Medical School Interview Questions
Medical School Interview Questions
Medical School Interview Questions
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The Ohio State University College of Medicine Interview ...................................................................... 43
The Ohio State University School of Occupational Therapy ................................................................... 44
The Ohio State University School of Optometry..................................................................................... 45
Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine ................................................................................................. 46
University of Arizona College of Medicine .............................................................................................. 47
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine .......................................................................................... 48
University of the Cumberlands—Physician Assistant Program .............................................................. 49
University of Dayton – Physical Therapy School ..................................................................................... 50
University of Delaware............................................................................................................................ 51
University of Illinois College of Medicine................................................................................................ 52
University of Iowa School of Medicine ................................................................................................... 53
University of Louisville Medical School................................................................................................... 55
University of Michigan Medical School Interview .................................................................................. 56
University of North Carolina Medical School .......................................................................................... 58
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine .......................................................................................... 59
University of South Carolina SOM (Columbia) ........................................................................................ 60
University of Toledo ................................................................................................................................ 61
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences ........................................................................... 62
University of Wisconsin .......................................................................................................................... 63
Virginia Commonwealth University ........................................................................................................ 64
Washington State University – Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine........................................................ 65
Washington University in St. Louis ......................................................................................................... 66
West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine ...................................................................................... 67
Wisconsin Academy of Rural Medicine (WARM) .................................................................................... 69
Wright State University Boonshoft SOM ................................................................................................ 70
Multiple Mini Interview Format .................................................................................................................. 74
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 74
Typical Format......................................................................................................................................... 74
Preparation ............................................................................................................................................. 74
Practice MMI Questions.......................................................................................................................... 75
Allied Health/PA Interview Questions ........................................................................................................ 79
Specific Location Interviews.................................................................................................................... 81
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Additional Resources .................................................................................................................................. 82
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Collected Interview Questions
Walking into an interview situation can be stressful, especially when your performance can determine
whether you get into your #1 choice for medical school. You can’t control what questions you will be
asked, but you can prepare answers for the most common types of interview questions. If you got an
invitation to interview for med school, the admissions panel already knows that you’re smart – they are
looking for indications that you have the character, compassion, and personality to make an excellent
physician.
In this manual, we have compiled together reports from Cedarville students about the admissions
interview process and questions from different medical schools across the country. The more informed
you are about how different medical schools conduct their admissions interviews, the more confident
you will be. Here is how you can prepare:
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Gradschool.about.com
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9. If you could do anything different in your education, what would you do?
10. Where else are you applying?
11. Have you been accepted anywhere?
12. What is your first choice?
13. Tell me about yourself.
14. What do you do in your spare time?
15. How did you get here?
16. Why would you be a good doctor?
17. What are your strengths?
18. What do you feel are the most important qualities in being a good doctor?
19. What are your hobbies?
20. Are you a leader or a follower? Why?
21. What exposure have you had to the medical profession?
22. If something happened where the world didn’t need medicine anymore, what would you
do? (Psychology research or any other health profession is off limit)
23. What are you most excited for and most nervous about for Medical School?
24. Why did you choose Cedarville University?
25. What are you afraid of seeing in medicine?
26. What is something that you are excited about learning in Medical School?
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Allied Health Interview Questions
1. We’ve never heard of Cedarville University; all we know is that it is a small church-related
school. Why, of all the schools in Ohio, did you decide to attend there?
2. What contribution do you think you can make it to the (PA, PT, OT) profession?
3. What skills do you have that will make you a good clinician? What weaknesses do you have?
4. Is there a particular patient population you’d most like to work with? Why this one?
5. What will you do next year if you are not admitted to a professional program for 2013-14?
6. Who have been your “role models”? How have they influenced you?
7. Relate or describe a situation you saw, or was part of in your clinical observation/patient contact
experience that gave you assurance that health care was the profession you would like to be a
part of?
8. Explain how you would handle the “difficult” or “noncompliant” patient. For example, the one
who does not want to get up and do PT exercises a couple of days after hip replacement,
because “it hurts”; or the patient won’t take his/her BP medication regularly because they
“don’t feel bad”.
9. Why have you selected this particular program as one to which you are applying?
10. Projections are gloomy for the future of Medicare; large amounts are spent on procedures and
physical therapy for persons in their 70s and 80s. Some suggest that government supported
therapies should have a “cut off” age of perhaps 70, since those folk are no longer working and
don’t “need” rehabilitative treatments. What is your position?
11. What sort of service activities have you been part of? What do you believe you gained from
those experiences?
12. What has been your greatest disappointment thus far in life? How has (or did) it affect you?
13. Students like yourself have track records of “success” in academics, and generally in other areas
as well; how do you deal with not doing so well at something? (or how do you think you would
deal with failing an exam, or some similar shortcoming.)
14. What is your greatest achievement thus far in life? How has (or did) it affect you?
15. You’ve done your undergraduate work at a relatively small, conservative college, where there
was little cultural or ethnic diversity. Tell us how you will function in an urban, inner-city
environment, and deal with a very culturally diverse population?
16. Suppose you are a senior PT, PA, or OT student, serving as a team leader for a student-staffed
out-patient clinic. One of the first year students reports for clinic with a scraggly goatee and
several facial piercings. How would you react to his appearance? Would you say anything to him
about it? Why, or why not?
17. What skills or strengths do you possess that will make you a good PT/PA/OT?
18. What are your weaknesses?
19. What leadership opportunities/roles have you had in college? What did you learn from those
experiences?
20. Graduate study in the health fields is intense and there are stressful times. How do you handle
stress?
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21. There are many health care fields; what led you to choose this one (PT, PA, OT)?
22. Have you, or your family, had any personal experience with clinicians in the field you’ve chosen?
Tell us about that experience.
23. What does “professionalism” mean to you? Is it different in any way for health care providers
than for those in other kinds of work?
24. Suppose you perceive that a preceptor for one of your clinical rotations has given you a below-
average evaluation because of your gender, appearance, ethnicity, or some similar reason. How
would you deal with that?
25. How do you handle conflict or disagreement with a fellow student, teammate, and colleague?
26. Suppose you know that one of your classmates cheated on an exam; what would you do?
27. I see you’ve been a college athlete; what did you learn or gain from the experience?
28. What do you anticipate will be the biggest challenge or “hurdle” you will need to overcome in
your graduate program?
29. Suppose you are accepted to a program, and successfully complete it, passing Boards, etc. What
would you most like to be doing ten years from now?
30. If you marry in the next few years, and have a family, how will you manage family and practice
responsibilities?
31. For PA-bound students: You have an outstanding academic record; tell us why you want to be a
PA rather than a physician?
32. For OT-bound students: Why have you chosen Occupational Therapy rather than Physical
Therapy?
33. What changes do you believe should be made in America’s health care system? Can we afford to
provide health care for everyone? What suggestions would you make to a Senate committee if
you had the opportunity?
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Baldwin Wallace
PA Program Questions:
The first was with the program director in a group of three applicants. He let us go around and ask
questions about the program and life in Cleveland. It felt like he was selling the program and we were
not being evaluated. I would suggest applicants be familiar with the program and have questions ready.
Is respect earned?
Why be a PA?
What role does a PA play in the healthcare system?
What unique value is found in that role?
Why were you drawn to medicine?
Questions specific to my application and my background
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Cambridge
MPhil in Clinical Sciences (Rare Diseases) Interview. Described as “no longer than 15 minutes…an
informal discussion regarding your background and experience, and a chance for you to ask any
questions.” I was told I would interview with the directors, which I correctly surmised was Dr. Menna
Clatworthy and Dr. Mark Tosher. I had seen Dr. Clatworthy lecture on YouTube and thus expected her
accent, but I didn’t think to find a video of Dr. Toshner. He spoke with a type of Scottish accent. It would
beneficial to future interviewers to familiarize themselves with various British accents to ensure that they
can understand their interviewers.
