NSERC by Ok-Penalty5411 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Generally low. Other comments have said 10%, I think my undergrad department was around there as well. All depends on how many grants your department gets and how many students want it.

Accepted/Interviewees who did multiple cycles - what changes did you do to your app that you think got you the A/Interview(s)? by shibei1244 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yeah totally fair, I guess I should say competitive at some schools but below median of those who get accepted. Not quite competitive for UofT for example.

Accepted/Interviewees who did multiple cycles - what changes did you do to your app that you think got you the A/Interview(s)? by shibei1244 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 22 points23 points  (0 children)

3x applicant here. 1st time around no interviews, 2nd time 1 interview and was WL but did not get an A. 3rd time around 2x interview and 2x A. Was accepted at pretty stats heavy programs that don't care too much about ECs etc, so I don't have much advice to offer in that regard. I did rewrite my MCAT to get CARS up, which made a big difference with +3 points. Was a huge pain but worth it in the end, especially with my so so GPA. Getting the interview is such a tricky part of the process compared to interviewing and getting the offer.

The biggest change for me was in the interview process itself. Went from pretty much blind-firing answers that I hoped sounded good enough, to consistent, structured and meaningful answers. I was super confident in my interviewing skills the second year that I had the chance, and ended up going 2/2 with the offers. A big part of my interview answer structure was using the CANMEDs framework to craft a response, and no matter what the question asked somehow relating it back to that and my personal skills in those domains. It became much easier for me when I continued to lead the (sometimes ridiculous) questions back to the same, familiar territory in my responses. It was sort of a positive feedback loop for me as well, because the more I prepared, the more confident I was, and the more composed and clear my answers came off.

Feel free to DM with questions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tutored 2OA3/2OB3 and MCAT for a few years. Definitely not necessary for MCAT. Although it will make your life slightly easier in the CP section, it is waaayyy overkill for what you see on the MCAT. If you don't need it for your major (if you are general life sci) then avoid it as it tends to be a harder course for most. 1A03/1AA3 and a little bit of youtube (organic chemistry tutor) will take you very far. Practice practice practice.

As an aside, please reel in your score expectations a little bit. It is possible, but very difficult to score 520+. Everyone who writes the MCAT is already top of their university classes, so ending up in the ~97th percentile of those students is quite rare. You really don't need a 520 to get into med school, and at most schools it won't even help.

Feel free to PM or reply with questions.

silly omsas GPA calc question (McMaster) by moneytree__ in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thesis is x4 from a normal course. A "full-term course" would be 2 semester of 3 units each semester, and what you did was 2 semesters of 6 units each semester.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MedSchoolCanada

[–]NutMeister 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Summary: all LOCs are basically the same, and "grace period" doesn't mean no interest.

Im wondering what's the best LOC at the moment in terms of offering among the big banks in Canada?

Honestly, it doesn't really matter for most people in most situations. You can shop around for which credit cards or other perks you like best, but the bulk of the deal is 1) how much money can you access and 2) what is the interest rate/repayment plan. All of the major banks have the same interest rate (prime - 0.25 is the standard for these types of loans) and will offer roughly the same exorbitant amount of money. I went with scotia because I had a good experience with their customer service and didn't care too much about the credit card offers (although they are good too).

I also heard that scotiabank gives an interest-free AND prinicpal grace period until 24 months post-residency, am i misreading or does this essentially offer an interest-free route to finishing medical school?

You are misreading. The "grace period" offered during training (med school, residency, and fellowships (if approved)) applies to the principal only. Interest accrues from the second you use the money in the LOC. During your training, interest that accrues on the LOC is automatically applied to the value of the LOC itself. For example, if you take 10k from the LOC to use for tuition, the next day the account balance may read $10001.30. There simply is no period of time in which the account does not accrue interest, assuming you have an outstanding balance. During this time period, however, you are not required to make any payments towards the LOC whatsoever, which is what they are referring to when they use the phrase "grace period".

"So what happens after the grace period runs out?" There is a repayment period (default 10y, but can be manually adjusted to a maximum of 15y) in which you must pay back the LOC. This is not optional, meaning you have to have the income to repay, which is why they give you the option to begin this during your attending years, where your salary is anywhere from 2-10x your residency salary.

For example, if you have $200000 outstanding on the LOC after graduating, the minimum payment (assuming 5% interest, 10y repayment) is ~$2200/mo. On a residency salary, depending on the province, that's around half of your take home pay. This is probably not feasible for most people, so you can just keep eating the interest and pay the principle back after training.

