people are very friendly"
"The facilities"
"My two interviewers seemed like they were caring, and took time to talk about a lot of things that went on in my life outside of numbers."
"number of hospitals"
"The hospitals, many opportunities for research"
"The effort everyone made to help you feel welcome and at ease at a stressful time. "
"the many hospitals on campus (provides outstanding clinical experience) and community outreach programs in Indianapolis"
"My interviewer was VERY nice, and since I am a minority, I got to meet with other minorities and everyone was really cool. Students came to talk to us and most seemed like they really liked it."
"The school and its facilities seem top-notch. Lots of famous people have either worked there or were treated there. The facilities are newly remodeled. The hospitals and campus impressed me as well."
"Many hospitals in a small area. Indianapolis is nicer than I remember it. Facilities looked nice and updated."
"The med students and their enthusiasm about the school."
"The admissions staff and my interviewer were all warm, friendly people. The Indianapolis campus is surrounded by hospitals, most of which are within reasonable walking distance from the medical school."
"the extensive campus"
"The five hospitals they have on campus and the city of Indianapolis."
"My interviewer was very friendly and the day went very smoothly."
"the relationship with Riley Children's Hospital and the Wishard hospital - also the students were really nice"
"The five hospitals all right on campus. Tour guide was very positive about her experience."
"It was really laid back"
"Students seemed really happy, interviewing doc was really nice, really easy to talk to, the group of hospitals on the campus are outstanding"
"number of hospitals in close proximity to the school, international based programs for fourth year students."
"The facilities, the competency program"
"Students, my interviewer, the facilities, the fact that James D Watson went there and there's a super cool glass sculpture."
"The facilities and the students"
"I really did not expect the facilities to be that nice, especially comparing to my other interviews. Going to the Indianapolis campus would be pretty nice I think."
"The nine competencies, the facility, the enthusiastic welcome, and the amability of everyone on campus"
"STUDENT ATTITUDE, SUPPORTIVE ENVIRONMENT,GREAT FACULTY AND SCHOOL TRADITION, HOSPITAL SYSTEM.MY INTERVIEWERS MADE ME FEEL AT EASE."
"Location in a beautiful part of Indy, great facilities and modern technology, curriculum"
"There was the opportunity to talk to current students and they were really nice and answered any questions we had for them. From questions about the classes, the application process, the social life, anything."
"students seemed well-adjusted, facilities are great"
"the laid back attitude, nice facilities."
"I enjoyed talking with my interviewer and all of the staff were very helpful. I am excited about the option of satellite campuses (though my first choice is Indy) and how they all have something different to offer."
"Everyone was very nice, the school seems to be very modern and updated, and the interview was very conversational."
"The facilities were really nice, I was impressed with the competency-based curriculum and the progressive, forward-thinking nature of Indiana. I also liked the connectedness of the hospitals."
"Everything was very laid back. The interviewer went out of his way to try and make me feel comfortable. It was just like chatting with someone in their office for a little while. "
"The Indianapolis campus is affiliated with many impressive hospitals, giving great teaching potential. The students seem happy at IU and indicated that there is a cooperative atmosphere. The professor I interviewed with was very impressive. It was not stressful, but rather conversational. "
"The campus is huge, and they are affiliated with so many hospitals."
"how easy my interviewer was....no hard questions at all"
"The Interview! I had the greatest, most laid back interviewers who managed to grill me without making me sweat."
"progressive curriculum, impressive facilities"
"The facilities were very new and everything is online from lectures to histology slides."
"Very nice facilities/buildings/campus grounds. I like the fact that the school offers a monorail between different hospitals--makes it easier if you are doing your residency in Indianapolis. Faculty and students were very nice and helpful. Interviewers tried hard to make me feel comfortable and welcome. The pediatric hospital at IU is supposed to be #1 in the nation. "
"the exposure students can get because of having a V.A., private, county, and children's hospital. IU is doing a lot of building and improving, esp. with research facilities, but also in the anatomy lab. they also have a great financial aid office."
"facilities were nicer than i thought they would be."