1. Tell me about your research experience. They asked a few questions along the way, one of
which was about why one project I was working on was clinically important. My team will be
looking at a drug-herb interaction and Dr. Toshner wanted to know if the herb was commonly
used.
2. They asked why I wanted to study their MPhil specifically.
3. They asked what type of research I would want to do at Cambridge and followed up by checking
what I knew about what research Cambridge was currently doing. It helped that I had looked up
a potential supervisor who had previously supervised students for this MPhil and they
mentioned that it would be possible to work with her.
4. They asked about my future plans. I talked about my desire to earn an MD/PhD and possibly do
the PhD at Cambridge. Dr. Clatworthy directs the NIH Oxcam program, which is what I’d do, and
said that it was useful to spend a year there before starting a PhD due to the challenge of having
two Pls in two countries.
5. They made sure I knew how expensive tuition would be.
6. They asked what questions I had for them.
7. At the end, they said they had everything they needed from their perspective and said that they
just needed to go through the administrative details to accept me. They closed by saying, “We
hope to see you this autumn!”
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Campbell University
School of Osteopathic Medicine (CUSOM) interview. The interview day included presentations on
financial aid and CUSOM as a school. My interview group was large so when we received the
presentation another group of students went to do the interviews. There were three back-to-back
interviews in total and each with a different person [staff, faculty, and “wild card” (anyone affiliated with
the school and for me it was another faculty member)]. Prior to my interview day I did two mock
interviews and also looked up potential interview questions using the Student Doctor Network. This is a
great site to look up interview questions for any medical school.
Questions:
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16) So you went to Paraguay (missions trip through Global Outreach), give me examples of how your
experience in Paraguay will help you in medical school.
17) Let's say you and another student are accepted to our school however only one letter can be handed
out, how would you plead your case that you are an exemplary candidate for our school? -Hardest one
to answer for me but I think I did it well.
18) If you could go back and change your study habits, how would you change them?
19) Do you have any questions for us specifically?
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Chatham University
1. How would you describe occupational therapy to someone who is not familiar with the field?
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Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine
The format of this school was a three person panel consisting of a DO physician, a Ph.D., and a 3rd
or 4th year medical student. The environment was not too stressful. The interviewers seemed genuinely
interested in getting to know me as a person.
The interviewers had only seen my resume and my supplemental application with essays about why I
thought CCOM was the right school for me and what could I contribute to their campus.
4. Tell me about a patient that impacted you from any of your healthcare experiences
(volunteering/EMT).
6. Was there ever a time when you had disagreements or conflict with a group? What did you do in
that situation?
9. What is one thing you would want us to know about you that is not in your application or
resume?
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The Commonwealth Medical College
The interview was very informal. The interview portion consisted of two 30 minute one-on-one
interviews, one with a second year medical student and one with a PhD faculty member. It was very
conversational yet they managed to ask several questions that I had prepared for.
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Duke University
PA program interview. Format: 2 15 minutes interviews and one 30 minute team processing exercise.
1. If you had to explain a PA’s role to your 8 year old nephew in 3 sentences or less, what would
you say?
2. What does integrity mean to you?
3. What is your favorite trip you’ve ever taken and why?
4. If you could trade places with anyone for a week, who would you trade places with and why?
5. If you could be any superhero and have any superpower, which would you have?
6. Pick a patient care experience that shows where you handled an unpleasant situation well.
7. How do you handle failure?
8. What do you like to do in your free time?
9. If you couldn’t be a PA, what would your plans be?
Group Prompt- Considering how medical technology has advanced since the PA profession began, where
do you see the PA profession moving in the future? (Discuss for 20 minutes in a group of 5)
Individual
What ability (super power) would you have if you could pick one?
Why Duke?
What role do you want to play in the PA profession and its advancement?
As a PA what can you/will you do to further the profession?
How do you want to be viewed by your coworkers?
What habits do you have that will help you balance the workload of PA school?
What specific things have you done to prepare yourself to be a PA?
What motivates you in life/medicine?
Name one weakness you have.
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East Carolina Medical School – Brody School of Medicine
At East Carolina, you have 2 blind interviews (the interviewers only have your name, major, and GPA)
and 2 other people review your written application. These 4 people discuss and a decision is made. The
interviews were very conversational and the interview ran very smoothly.
Interview 1
Interview 2
BSOM holds two, back to back, interviews. The first one has a 2nd or 3rd year med student.
They asked:
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A classmate says that your answer is wrong, you know for a fact that you are right, how do you
go about letting them know that?
What four words would your siblings use to describe you?
What are your other plans should we choose to not accept you? (I think this was specific to me
because I applied early decision).
As a final note, I put in my application that I've cut hair for free for my entire undergraduate, and both of
my interviewers brought this up of their own accord. My first interviewer told me he was joking with his
wife in particular that he was going to ask me to cut his hair during our interview; it was pretty funny.
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The Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM)
1. Structure:
- Welcome to campus
- Faculty interview (had my application in front of them)
---2 faculty @ 30 minutes each
- VCOM introductory speech by admissions
- Tour of the medical school
- Lunch (provided)
- 2nd year student interview (30 min)
- Tour of Spartanburg, SC
- Financial aid presentation
2. Topics:
--Faculty:
Tell me a little about yourself.
Tell me about the research you've done.
Why do you want to come to VCOM?
Why do you want to practice medicine, especially osteopathic medicine?
What are your future goals with your medical career?
--2nd year student:
Have you ever had to deal with people unlike you?
Have you had to face some type of ethical decision?
What do you believe you possess that would make you a good fit for VCOM?
Have you had to work in a team atmosphere before and how did you handle it?
Overall, this interview was incredibly personal. They were more interested in getting to know the
interviewee than grilling them to the point of embarrassment. My suggestion: just relax, be yourself, be
ready to sell your strong points, smile, and enjoy the opportunity. They were really kind and wanted to
make a good impression as much as I wanted to make a good impression on them.
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Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine
Overall, the mock interview process prepared me well (in addition to just having Christian morals and
learning through CU classes how to think critically about ethical issues from a biblical perspective). The
interview was an MMI (that info is given online) and the questions were all medically relevant. I had 9
total interviewers. We were given 5 minutes to answer each prompt (except for one longer 13 minute
traditional interview), but it usually took me about 3 minutes to answer. All of the interviewers were
very conversational and continued to ask follow up questions until the 5 minutes were up. Additionally,
none of the MMIs included actors, they all just asked my opinion given the prompt, or how I would deal
with the given scenario.
Though the official "interview portion" was only an hour and a half long, I was at the school from 10am-
6pm attending different sessions, having lunch with students, and going on a campus tour. Though I was
on my guard all day, I am fairly certain that there was not a ton of formal evaluation happening outside
of the official interview time. The students we interacted with repeatedly assured us that they had no
say in admissions decisions and that we could relax and ask them things that we were truly wondering.
At one point, however, a faculty member had us go around the room and share an "interesting fact"
about ourselves (I definitely didn't take advantage of the opportunity as I should have, and I am not sure
if the comment was being formally evaluated or not. I was sitting in the front row and he had me go first
and it caught me off guard. I didn't think through the fact that it was an opportunity to showcase an
important part of my application until we were halfway around the room and I realized that that was
what everyone else was doing. Not a mistake I will make twice...). Other than that one comment, there
wasn't much opportunity for us to talk, we just listened to a lot of presentations.
One thing that proved valuable that I learned while interviewing with you both was how to incorporate
a list of "resume highlights" into my answers regardless of the question asked. I had a list of 7 points I
wanted to hit and I was able to hit all 7 during my 13 minute interview. I was even able to bring up
several of them during the MMI scenario questions. Thank you so much for helping me to think in this
way- I left the interview feeling confident that I had been able to communicate the things I was wanting
to highlight.