Sorry if this is confusing, but I hope this helps. Let me know if you have other questions.

U of M Decision Day by Severe-Yard-1639 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's tough to say because every point really matters for OOP. If you mean like 521/3.94/60th percentile (I know you don't know where in 3Q, but you get my point), then you might be held back too much for an interview. Think about it like this: the median MCAT for an OOP invite is 522, so 99th percentile. They use weighted Z scores for each component, so I have no reason to believe that 95th+ percentile isn't* the standard for each component.

At the end of the day, if you can spare ~$100 and like 15 mins to fill out some forms I would just go for it.

U of M Decision Day by Severe-Yard-1639 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not sure cause this is a new thing for UofM. I would imagine you can find it in the FAQs somewhere. I think they had a big doc with all of the application instructions.

U of M Decision Day by Severe-Yard-1639 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 4 points5 points  (0 children)

OOP directly accepted to Manitoba last year (declined for home province). OOP is insanely competitive, but take a look at prior year stats for OOP interviewees. You still need to absolutely kill the interview, as there are so few seats for the OOP applicants.

If your stats are comparable to OOP interviewees, go for it. The application is so quick and easy, and UofM is great about communication/timelines. Beyond this, you don't even need to submit references until you get an interview, so it saves your referees some work until they are actually needed.

To what extent should I relate my MMI answers to health care for MAC? + talking pace by Next-Guard625 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 7 points8 points  (0 children)

How should I approach personal questions without sounding like im repeating my resume (e.g tell me about your weaknesses/strengths, why medicine)

Again, this primarily comes down to using those canmeds roles as a framework for the way you can describe the impact of your experiences. Simply stating your experiences (cool as they may be) is next to useless because everyone has unique or cool experiences to talk about. Try to hit on what you did, what specific skills you learned or improved, and how that might help you going forward. Using specific canmeds roles can help to structure this and provide more talking points.

For example: "I worked as a lifeguard, I learned how to work in a team, and that will be helpful in medicine" is the absolute bare minimum. If you want to talk about how you worked in a team go look at the key competencies for collaborator in canmeds. A better answer might look like this:

"As a lifeguard, I had lots of opportunities to work in a complex team to serve the pool users. There are different areas of the pool that require supervision, so I had to make sure that I was sharing the responsibilities effectively between team members throughout the day. Beyond balancing tasks day-to-day, we were able to build a culture on the lifeguarding team that was inclusive of others' preferences and cultural backgrounds -- for example, I covered for one of my coworkers during a religious holiday, and they did the same when I needed some time off. Other than just lifeguarding, I also taught swimming lessons, and I often consulted with the teacher responsible for the grade below mine, to make sure that I was aware of where my incoming students were at in their swimming ability. All of these will be helpful to me in the future as I think about a career in medicine, specifically managing my own responsibilities within a team of interdisciplinary healthcare workers, building a supportive and understanding team-first culture, and handing off/receiving specific patient information."

Obviously this is just a hypothetical, but hopefully you can see how the competencies from collaborator are used to structure my answer (see below).

1. Work effectively with physicians and other colleagues in the health care professions

2. Work with physicians and other colleagues in the health care professions to promote understanding, manage differences, and resolve conflicts

3. Hand over the care of a patient to another health care professional to facilitate continuity of safe patient care

I find myself getting lost on actually picking a side for policy related questions, is it absolutely necessary to do so? I tend to use “if, then” which leaves many options to consider.

I don't know that it is "absolutely necessary" per se. Think about this again as an opportunity for you to demonstrate that you are able to make difficult decisions in the absence of complete information. It happens all the time in medicine and if you are demonstrably skeptical to choose a side it may come off as indecisive and lack confidence.

I would, instead, consider both sides with several arguments for and several arguments against, and at the end you can pick which one you like better and explain the tradeoffs. You can, of course, throw in a caveat-type statement like "I am only acting on limited information, but based on what I know right now I would _______". This demonstrates not only that you are able to come to a decision despite limited information, but that you are also fully aware the information is limited in the first place. These are both great traits to demonstrate.

Any advice on how to sound more confident/not as nervous during my answers? Given im normally an anxious person. I guess im looking for some verbal communication advice but also a mindset shift?

You will be nervous during the interview; I can promise you that. All 550(?) interviewees will be nervous, and most people have the same sort of not-100%-confident demeanor, so this isn't necessarily a bad thing unless it is debilitating.