"plasma screen tv's in anatomy labs, campus was nice"
"The competency based curriculum."
"The school is on there way up. Their facilites in biophysics and biochemistry were amazing. The state clearly is putting a lot of money into the program."
"The new integration of IU's 9 competencies in their program."
"The students were extremely friendly and excited to be at IU. Also, the close proximity of a variety of hospitals provides many clinical opportunities. They are also building more research facilities in a push to become one of the top med schools. Also they have opportunities to go to Kenya!!"
"The school is beautiful. They're trying to become one of the top ten med schools by 2010, so they're constantly making improvements."
"IU SOM in Indianapolis has some very nice facilities, and I didn't know there were so many hospitals right next to the med school campus. The students seemed nice and friendly, but all they talked about was medicine--no outside interests. "
"Relaxed atmosphere but still professional. Everyone was nice and helpful. I thought the 1/2 hour information session on the school and the optional financial aid information sessions were nice. I felt like they were trying to sell the school to us, not that we had to sell ourselves to them. "
"Very laid back atmosphere, nine campuses to choose from."
"students seemed very friendly and relaxed. Campus atomosphere was inviting."
"The student hosts were friendly, and so was the Admissions Office staff"
"The many campuses."
"not much"
"All of the students I encountered were virtually ecstatic about attending this school. The financial aid director was extremely informative and very respected by the students."
"the campus is technologically superior to many others."
"facilities, affiliated hospitals, this tram system between hospitals, "
"The medical students up there were very helpful with information about IU....both good and bad! But they seemed to be proud of their school though."
"The professionalism and confidence of the faculty. The size of the campus and the facilities were also outstanding."
"The Interviewers; the friendliness of the staff and the candor of the students."
"Number of hospitals in area; attitude of students and staff; facilities; most everything."
"Staff and interviewers were very friendly-established a low stress environment-don't sweat this one"
"Nothing--I left right after I interviewed."
"The facilities were great! "
"VERY friendly staff. Positive student feedback. Pleasant atmosphere and nice facilities."
"I can't stress enough how much I enjoyed this interview. The doctors that interviewed me were both extremely animated and compassionate people. They were both really interested in who I was and what makes me tick as a person. It felt pretty good also to have them tell me they hoped I would come to IU! It was very nice to feel that they were trying to sell me on the school."
"This was my first interview and I was really nervous, but my interviewer made me feel really comfortable and really listened to what I had to say."
"My interviewer was incredibly friendly!"
"Overall atmosphere on campus. People seemed happy to be there."
"The facilities are awesome. The students are happy. The note-taking service is also great."
"Everyone is really friendly, and the staff really does a good job of trying to convince you to attend the school. The students seem to be happy."
"Fantastic buildings in the campus. Good facilities for students. "
"the students i met were very friendly and down to earth. none of them seemed really stressed out and they were all eager to meet the interviewees"
"The friendliness of the interviewers. How well maintained the school is and the facilities offered to students. You have a choice of nine different campuses for you first two years."
"Everyone was very enthusiastic about the school from the admissions officers to the students to the interviewers. As an in-state student, I thought that I would not be impressed by IU. I was actually feeling mostly apathetic on the drive to the interview. Instead I found myself thinking that I could really see myself as a student. The international and research opportunities for students are outstanding. I also met several other interview candidates that I could really see as my future classmates. "
"EXCELLENT resources and facilities. It is a large institution with tons of cutting edge medical and scientific programs. I'm not interested in research at all but it's neat to have all of that information and technology available. Campus is really nice, have their own hospital and easy access to others nearby."
"Laid back students, very nice faculty. Opportunities abroad early on in places like Kenya!!!"
"the student lunch was sweet---they even tried to sneak us in the anatomy lab, but they change the codes every year :) very professional, organized, and low stress"
"The facilities are second to none! Plus, Indianapolis has got to be one of the greatest cities around."
"It was my first interview, so I was just stoked that everyone was so friendly and doing so much to welcome me. Also, other applicants seem to be great people. Facilities were fantastic, and though it's in the Midwest, Indy isn't shut off from civilization."