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George Washington University – PA School
From a list of various survival gear pick which you would use if stuck at sea. (and which you
wouldn't want)
Given an email written by a student to a professor regarding his/her grading policies, give me
your thoughts of the email.
What do you think about the PA profession potentially moving to doctoral degree, what affect
will it have?
Given a graph of a social groups views on body image and the rate of heart disease, evaluate the
data and give a reason why there might be a relationship.
You're a PA student in clinical rotation, tests suggest the patient most likely has cancer. When in
the room with just the patient they ask if they have cancer and if they're going to die. What do
you do?
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Hardin-Simmons University
1. (They gave me a paper clip) In 30 seconds, name some things you could do with this paper clip.
2. Have you read anything for fun lately? What was it, and what was its main message?
3. Name an uncomfortable situation that you have previously found yourself in. How did you deal
with that?
4. Many students who apply to PT school have never really failed in life. How do you deal with
failure?
5. How do you learn? What setting do you learn best in?
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Indiana University – University Indianapolis
1. How would you describe occupational therapy to someone who is not familiar with the field?
2. Describe a time in which you received help. Who helped you and how did you respond?
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Indiana University School of Medicine
I had one interview. It was between thirty and forty-five minutes long. The interviews are supposed to
consist of one faculty member and one other person (faculty or student) both interviewing the candidate.
However, only one faculty member was able to be present at my interview.
Interviewer Background:
M.D., went to medical school at IUSOM and “never left” for about 25 years. Works as an
anesthesiologist. Conservative – papers on his door blasted Obama. He asked a lot of yes/no questions
like “you did X, correct?” I thought this style of questioning required more proactive-ness on my part to
make sure my best points were shown. I also felt that he questioned me about unimportant areas of my
application (PCC, playing an instrument, how long my parents practiced).
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Another individual’s experience:
Interview started casually, but later questions felt more like an oral exam.
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Iowa State College of Veterinary Medicine
1. Tell me about a time when you had to take the lead on a project.
2. Tell me about a time when you had to think outside of the box to solve a problem.
3. Tell me about a time when you made a promise and had a hard time keeping it.
4. Tell me about a time when you encountered a problem and how did you solve it?
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Kettering Physician Assistant School
1. What was a time where something did not go your way and how did you handle it?
2. What was a time in which you were criticized and how did you handle it?
3. You have a problem in front of you…what do you do to handle that problem?
4. What’s a strength and weakness that you have?
5. What makes you stand out among these other students?
6. Tell me about yourself.
7. What do you think about attending a Christian/faith-based college?
8. Why Kettering?
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Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine
I feel that my interview at LECOM at Seton Hill went very well. It was an hour and a half group interview
with two faculty and seven interviewees. The group interview seemed to gauge listening and
communication skills more than a panel interview would have. Following are the four questions they
asked:
3. Why are you here at LECOM? (In other words, why did you apply to LECOM at Seton Hill?)
4. What scares you the most about the Problem Based Learning pathway? (PBL is the only pathway
offered at LECOM Seton Hill, although other pathways are available at their other campuses.)
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Liberty University College of Osteopathic Medicine
The interviews at LUCOM went well. I had two, one on one interviews, thirty minutes each, and I had
good feedback from both of the interviewers. It was very conversational. Here are the questions I
received:
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Lincoln Memorial University
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Lock Haven Physician Assistant Program
This was an individual interview and took about 15 minutes. The interview was conducted with 2 faculty
members and a current PA student. There was also a brief tour of the professional building and a Q&A
with current students. They also had us do a biology quiz (did not count towards admissions) and write
an essay. Overall, the entire process was extremely laid back.
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Marian University College of Osteopathic Medicine
This interview was different than other interviews because MUCOM uses a Mixed-Mini Interview (MMI)
format. I believe there were 7 “stations” (one was a “rest” station and one included a 20 minute
“standard” interview). Each interviewee started at a different station. On the door to each room/station
there was a prompt with a question or a description or a situation. These are designed to make you have
to think through multiple sides of the problem and consider different possibilities. [The following
examples] are simplified, but get at what the questions asked. I know that they have since changed the
questions, but this gives a general idea of what it was like.
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Marietta College Physician Assistant Program
Program Questions:
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Marshall University School of Medicine
I came to the student center and met the assistant dean who acted as the mediator before and between
the interviews. I went through two interviews, one with a faculty member, and one with a graduate. The
interviewers are different most of the time, but similar questions seem to be asked each time. A tour of
the facilities is optional by request, and everyone was very helpful. The interview is very relaxed and As.
Dean Warren is great at helping you relax. The school has a family like atmosphere, with a rural and
international focus. The facilities are almost all brand new, the graduates have 100% residency
acceptance, most to their top choices. It seemed like a great small school where you could get a quality
education, your pick of residency, and yet still not get lost in the crowd.
First Interview
Second Interview
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Medical University of South Carolina
All day interview including information sessions, tour and meals. I had three interviews with teachers and
current researchers; some other interviewees met with an alum or current student.
Three 45-minute questions with faculty or staff. All three interviews were very laid-back and
conversational.
1st Interview
2nd Interview
3rd Interview
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Michigan State College of Human Medicine Interview
The day consisted of two 30 minute interviews, a faculty and a student. MSU interviews always ask the
same 6 questions, with perhaps a few extra thrown in at discretion. The questions can be mixed up in
order and by who asks them, but everyone gets the same 6 questions. Partial-open book. Our
interviewers only see our essays and our activity list.
Second Interviewer (A faculty (not MD) really good interviewer. The interview started question-based –
like MSU wants it – but ended more conversational).
1. How would (or how did) you deal with a difficult patient/situation?
2. Who are your role models?
3. What makes you unique to MSU?
4. Where do you see yourself in 15 years?
5. Describe an unethical situation you have been or witnessed and how you dealt with it (may
have been a Northwestern-Feinberg question from faculty)
6. Any questions?
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Northeastern Ohio Medical University (NEOMED)
The interview went really well. I had two interviews with two different clinical faculty members. The first
was great and very conversational.
The second interview was a little more serious. The second interviewer grilled me on the institutional
action.
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Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Feinberg interviews were very unique from my other interviews. There were two separate interviews. The
first (for me) was a panel interview where three interviewers (a faculty, a physician, and a student)
question three interviewees. This interview lasted 1 hour and 15 minutes. The second was a faculty
interview that lasted 20-30 minutes.
First Interview (A PhD in Immunology who also helped design the medical school curriculum, a
pathologist, and a fourth-year med student. This was closed book – they only knew our names and our
schools. Each of us was asked a unique question – I’ll list some of mine. But we may or may not (usually
not) get the same questions as the interviewees in our panel. The interview went in segments. Since
Feinberg’s curriculum is built around small groups, this interview is geared to see how I work in a group).
Second Interview (One-on-one. A physician, in part, with an MD, MPH, and JD).
1. Why medicine?
2. What is your strongest point?
3. What is one of your weak points?
4. Tell me about a memorable patient?
5. Tell me about your research.
6. Describe an unethical situation you have witnessed and how you dealt with it (may have
been MSU question from faculty).
7. Any questions for me?
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Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
Here are some of the questions I got asked. There were 3 separate 30 min. interviews with faculty (one
was a D.O., and 2 were Ph.Ds.). They had looked over my application and asked me some questions from
that (except my first interviewer didn’t show up that day, so there was a back-up interviewer who
conducted that interview – he didn’t get a chance to look over my application at all because it was last
minute…I actually lost 15 min. of interview time because of that). They were all very nice and it was a
really relaxed atmosphere.