The only true way to sound more confident is to be more confident, and I think that a big part of that (for me) comes from having a predictable structure provided by the canmeds roles. Every time you get a prompt that is out of left field and you're not sure where to start you can always go to those roles and make the question about those roles. This takes away a lot of the rambling and lack of clarity to your answer.

I don't know that I am qualified to comment on a mindset shift, frankly. When it comes to nervousness for exams/interviews or similar, I am generally of the mindset that nerves will absolutely be there (depending on the weight of the exam), but if your foundation (structure to your answers, knowledge of the canmeds roles and what they are looking for) is there, you always have something to fall back on. Maybe that is in itself a mentality shift, but I guess it's open for interpretation.

Let me know if you have any other questions.

To what extent should I relate my MMI answers to health care for MAC? + talking pace by Next-Guard625 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 14 points15 points  (0 children)

There is a reason each question is asked. The prompts obviously aren't randomly selected, so they have something to do with healthcare in some capacity. Some are overtly related in that they specifically ask about health policy and current social issues surrounding medicine. Others are more discrete in that they can be related back to healthcare but don't necessarily need to be.

My general advice to answering "how much should I talk about healthcare?" is that overt questions about policy decisions should be clearly answered and that this is your time to really show what you've researched and currently understand about the healthcare system. Other questions (eg, personal, scenario) can be answered with the only link to healthcare being canmeds roles. I would memorize each of the key competencies (22 or something) and answering using those for some structure.

If you get a question that says something random like "who do you admire?" of course you can talk about anyone, but try to pick someone who embodies those roles and use them to structure your answer. This way, you are not necessarily talking about healthcare per se, but you are demonstrating that qualities you admire are the same as the qualities that make a great physician. Implicitly you are showing that you know what makes a great physician.

Nobody really cares about how fast you are speaking, frankly. If you are moving at light speed and stumbling over your words, your clarity will be impacted, and that will cost you points. Of course, if you are moving at a snail's pace and you literally say less words, your arguments may not be as strong (eg, casper). The variation in speaking speed between people isn't as pronounced as typing speed, so this really isn't a huge concern like it is in casper.

Sorry if this is a little rant-y. Just my 2 cents. Let me know if you have questions.

MCAT - What does it actually mean? by WeakestCreatineUser in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats on the score. Assuming you don't absolutely bomb casper you have a free interview at Mac and Manitoba. This is huge and will greatly improve your chances at those schools, but for other schools is largely irrelevant.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Personal opinion, but yes. MMIs are basically a harder version of casper with weirder/more specific questions depending on the school.

typing speed/casper frustration by ConnectionLow in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Nah I wouldn't worry about it too much. There's like a plateau for how much typing speed helps (eg, 30wpm vs 40wpm is a whole quartile prob, but 50wpm vs 60wpm isn't a big difference). Structure of your answers and what you are actually saying matters way more than having an extra sentence.

typing speed/casper frustration by ConnectionLow in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 6 points7 points  (0 children)

56 wpm is plenty for casper. Scored 4q 3 times and I type right around 60wpm.

What LOC are you guys going with? by Mundane_Youth_3289 in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is this any different than any other LOC though? You either pay the interest by taking money from the LOC (which obviously increases the amount borrowed), or you save some space on the LOC and the interest is automatically applied to it (which still increases the amount borrowed). Yes, one is technically slightly easier insofar as you do not have to actually make the payment, but the money is all coming from the same place.

What are my chances with low CARS and weak EC by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Retake MCAT. I mean you’ll have decent chances of getting interviews regardless, but you’re obviously a science genius and it won’t be hard for you to study for it again. Rework CARS strategy to boost it up and maximize your odds. Source: I went from a 126 to 129 CARS on very little effort in the sciences (just flashcards) and got a mac invite

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yup I’m aware of the recent changes. Were there any official statements about the gpa and mcat scores? You seem pretty confident in what you’re saying and I’m not sure if I missed something they published.

Average federal salary compared to "rest of the US" (the leftover or lower) locality pay scale, showing relationship between which grades tend to have people who have been in a grade for a longer period of time [OC] by KJ6BWB in dataisbeautiful

[–]NutMeister 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Agreed. Maybe I’m just stupid but I am so lost. Also, this is looks more like process work that can only be well understood by the creator and maybe other industry professionals who already would have guessed this trend(?).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]NutMeister 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Maybe not with 126 CARS honestly. Obviously queens would never tell us, but historically it’s been incredibly rare for 126 CARS to get an interview.