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DD1 has been turned down by all her choices and is taking a year out. How best to spend her year to increase her chance of success next year?

51 replies

duchesse · 10/03/2013 13:04

That's it really. DD1 has been turned down for medicine by all 4 of her choices. We've been advised by friends that she would do well to work as a HA for a year to gain some experience in a real medical setting and some maturity before reapplying. Any advice gratefully received.

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duchesse · 10/03/2013 13:04

Sorry, HA= Healthcare assistant

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Faxthatpam · 10/03/2013 13:10

Can she get feedback on why she's been turned down? And advice from uni she really wants to go to? Can't hurt to ask them. Sorry she's had no luck - hope she succeeds in the end.

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LIZS · 10/03/2013 13:12

Fundamentally is she predicted to get the right level of grades in standard subjects? Does she have any related work experience yet.

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NewFerry · 10/03/2013 13:44

Sorry to hear that duchesse Sad such a competitive course to get on to.

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duchesse · 10/03/2013 13:47

She has 9 As and 1 A at GCSE and is predicted all 6s and 7s at IB (equivalent of As and As). She's been volunteering at a day centre for the elderly & disabled in the village for 18 months which she loves.

After the IB and 1 A level she's doing she's actually really looking forward to a year out tbh. She needs the rest.

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fraktion · 10/03/2013 13:50

I agree to make sure that there isn't an obvious reason (grades etc) and work to fix that as a priority before next year.

She could do HA work or she could look at voluntary work overseas or au pairing if she were interested in paeds later. We had a prospective med student apply for our job but the needing to go to interviews just didn't work at the time although it would be feasible now.

Hmm she didn't get the places she wanted.

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duchesse · 10/03/2013 13:51

Apparently about 60% don't...

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samuelwhiskers · 10/03/2013 13:56

At my DD's independent school, none of her year group got into Medicine, all A grade and A* students, work experience etc. Yet, at uni she met a few state school students who had got into medicine with A levels ranging from ABB to BBC. They re-applied the following year after travelling/HA work experience and got into their first or second choice medical schools. Maybe she shouldn't worry and just take a year out to work and reapply.

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samuelwhiskers · 10/03/2013 14:02

Oh yes, should add that a friend's DS from an international school got into medical school with 34 points at IB. He got four offers, some very low (31). He had a good amount of work experience - every holiday he worked in an old people's home, voluntary work abroad, with children etc etc. Presume your DD got good marks at MCAT? He got all the books and revised constantly at doing the tests so he could get the best possible marks.

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Percephone · 10/03/2013 14:07

Agree working as a healthcare assistant might help. Could also try contacting the clinical skills tutor at a local teaching hospital. Some of them can arrange work experience for a level students. She should keep a log of all the experience gained and write some reflective notes on what she saw and learned for showing at interview. Could approach a health centre and ask to spend time with a health visitor or practice nurse. I think her problem is lack of relevant experience or evidence of commitment to medicine. It's highly competitive now and many candidates will have done all this and more. Hope that helps.

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Percephone · 10/03/2013 14:11

Most of all it helps to have done some less glamorous work - old peoples home, volunteer at a special school, samaritans, befriender. You get the idea!

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Copthallresident · 10/03/2013 14:55

Amongst DDs peers it does seem as though the evidence of a vocation and empathy and emotional intelligence is now becoming more important than straight A/As. They seem to have been really successful in identifying the ones who want to do it for the right reasons, not necessarily the A students. A year spent accumulating evidence of that would be well spent, and writing a personal statement focused not just on what she has done but what she has gained from it.

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boomting · 10/03/2013 16:25

The thing that really stands out to me is the lack of any work experience in a healthcare setting, so working as an HCA would be a good option for her.

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creamteas · 10/03/2013 16:55

Getting work at as HCA in a hospital can be quite difficult now, but is worth looking into. Domiciliary care work is also a possibility if she has access to a car.

Re-applications also show a real commitment to a career in medicine which will help as well.

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getmeaginandtonicnow · 10/03/2013 17:22

Make sure she gets work experience dealing directly with doctors, though appreciate that's harder to set up than care work etc. Maybe join St John Ambulance or something too. Also, in the PS, essential to show lots of reflection on everything, med schools love that. Sign up to online UKCAT practice sites. Get lots of interview practice - when all candidates have straight A grades, I think it can come down to how confidently they come across at (sometimes really tough) interviews.

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MedusaIsHavingABadHairDay · 10/03/2013 19:06

Actually she doesn't need work experience directly with doctors.. sorry to contradict getmeagin but she doesn't.. it's much more important to have W.E at a ground level.. and if possible in different settings, whether she volunteers to hand out the teas in a nursing home, or helps on a special needs play scheme.. variety is good as long as some time is spend in each area.