Interview 1
Interview 2
Interview 3
1. What’s CU like?
2. Tell me about your family.
3. What’s been your favorite class so far? (She stressed that it definitely did not have to be a
science class…)
4. What is one principle that you learned in a non-science class that rocked your world?
5. How do you relax after a stressful day? (I answered running…) Besides running?
6. What are your hobbies?
7. What would be the most hurtful thing someone could every say to you?
8. Do you have supportive people you can turn to?
9. What are your current science classes? Have you taken histology?
10. Involved in any research/senior project?
11. What cultural things did you learn in Africa?
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12. What was your job in the clinics in Africa and Peru?
13. If you couldn’t be a doctor, what would you be instead?
14. What would your closest friends say is your worst trait?
15. You like reading? What books are you reading right now?
16. What would be your biggest challenge in medical school?
3 interviews with faculty or staff for 20 minutes each. Very conversational and based off experiences
described in application.
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Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
I had two 30-minute interviews, one with the Director of Admissions and the other with a physician
faculty member. Admissions Director: open file, very conversational. Most of the questions were
inquiring about my application, including personal statement and activities.
Physician Faculty Member: closed file, only had access to my secondary application with essays. She
asked me not to divulge GPA/MCAT.
SIU is a very mission-focused medical school. Their mission statement is specifically to “serve the people
of central and southern Illinois.” I would highly recommend that you emphasize your desire to fulfill that
mission, especially If you are from a rural area or central/southern Illinois originally.
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The Ohio State University College of Medicine Interview
OSUCOM interview includes two segments, one with a faculty and one with a student. The faculty
interview is geared to make sure you’re the same person you put on paper and see whether you are
really fit for medicine. The student interview is geared to find out if you will “fit” in with the OSU class.
First Interviewer (A physician from the pediatric hospital. This was open-file; she had seen my essays and
my grades. The interview was pretty conversational).
1. Both of your parents are doctors. No surprise you’re going into medicine. (This was sort of a
lead on for me to expound on my parents being physicians).
2. What motivated you to go into healthcare?
3. Tell me about some of your research.
4. What about this bad grade in X class? What happened here?
5. I’m not sure of everything she asked since I talked quite a bit and the questions followed
from my statements rather than prewritten questions. However I felt as though the
interviewer’s mission was to probe out my honesty (compared with my application), and
whether I had the integrity, compassion, and commitment to become a physician.
Second Interviewer (First or second year student. This was closed file. He only knew my name and my
school. His job was just to see if my personality would be a fit at OSU – which prizes down-to-earth kind
of people).
Optometry Interview
It was very laid back and one of the interviewer’s daughters plays volleyball, so talking about that really
put me at ease. The style was more conversational than having rapid-fire questions, but here are the
basics:
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The Ohio State University School of Occupational Therapy
OSU sent me an email with some interview questions to practice. I also heard from other Cedarville Allied
Health girls who were interviewed for the program last semester how the format of the interview works.
It is four separate rooms, one question per room, and five minutes for each room for a total of 20
minutes.
We would first like for you to review the personal statement requirements from the application
instructions: your statement should address why you selected OT as a career and how an Occupational
Therapy degree related to your immediate and long-term professional goals. Describe how your
personal, educational, and professional background will help you achieve your goals.
We would also like you to read and consider the following questions/topics. This will help prepare you
for the types of questions you will be asked during your Interview Session:
1. What is the most challenging obstacle you have faced at work, school, or another environment?
How did you deal with it and what did you learn from the experience?
2. Think about an experience in which you had to make an ethical decision. What decision did you
make, what influenced your decision making process, and who was affected by the decision you
made?
3. Begin to think about an experience in which you had to take a formal or informal leadership role
within a group or organization.
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The Ohio State University School of Optometry
Overall, this interview was very laid back and conversational. I felt prepared for all the questions they
asked, and I had questions for them at the end. The whole interview lasted about 30 minutes.
1. Why Optometry?
2. What are your strengths and weaknesses?
3. What is a mistake you have made and how did you deal with the consequences?
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Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine
The interview was conversational and we talked primarily about my background. Most of the questions I
received would not apply to other applicants from CU. However, there were two questions that you
could add to your list of interview questions;
2. Is there anything that is not in your application that you would like to tell us about?
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University of Arizona College of Medicine
Universities are commonly faced with the complicated task of balancing the educational needs of their
students and the cost required to provide learning resources to a large number of individuals. As a result
of this tension, there has been much debate regarding the optimal size of classes. One side argues that
smaller classes provide a more educationally effective setting for students, while others argue that it
makes no difference, so larger classes should be used to minimize the number of instructors required.
Discuss your opinion on this issue with the interviewer.
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University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
MMI Format: 8 stations, 6 minutes each. Everything was very straight-forward and objective.
1. What was a time when you had a plan for how to do something (non-academic), but had to go a
different route because of majority rule, a dissenting supervisor, etc.? How did you react?
2. A student is choosing between University A and B. A variety of information is given and you have
to say where the student should go and why.
3. Acting Scenario: A fellow student has been missing class recently, and you just find out that her
mom was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. You have to talk to her and “explore her feelings.”
4. Pick 3 adjectives from a list that describe you and say why. One must be negative.
5. I do not remember the prompt, but I believe that it had something to do with leadership and
decision making.
6. Rest station.
7. Acting Scenario: You are told that you are asking a first year medical student for tips on
interviewing for medical school. However, when you walk in, the student asks you, “Why do you
want to be a doctor?” He then tells you how terrible medical school is and you must defend your
decision.
8. Talk about holistic healthcare.
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University of the Cumberlands—Physician Assistant Program
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University of Dayton – Physical Therapy School
1. We work a lot in groups here, could you please explain what role you typically play in groups, how you
do in groups, and provide an example of conflict management within a group?
3. Everyone has a time in their life when they fail at something. Please give us an example of this, and
how you coped with it.
4. I foresee you being accepted into several programs, so what will your decision making process be
once you find out where all you are accepted?
The interview was conducted by one faculty member (who asked questions 1, 3, 4, and 5) and a third-
year student in the program (who asked question 2). It was an individual interview, not a group
interview.
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University of Delaware
The interview was individual, about twenty minutes long, and very low key. The professor actually told
me as soon as I sat down that he was trying to sell me the school as much as I was trying to impress
them.
Other than that we talked about the interviewer’s research, as well as any questions I had about the
program.
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University of Illinois College of Medicine
Three 30-minute interviews one-on-one interviews, one with a physician faculty member, one with a staff
member, and one with a second year medical student.
Physician faculty member – very laid back and conversational, open file, most of the questions stemmed
from my extracurricular activities.
Staff member – closed file, very friendly, only had access to my essays from the secondary application.
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University of Iowa School of Medicine
This interview was from the Physical Therapy Department. I was interviewed by two faculty members.
They also asked me a very specific question about something someone said in their recommendation
letter. One prof wrote that I had showed research at a conference and I was surprised at how detailed
the questions were regarding my project. They asked exactly what the research project was and how
many participants I had in each experimental group and how many students in my control
group…detailed! I probably could have just thrown random numbers out, but I think they wanted to
confirm that I indeed, did show my research paper. They asked about pretty much everything on my
resume/application. So, if you go to Iowa, you better know what you wrote when you applied 3-4 months
earlier!
Interview #1
1. How equipped are you as a leader and how have you utilized and developed your leadership
skills?
2. Ethical Question: If you were in charge of a PT program and a PTA (physical therapy
assistant) entered the program but still used the old methods as he had been doing for
years, what would you do?
3. What do you look for when you are choosing a PT program?
4. What attracts you to Iowa?
5. What were some of the most important characteristics in the people you interned for?
What made them a good (or bad) physical therapist?