"The hospitals surrounding the school seemed well-developed and very busy. In addition, the student who ate lunch with us was awesome. He was very positive."
"Impressive growth! All the students seemed happy! "
"Seems like a nice safe city."
"The relaxed atomsphere, the nice people who interviewed me"
"How much was being built around the campus. Lots of funding coming in now and over the next couple years. The research is already really good (lots of projects involved with Purdue and their new Biomedical engineering department) and is only going to get better. The people are really nice, too."
"Indianapolis is a nice smaller city than other cities and is very clean."
"Well, I had been there before but I love how all of the hospitals (except Methodist) are centrally located in Indy."
"The interviewer seemed to try and understand who I was and what I could bring to thier school."
"The people were SOOO NICE!!! The interview was not stressful at all, and I felt like they were really trying to get to know me."
"the curriculum has a lot to offer in terms of meeting your specific learning style. they have a campus that has lecture from 9-3 or a campus that has lecture from 10-noon, small groups, every sort of style--but it does mean that your class (which is rather large) gets split up"
"The laid back atmosphere and all the great hospitals right on campus"
"The number of hospitals available to students and opportunities for employment there in your third and fourth years."
"students were laid back, fascilitates were great and the interviewers were amazingly nice"
"The campus is clean and many buildings are either new or newly renovated. The new monorail system is also amazing (when it's complete in a few months)."
"the willingness of the students to be sent to one of 9 regional campuses"
"The campus is very nice (compared to my home school) and the student were very helpful. They had things plannedl for all day (a meeting with everybody at lunch, financial aid meeting, group lunches with students (I had ~6interviewees and 2 med students), they provide breakfast and lunch, and campus tours. It was nice to meet the other students being interviewed."
"The students seemed pretty laid-back for med students. I didn't meet even one anal-retentive person. "
"There is alot of construction which means new and modern facilities are being built. "
"I enjoyed walking around Riley Hospital because I was amused by the environment of the children's hospital. I have never seen a barney or a curious george that huge. I was also amused by the fact that they are constructing a monorail to connect their hospitals. The only monorail I have ridden is at Disneyland."
"The facilities were amazing. There are so many associated hospitals near the school."
"All the students seemed very happy and not too stressed out."
"The huge investment in capital that is being undertaken. Construction going on all over campus. Plus, they're building a monorail!"
"newer facilities. Indy is a pretty good place to live."
"hospitals...also, they're building a monorail!"
"Almost too informal, did not have a chance to talk about myself that much."
"Not much to be honest. There were a lot of individuals interviewing at once, so questions were quite difficult to ask during the student and financial aid panels."
"The interview showed up 10 minutes late to the interview, and left about 10 minutes early. She asked standard questions off of a piece of paper, and asked absolutely nothing about me, my hobbies, or my application that was not written for her to ask. That aspect felt very impersonal."
"Wasn't too conversational. Seemed like they had a list of questions to go through."
"The virtual interview day schedule felt disjointed"
"They asked a standard set of questions for all applicants. I didn't get asked any specific questions about me or from my application."
"The virtual interview day could've used a general information session."
"There was too much down time and the financial aid session was boring."
"Interviewers seemed uninterested in the interview."
"The interviewer didn't seem like she cared about me. There were no follow-up questions based off what I said; it was not a 'conversation.' It's different from a lot of other med school interviews in that way. It almost seemed that my interviewer was reading off a script"
"They did not wanted to be there. The interviewers seem like they did not care one bit about my application/experience and just care about the stats"
"Essentially one building, not a huge amount of resources, and lack of opportunities to mix with other professional students."
"One interviewer was doodling and seemed uninterested. Had doodles prior to coming into the room. Definitely unprofessional..."
"Didn't have enough time to get through the full financial aid presentation which was a shame because the guy really knew his stuff and had some excellent content in the slides. Would have loved to hear his full presentation."
"Actually, one of the interviewers didn't seem to care to be there. But he wasn't a jerk thankfully!"
"No parking permits on interview day."
"How spread out the facilities were at this particular regional campus."
What is one of the specific questions they asked you (question 1)?