Did she get to the interview stage? this is important. If she was flat out rejected without any interviews then her personal statement is likely to be letting her down.. it needs to be not only well written and passionate, but it also needs to be fresh..not full of ' why I want to be a doctor 'cliches. Did she sell herself enough? DId she talk about what she had learn from her work experience and how it will help her be a doctor?

My DD2 is at med school, and while she was lucky first time, a lot of her fellow students were reapplicants; as you said, 60% are unlucky first time round, but plenty get in second time and to be honest, looking at how hard it is, a year out and year of extra maturity isn't a bad thing!

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duchesse · 10/03/2013 19:08

Yes, she went for two interviews, one at Cambridge, one at Bristol. I think her PS is good. Obviously she ought to have more to say next time around!

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alreadytaken · 10/03/2013 20:44

Sorry to hear it, duchesse, but a lot of good students do get turned down. If you have 10 or 20 applicants per place you do - to quote one admission tutor - look for anything to rule them out. Assuming she gets the predicted results it is worth phoning Bristol on results day to check they have no places. Medical schools do not go into clearing but have been known to take people in August that they turned down earlier. I don't think Bristol do that but it does no harm to ask. Or she could consider applying in Extra to one of the places that have courses allowing transfer to medicine. I'm afraid I'm not very knowledgeable about those but the student room website may have information.

NHS jobs website www.jobs.nhs.uk/ Consider not just health care assistant but phlebotomist, ambulance care assistant and other such posts. If you search for jobs under 20k you'll find all the entry level posts. If they say temporary or bank she may have more chance of success and bank posts can involve full time work filling in while they go through the recruitment process. She should start applying before she wants the job as it can be a slow process. If she can't get an NHS job then look for nursing home jobs but any job working with people is helpful.

Apart from the PS the other thing to consider is if the reference said the right things. A medical reference needs to say slightly different things to the standard school reference.

While all medical schools say experience in health care settings isn't essential reapplicants are commonly told to get more experience Hmm

If she wants to try again for Cambridge and Bristol she will need to check they will reconsider her as some schools do not accept reapplicants who were interviewed. Generally reapplicants with good grades are popular with medical schools as they have demonstrated real commitment, maturity and proven academic ability, she is likely to be snapped up next time.

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glaurung · 10/03/2013 22:36

A friend's ds was in a similar situation last year ie: excellent grades, strong ps, 4 rejections (2 after interview).

He worked hard, achieved great A levels, got a full time HA job this year, did lots of UKCAT practice and improved his score considerably and he now has 2 offers and is waiting to hear from the other two (both have interviewed). It worked for him! I think the extra maturity is valuable and the universities do seem to prefer achieved grades to predicted ones too.

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Yellowtip · 11/03/2013 08:42

I'm sorry to hear about four rejections too duchesse, that's very tough. Her grades are clearly very good but the places she succeeded in getting interviews at suggests her UKCAT (which you mentioned on a previous thread) might be the obvious problem. Was the BMAT ok? She needs to crack the UKCAT first to give her clear pointers on where to apply and if it's not great again the second time round concentrate on the few non UKCAT unis and the BMAT ones for 2014. The work experience stuff has all been said.

samuel I think you may be overplaying the prejudice-against-indieschoolstudents card :)

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Yellowtip · 11/03/2013 09:36

Another thing to think about is the interviews, since she interviewed at two places. How did she think they went? Getting experience of proper interviews is invaluable for next year: how did she feel they went and would she approach them differently?

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impecuniousmarmoset · 11/03/2013 09:51

"state school students who had got into medicine with A levels ranging from ABB to BBC"

BBC? Hmm

Of course, it must be that famous antagonism against private schools. Did you know, less than 40% of Cambridge offers went to public school pupils last year? Shock

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alreadytaken · 11/03/2013 11:11

one of the reasons medical schools like reapplicants is that they have shown they can deal with stress and adversity. All doctors make mistakes and when they do they need to have confidence in themselves to carry on. Reapplying is pretty strong proof they already have that ability.

No-one has yet mentioned doing any teaching. As all doctors need to pass on their skills doing some form of tutoring with younger pupils ticks another box.

References don't always reflect fully what a student has done, especially outside school, and external activities may provide better examples of some skills. It can be useful to encourage feedback to the referee. There is provision for one or two supporting letters e.g from employers to be sent with applications (check the UCAS site, few people seem to be aware it's possible) but it may be better if letters go to the referee and they include some choice comments.

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creamteas · 11/03/2013 11:19

impecunious Getting into medicine with BBC at A level is possible. But usually you would need to take a foundation course. So you have to pass this with good results before being accepted onto a medicine degree.

Foundation courses are often only open to applicants who come from disadvantaged backgrounds.

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impecuniousmarmoset · 11/03/2013 11:26

Yes I'm sure that's right creamteas, it was the implication that all it took was to be a 'state school applicant' to get in with BBC that irritated me! As you say, you'd need very exceptional circumstances and an extra foundation course. In the usual run of things, you do not get to medical school with BBC at A-level.

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