6. If you get into Iowa, how do you want to change and grow other than gaining the scientific
knowledge and skills?
Interview #2
St. Ambrose DPT Department. Again, I was interviewed by two faculty members.
1. Ethical Question: Say you needed treatment and you received treatment X. You go through
school and you learn that treatment X isn’t the best treatment anymore. Now you are a
doctor and a patient comes in and insists that they receive treatment X. What will you do?
2. Why do you want to be a therapist?
3. If you got a D on your first Anatomy test, what would you do? Take us through step by step
how you would handle that.
4. If you had planned out your studying and a professor gave you a five page paper due in two
days at the last minute, what would you do?
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Another response:
My interview was on a Friday. The whole day was from 8:30 to about 2 in the afternoon. There were 17
of us interviewing this particular day. The day started out in a conference room with an overview of what
the day would look like. Next a lady came in and talked about the curriculum at the Iowa [Carver College
of Medicine].After her, another lady came in and discussed financial aid and paying for medical school.
By now it was about 10 in the morning. Eight of us left the conference room and went to our interviews,
while the other eight stayed and worked on a case based learning example. I was one of the eight so I
went out into the hallway to wait. The first round of interviews for my group was at 10 and the second
round was at 10:30. I waited until 10:30 for my interview. The interview was 25 minutes long with two
faculty members. I was interviewed by a clinical assistant professor with his doctorate in radiation
oncology and a clinical assistant professor with her doctorate of allopathic medicine in internal medicine.
The interview is set up kind of funny. First it is a closed file interview. They knew nothing of my primary
application, secondary application, GPA, MCAT, ect. They only knew my name and my undergraduate
school. It started with them telling me a bit about themselves and then they asked me to tell them a bit
about myself (so I guess this really was my first question).Then they described what the interview would
look like. They have three structured questions to start. They asked me a question, listen while I
responded, and were not allowed to respond or say anything besides reading the question word for
word. After these three questions, they could ask any follow up questions that they wanted to and
interact as they saw fit.
In past interviews I have also heard of these questions being asked in the structured part:
1. What do you think is the greatest contributor to the rising cost of medical education?
2. (Ethical Scenario) You arrive in the ER to start your shift as a resident and your attending smells
like alcohol, what do you do?
By the time I was done with the structured part, I only had about ten minutes left. They asked me…
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University of Louisville Medical School
Interview #1
Interview #2
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University of Michigan Medical School Interview
I had three half-hour interviews. They tried to give you an interview with a student, a faculty member,
and an alumni, but sometimes are unable because of scheduling. They were one on one and open-source,
meaning the interviewers had access to my AMCAS application and secondary. Almost every question
came from my AMCAS. Michigan usually sets up their interviews to be a faculty member, a med student
and a “question mark” (usually a med student or alumni). The latter two interviews tended to be more
conversational, so I’ve taken some liberties in recording the questions more traditionally.
First Interviewer (4th year medical student who was earning an MD/MCRiT [Multidisciplinary Clinical
Researchers in Training], he had completed three years of medical school and was now on his year of
research training. He had applied for the job of interviewer. Usually UofM likes to have a representative
from a student group. This interviewer was the Policy Chair of the united Asian American Medical
Student Association – I had to find this out; he didn’t tell me.)
1. You’ve done quite a bit and had an exposure to different areas of medicine. In your
experience did you learn anything about disparities in medicine?
2. Do you plan to address these disparities were you to become a doctor?
3. If you’re accepted, you’ll be out of school for a semester. What will you do during that time?
4. I see you went to Kenya. Tell me about that experience.
5. You said you even stuck with a needle! Tell me about that experience.
6. I have a friend that went to Guatemala during undergrad and had even more patient contact
than you seem to have had. In fact, he told me that at one point he had primary
responsibility for ten patients. Do you think its right for a relatively untrained undergraduate
providing medical care for these people who have nowhere else to go? (He hedged the
question a bit more, but this is basically it)
7. Tell me about one of your research experiences.
8. I didn’t really understand your involvement in the “Ministry Council”. Tell me more about
that.
9. What is the Luke Commission? Tell me about your involvement.
10. You wrote in your essay that doctors tend to become mechanistic. How would you avoid
that as a physician?
11. Do you have any questions for me?
Second Interviewer (Alumni who is now practicing in the area of ophthalmology I believe)
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6. Tell me about your biochemical research.
7. Tell me about your electrophysiological research.
8. Considering your first school, you seem to have some changes in your plans for the future
since then. Tell me about the evolution that brought you to pursue medicine.
9. Any questions for me?
Third Interviewer (Faculty member, head of the Family Medicine department, over 30 years in medicine.
Surprisingly, we (he did much of the talking) just chatted for about 25% of the interviewing time.
1. You said both of your parents are doctors? What kind of doctors? Where do they practice?
2. Tell me about CU. I’m pretty sure we’ve never had a student from there.
3. How do you think you’ll transition from a small school to a large school like UofM?
4. You’ve had some international experience I see. Tell me about that.
5. Do you think you’d want to work internationally? If so, how so?
6. Why that particular interest if you worked internationally?
7. I enjoyed your essay. Tell me about X feature of your essay.
8. Any questions for me?
9. Tell me about your biggest disappointment and how did you deal with it?
10. Why do you want to be a doctor?
11. Tell me about yourself?
12. What do you do for fun?
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University of North Carolina Medical School
There were 2 interviews for 45 – 1 hour. They both had my application in front of them. Extremely
relaxed – talked to one interview for about 15 minutes about the TV show – the Good Wife.
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University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Two 30-45 minute interviews for the day, one faculty, one student. Both interviews are equally weighted,
which is unique. Though the student interview is pretty low-key, I was warned not to take it less
seriously!
First Interviewer (First year student – seemed a little nervous. This was closed book. All he knew was my
name and my school).
Second Interviewer (Faculty (a PhD) at one of the UPitt’s hospitals. Very good interviewer; really delved
into what made me want to go into medicine. Very conversational style of questioning, where one
question leads to another. This was open book, or partially open. He had definitely read my essays and
seen my activity list. I’m not sure if he knew my grades).
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University of South Carolina SOM (Columbia)
Interview Questions
1. Tell me about your last name. (He said he knew someone with my last name a long time ago.)
2. What happened at Cedarville in 2012 with the leadership change?
3. Why do you want to be a doctor?
4. Do you have enough experience to say for sure that you want to be a doctor?
5. What did you do in the Dominican? What was your experience like?
6. Tell me about the essay you published.
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University of Toledo
Interview Questions
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Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
These weren’t all the questions from this interview, only the generic ones. The others were focused
directly on things that came from my essays. (For instance, the first guy asked me about why I chose to
describe myself as innovative and reread me the last paragraph of my personal statement).
1. What is something that people you don’t get along with would say about you? (The interviewer
pointed out at the beginning that he just saw this question on an IT departments example
interview questions list—he said he liked it more than the typical question that askes what your
friends would say about you).
2. What is a book you’ve read recently that you would recommend?
3. Tell me about your role on a team.
4. Tell me about your clinical experience in the ER. How has that shaped you?
5. Tell me about a time you felt defeated or like you failed. How did you overcome that and what
did you learn from it?
6. Give me one strength and one weakness.
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University of Wisconsin
School of Medicine and Public Health- Format: 2 interviews, thirty minutes each
First interview with an anesthesiologist who worked at the hospital connected with the university. He
asked the following questions from a long list he had:
The next interview was with two medical students. There were three people being interviewed together.
1. Tell us about yourself: name, where you are from, and where you did your undergraduate
studies.
2. Why do you want to go to UW?
3. Why do you want to be a doctor?
4. What would you say is your greatest weakness?
5. What do you do in your free time?
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Virginia Commonwealth University
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Washington State University – Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine
Overall, the mock interview process prepared me well (in addition to just having Christian morals and
learning through CU classes how to think critically about ethical issues from a biblical perspective). The
interview was an MMI (that info is given online) and the questions were all medically relevant. I had 9
total interviewers. We were given 5 minutes to answer each prompt (except for one longer 13 minute
traditional interview), but it usually took me about 3 minutes to answer. All of the interviewers were
very conversational and continued to ask follow up questions until the 5 minutes were up. Additionally,
none of the MMIs included actors, they all just asked my opinion given the prompt, or how I would deal
with the given scenario.
Though the official "interview portion" was only an hour and a half long, I was at the school from 10am-
6pm attending different sessions, having lunch with students, and going on a campus tour. Though I was
on my guard all day, I am fairly certain that there was not a ton of formal evaluation happening outside
of the official interview time. The students we interacted with repeatedly assured us that they had no
say in admissions decisions and that we could relax and ask them things that we were truly wondering.
At one point, however, a faculty member had us go around the room and share an "interesting fact"
about ourselves (I definitely didn't take advantage of the opportunity as I should have, and I am not sure
if the comment was being formally evaluated or not. I was sitting in the front row and he had me go first
and it caught me off guard. I didn't think through the fact that it was an opportunity to showcase an
important part of my application until we were halfway around the room and I realized that that was
what everyone else was doing. Not a mistake I will make twice...). Other than that one comment, there
wasn't much opportunity for us to talk, we just listened to a lot of presentations.
One thing that proved valuable that I learned while interviewing with you both was how to incorporate
a list of "resume highlights" into my answers regardless of the question asked. I had a list of 7 points I
wanted to hit and I was able to hit all 7 during my 13 minute interview. I was even able to bring up
several of them during the MMI scenario questions.
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Washington University in St. Louis
At each station, the interviewee is given around two minutes to read and consider a prompt. Two
minutes is more than enough time, trust me. The student is then asked (over an intercom) to step inside
the room and address the prompt.
Advice to students: A lot of the MMI interview style questions do not have a right or wrong answer. Do
not try to memorize all the answers to possible questions or others like them. I would recommend
considering the nature of example questions and some strategies of how to approach similar ones. It is
important to empathize with one or two sides of a conflict/problem. I made an effort to show I could
consider both sides of a debate, even if I told the interviewer that I agreed with one side over the other.
Be prepared to back up what you say. Communication, rather than success, was key in the teamwork
stations (although they often went hand in hand). Be ready to think on your feet. Personally, I found MMI
interviews to be more “fun” than traditional ones, so don’t stress too much. At least in these interviews
you won’t be asked to talk about yourself (which can sometimes be a little uncomfortable).
Example question: A child rapist has recently been released from jail after serving his punishment. What
rights should be granted to this man? In what ways, if any, should he be restricted?
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West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine
Four prospective students had their interview in the morning, five had theirs in the afternoon (I was the
first afternoon interview). I arrived at 10:15, we filled out a couple forms, they showed us a short clip
about the school, and then we went on a tour of the campus. The tour lasted about one hour. After the
tour, we had lunch with 3 second-year medical students and were encouraged to ask them questions.
Lunch lasted about one hour. We then returned to the Admissions Center and those who interviewed in
the morning were free to leave.
The interview was with three interviewers—one from the admissions staff, their curriculum coordinator
(Ph.D.), and a representative of the clinical staff (Ph.D.). The interview lasted about 30 minutes—2/3 of
the time they asked me questions, and the last 1/3 I was able to ask them questions.
Everyone at the school was very friendly and kind, reminded me of Cedarville somewhat. They really tried
to sell this attribute of the school. Overall the day was very pleasant and relatively stress-free.
* Asked a few other questions that stemmed from my answers to their questions.
Another Response:
1. Why osteopathic medicine?
2. What does a good physician look like to you?
3. Besides golf, what do you like to do?
4. Tell me about the Civil Rights Bus Tour.
5. Will moving from home affect your support group?
6. Are you a servant?
7. Do you have any experience with OMT?
These are the main questions, and then there were a few follow-ups depending on my answer. They
worked hard to make me feel comfortable, and there was a conversational feel to the interview.
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Another individual’s experience:
1) Why D.O.?
2) Why WVSOM?
4) How would your best friend describe you? What about your mother?
5) I see you had C's in a few Calculus courses. How did you overcome your struggle with math?
(weakness in application)
WVSOM is known for family practice medicine and a focus on rural communities. They also like to see
applicants who would plan to continue working in WV at some point. I felt like they were looking for
answers that were trying to relate to their values.
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Wisconsin Academy of Rural Medicine (WARM)
Just a side note in case people are wondering, this is a separate application process than the regular
M.D. program at the University of Wisconsin, and it has a different interview process. The regular M.D.
interviewers only have the applicant’s personal statement and possibly their list of activities. For WARM,
I was interviewed by the Director of the program (seems to be the norm) and he had all of my application
materials (primary and secondary) as well as my test scores, etc. He had read through everything and
taken notes on sentences I wrote throughout the essays.
He started off by telling me about himself, then told me that the interview would be less formal
questions and more conversational. Lasted about 30-45 minutes.
Next was a small group discussion involving two current medical students, myself, and two other
interviewees. Every question the students asked they also answered after the interviewees did. It was
very informal and relaxed, but the students did have a say in our eventual acceptance. Lasted about 45
minutes to an hour.
Overall, the whole day was very relaxed; it was a great interview experience and actually kind of fun!
They were very welcoming and made all of us feel like we belonged there.
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Wright State University Boonshoft SOM
I was fortunate to be able to receive some very positive and insightful feedback from both interviewers,
as to the ways I thought through and answered the questions, and also about mistakes many other
applicants make. A good piece of advice they mentioned was, “Don’t TRY to be an attractive candidate,
just BE one.”
1. Tell me about yourself, - give me the history of the life and times of Sam, and maybe focus
on the specific bits that highlight your journey towards medicine
2. Why do you think cultural diversity is important? What experiences in your life have
demonstrated that this is something that you value?
3. What is your favorite class you’ve taken at Cedarville? – Why? Tell me about it. (I asked
kindly, “does it have to be a science course?” And the interviewer replied, “Please no! So
many applicants come in here telling me biochemistry or organic because they think that’s
what we want to hear, and unless they explain in very good detail and emotion why it
actually is their favorite area of study, I know they’re full of crap and their interview suffers
for it. So please, by all means be honest.” So I talked enthusiastically about Humanities,
music philosophy, etc. And this went over very well with her.)
4. If you were an animal, which would you be, and why? (While questions like this may be
anticipated, I did not have a pre-thought out answer for this…Rather than immediately
starting answering and stammering through a half-baked answer, I kindly asked the
interviewer, “May I please give this some thought for a minute?” She replied, “Absolutely,
and give me a deep answer.” So I replied, well I know the perfect creature. It would be a
hybrid cat-otter, and I explained that I could be creative, energetic and light-hearted (otter)
and also wise and shrewd, with confident self-identity and instinctual problem-solving (cat).
As cats hate water, but otters are at home in the water, I could function as an excellent
doctor on both the sea, and the land…We had some good laughs, and she replied, “That’s
the best answer I’ve had to that question yet. It seems a number of people tend to respond
‘dogs, because they’re cute. Or eagles because they’re rare.’ When we ask these questions
we like to see some deep thought behind the ‘why’...”
5. If you could have dinner with three important people, alive or dead, who would you choose
and tell me why.
6. Let’s talk about your colorful experiences: Cars, Music, and Painting – how have these
bettered your life? Do you see yourself using them to benefit others, maybe patients? If so,
how?
7. What directions of medicine are you thinking? Why those specialties?
8. Explain why our medical program in particular is a good fit for you. (Hint: know the strengths
and emphases of the med school!)
9. Where do you see yourself in the next five, ten, or fifteen years? What are some goals and
directions you intend to pursue?
10. Is medicine a science? Or is it an art? (Think outside the box. I said “yes”, and explained
specific instances where it was each)
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11. Give me an example of a time when you felt “culturally competent”.
12. Will moving from home affect your support group?
13. Are you a servant?
14. (For those of you whose parent(s) happen to be physicians also), Lay out for me how this
journey into medicine is of your own accord, not just because it’s familiar to you; show me
the intentional choices in your life that demonstrate this.
15. Where do you draw the line between your personal ethics and your professional care? And,
give me a clear example of how you might face this as a doctor.
16. Tell me a little about yourself
17. Tell me what research you have done
18. Why do you want to come to VCOM?
19. Have you had to deal with people unlike you?
20. Have you had to face some type of ethical decision?
21. What do you believe you possess that would make you a good fit for VCOM?
22. Have you had to work in a team atmosphere before and how did you handle it?
23. And here are a couple good questions I thought of, as they told me, impressed both
interviewers:
a. In your experience of this medical program, what has been something that you
really take pride in? Not the list of strengths or selling points of the school, but
what’s something that you enroll your heart in with excitement?
b. Dr. [Interviewer], describe for me a distinctive experience in which you can point to
and say, ‘Wow!’ That wouldn’t have happened anywhere else but at [their medical
school].
Overall, this interview was incredibly personal. They were more interested in getting to know the
interviewee than grilling them to the point of embarrassment. My suggestion: just relax, be yourself, be
ready to sell your strong points, smile, and enjoy the opportunity. They worked hard to make me feel
comfortable, and there was a conversational feel to the interview.
Here are some of the questions I was asked at my interview with Wright State Boonshoft School of
Medicine
1. Tell me about yourself
2. What was a challenging experience that you had to overcome?
3. I noticed you volunteered at Greene Memorial Hospital and at Dayton Children’s. Tell me about
those experiences.
4. Tell me about a leadership role you have had.
5. If I were to tell the committee why you should be admitted to our school, what should I say?
6. A lot of questions were directly related to my application (I see you did this/were involved
in…Can you tell me more about that? Or some question relating to something in my
application.)
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Another interview response:
I am writing to list any interview questions which I faced that I did not see on the Question Index pdf.
They are as follows.
Most were very AMCCAS application specific (ie: they asked questions about my activities list)
Unique questions were:
1. List one strength which you think you could use to benefit the school and student body.
2. How did you like growing up in a rural area (I’m from rural Kentucky).
3. What do you think about the recent healthcare reforms.
As a general feel it was a fairly conversational, relaxed interview. It was very much focused on getting to
know me as an individual.
1 interview with current student, 1 with faculty, 30 minutes each. Friendly, but some awkward questions.
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Another individual’s experience:
As I'm sure you're aware, BSOM holds two, back to back, interviews. The first one has a 2nd or 3rd year
med student.
They asked:
1. What was a good quality you inherited from your mother? What about your father?
2. We have plenty of Cedarville students that have run through this college with great success.
However, Cedarville is a very homogeneous school. What do I tell the admissions group when
they ask me how that's affected you, not having diversity there?
3. So from your experience shadowing doctors, what makes being a doctor hard?
4. What do you do when people don't like you? How often does that happen? If you are working in
a team-based learning activity, and some people in your group say 'I really don't like (your
name)'s answer,' what do you do?
5. What did you sign up for?" (He asked this to see how well I registered the enormity of the
decision.)
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Multiple Mini Interview Format
Introduction
The multiple mini interview (MMI) format is a new screening method that many postgraduate dentistry
and medical programs have implemented into their admissions process. The philosophy of MMI’s is that
they provide a more accurate prediction of a candidate’s future success because they provide a tool to
measure not just candidates’ grades and test scores, but other qualities that allow them to become
excellent physicians.
Typical Format
Six to ten interview “stations” with candidates rotating between each one
A prompt at each station
Two minutes (approx.) for candidates to read the prompt and formulate an answer
Eight minutes (approx.) for candidates to enter the station and interact with an interviewer
A time at the end of each interview where the interviewer will evaluate the candidate’s
performance
MMI’s typically take about two hours for candidates to go through every station
Possible scenarios will measure:
o Ethical decision-making
o Critical thinking skills
o Communication abilities
o Knowledge of current health care issues
Possible stations could include:
o Ethical dilemmas or questions about social issues
o Interactions with an actor where the candidate may need to deliver bad news, confront
them about a problem, or gather information from them
o Standard interview questions
o Teamwork exercise involving two or more applicants working together to complete a
task
o Short essays responding to a prompt
Preparation
Prepare answers to standard interview questions, but remember that the format of MMI’s
measures the ability to think logically and well under pressure
Consider what qualities make an excellent physician and how you can implement these into
your performance at each station
Familiarize yourself with bioethical issues
Research current events in healthcare and social policy
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Practice time management – one of the most difficult components is how to pace yourself to
answer questions effectively within the allotted time. Wear a watch during your interviews to
keep track of your time.
Be confident – research MMI’s and look up videos and sample questions to familiarize yourself
as much as possible with the format. While you have no way to know the exact situations you’ll
encounter at each station, you can calm your nerves by taking to prepare yourself for what to
expect.
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first contact) as a way to control health care costs. The assumption is that this will deter
people from visiting their doctor for unnecessary reasons.
Consider the broad implications of this policy for health and heath care costs. For example,
do you think the approach will save health care costs? At what expense? Discuss this issue
with the interviewer.
5. Standard Interview 1
Why do you want to be a physical therapist? Discuss this question with the interviewer.
6. Class Size (Critical Thinking)
Universities are commonly faced with the complicated task of balancing the educational
needs of their students and the cost required to provide learning resources to a large number
of individuals. As a result of this tension, there has been much debate regarding the optimal
size of classes. One side argues that smaller classes provide a more educationally effective
setting for students, while others argue that it makes no difference, so larger classes should
be used to minimize the number of instructors required.
Discuss your opinion on this issue with the examiner.
7. Parking Garage (Communication Skills)
The parking garage at your place of work has assigned parking spots. On leaving your spot,
you are observed by the garage attendant as you back into a neighboring car, knocking out
its left front headlight and denting the left front fender. The garage attendant gives you the
name and office number of the owner of the neighboring car, telling you that she is calling
ahead to the car owner, Tim. The garage attendant tells you that Tim is expecting your visit.
Enter Tim’s office. Tim will be played by an actor.
8. Preferential Admission (Societal Health Issues in Canada)
Due to the shortage of physical therapists in rural communities, it has been suggested that
physical therapy programs preferentially admit students who are willing to commit to a 2 or
3 year tenure in an under-serviced area upon graduation.
Consider the broad implications of this policy for health and health care costs. For example,
do you think the approach will be effective? At what expense? Discuss this issue with the
interviewer.
Please Note: these questions were designed by the Astroff Consultants Inc. and the use of the material
below for income-generating purposes is strictly prohibited. Thank you.
Instructions:
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1. Station #1
A close friend in your 1st-year medical school class tells you that his mother was recently
diagnosed with breast cancer. He feels overwhelmed by his studies and is considering dropping
out of medical school to spend more time with his mother. How do you counsel your friend?
2. Station #2
Joe is a pizza delivery worker. The pizza shop he works for has a thirty minutes or less delivery
guarantee or else the customer does not have to pay. On Joe’s most recent delivery, he spots a
woman bleeding on the street. There is no one else around and the woman seems to be unable
to move by herself. However, Joe knows that if he returns empty handed again, he will be fired
from this job he most desperately needs. What do you think Joe should do? Justify your solution
in terms of practicality and ethical considerations.
3. Station #3
“Liberation Therapy” (LT), a vascular operation developed to potentially cure multiple sclerosis
(MS) in certain patients, has recently come under very serious criticism – delaying its widespread
use. Among other experimental flaws, critics cite a small sample size in the original evidence
used to support LT. As a healthcare policy maker, your job is to weigh the pros and cons in
approving novel drugs and therapies. Please discuss the issues you would consider during an
approval process for LT.
4. Station #4
Because of federal and provincial subsidy policies and return-of-service agreements,
international medical graduates (IMGs) now make up an increasingly large proportion of rural
doctors. As a consequence, the shortage of doctors in rural areas has prompted many family
medicine residencies to increase their quotas for IMGs in their programs. Effectively, this
development is leading to a relative reduction in spots available for Canadian medical graduates.
Please discuss the pros and cons of such a development.
5. Station #5
Discuss one of your pastimes outside of school and how the skills you acquired from this activity
will help you in your career.
6. Station #6
You are a family physician seeing Jane, a 67 year old woman with a recent history of multiple
fragility fractures. You diagnose her with osteoporosis and prescribe some bisphosphonate drugs
and other pharmacological treatments. Jane tells you that she has heard some good things over
the internet about alternative medicine treatments such as Chinese medicine, and she is
adamant on trying these as well. You are concerned about the use of these alternative medicine
treatments and the possible negative effects they could have on Jane’s health. How would you
handle the situation and what would you recommend Jane to do? Discuss any ethical
considerations that are present.
7. Station #7
You are on the committee for selecting a new Dean of Science. What characteristics and/or
qualities would you look for when selecting an effective dean?
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8. Station #8
In June 2011, the infamous Vancouver riots took place after their hockey team lost in the Stanley
Cup Finals. Stores were ransacked and cars were burned. Hundreds of people were injured and
sent to overcrowded hospitals. As the police chief in Vancouver, what measures or policies would
you put in place to make sure this does not happen again?
9. Station #9
Clostridium Difficile (C. difficile) is a type of bacteria that increases its activity with most
antibiotic use, and is therefore very difficult to treat. Research shows that the most effective way
to prevent the spread of infection is frequent hand washing. However, many people have flat-out
refused to wash their hands in hospitals. The government is contemplating passing a policy to
make it mandatory for people entering hospitals to wash their hands or else risk not being seen
by doctors and being escorted out of the building against their will. Do you think the government
should go ahead with this plan? Consider and discuss the legal, ethical or practical problems that
exist for each action option and conclude with a persuasive argument supporting your decision.
10. Station #10
Discuss an experience that allowed you to learn something important about yourself. How will
this lesson help you succeed in your career?
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Allied Health/PA Interview Questions
We have never heard of Cedarville University; all we know is that it is a small church-related
school. Why, of all the schools of Ohio, did you decide to attend there?
What contribution do you think you can make to the (PA, PT, OT) profession?
What skills do you have that will make you a good clinician? What weaknesses do you have?
Is there a particular patient population you’d most like to work with? Why this one?
What will you do next year if you are not admitted to a professional program for this year?
Who have been you “Role models”, and how have they influenced you?
Relate or describe a situation you saw, or was part of in your clinical observation/patient
contract experience that gave you assurance that health care was the profession you would like
to be a part of.
Explain how you would handle the “difficult” or “noncompliant” patient. For example, the one
who does not want to get up and do PT exercises a couple of days after hip replacement,
because “it hurts”; or the patient who won’t take his/her BP medication regularly because they
don’t “feel that bad.”
Why have you selected this particular program as one to which you are applying?
Projections are gloomy for the future of Medicare; large amounts are spend on procedures and
physical therapy for persons in their 70’s and 80’s. Some suggest that government supported
therapies should have a “cut off” age of perhaps 80, since those folk are no longer working and
don’t “need” rehabilitative treatments. What is your position?
What sorts of service activities have you been part of? What do you believe you have gained
from those experiences?
What has been your greatest disappointment thus far in life? How has (or did) it affect you?
How have you coped with it?
Students like yourself have track records of “success” in academics, and generally in other areas
as well; how do you deal with not doing so well at something? (Or how do you think you would
deal with failing an exam, or some similar shortcoming?)
What is your greatest achievement thus far in life? How has (or did) it affect you?
You’ve done your undergraduate work at a relatively small, conservative college, where there
was little cultural or ethnic diversity. Tell us how you will function in an urban, inner-city
environment, and deal with a very culturally diverse population?
Suppose you are a senior PT, PA, or OT student, serving as a team leader for a student-staffed
out-patient clinic. One of the first year students reports for clinic with a scraggly goatee, and
several facial piercings. How would you react to his appearance? Would you say anything to him
about it? Why or why not?
What skills or strengths do you possess that will make you a good PT/PA/OT?
What are your weaknesses?
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What leadership opportunities/roles have you had in college? What did you learn from these?
Graduate study in the health fields is intense, and there are stressful times. How do you handle
stress?
There are many health care fields; what led you to choose this one? (PT, PA, OT)
Have you, or your family had any personal experience with clinicians in the field you’ve chosen?
Tell us about that experience.
What does “professionalism” mean to you? Is it different in any way for health care providers
than for those in other kinds of work?
Suppose that you perceive that a preceptor for one of your clinical rotations has given you a
below-average evaluation because of your gender, appearance, ethnicity, or some similar
reason. How would you deal with that?
How do you handle conflict or disagreement with a fellow student, teammate, or colleague?
Suppose you know that one of your classmates cheated on an exam; what would you do?
I see you’ve been a college athlete; what did you learn or gain through that?
What do you anticipate will be the biggest challenge or hurdle you will need to overcome in
your graduate program.
Suppose you are accepted to a program, and successfully complete it, passing boards, ect. What
would you most like to be doing ten years from now?
If you marry in the next few years, and have a family, how will you manage family and practice
responsibilities?
For PA-bound students: You have an outstanding academic record; Tell us why you want to be a
PA rather than a physician?
For OT-bound students: Why have you chosen Occupational Therapy rather than Physical
Therapy
What changes do you believe should be made in America’s health care system? Can we afford to
provide health care for everyone? What suggestions would you make to a Senate committee if
you had the opportunity?
How do you think that healthcare reform (Affordable Care Act) will affect the (PA, OT, PT)
profession?
What are you views regarding euthanasia? Medically assisted suicide? Are you comfortable with
DRN orders?
You are at your assigned clinical rotation (PT or OT Clinic, medical office). When your preceptor
comes in, his/her behaviors, speech, and/or appearance suggest that he or she is impaired at
that time. What would you do?
Think of a time when you may have had a difference of opinion, or “conflict” with someone in
authority. It may have been an employer, professor, coach, ect. How did you handle that
situation? Were you satisfied with how you dealt with that situation? Is there anything you wish
you had done differently? If so, what is that?
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Specific Location Interviews
Duke University:
Format: Two 15-minute interviews and one 30-minute team processing exercise
1. If you had to explain a PA’s role to your 8 year old nephew in 3 sentences or less, what would
you say?
2. What does your integrity mean to you?
3. What is your favorite trip you’ve ever taken and why?
4. If you could trade places with somebody for a week, who would you trade places with and why?
5. If you could be any superhero and have any superpower, which one would you have?
6. Pick a patient care experience that shows where you handled an unpleasant situation well.
7. How do you handle failure?
8. What do you like to do in your free time?
9. If you couldn’t be a PA, what would your plans be?
Campbell University
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Additional Resources
The Association of American Medical Colleges has produced an online database that allows you to
browse, and compare information about U.S and Canadian medical schools and various other BS/MD
programs. If you are interested in using this as a resource we suggest you contact Dr. Melissa Burns for
more information.
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May 2013
Rita Heaton
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