45 Medical School Recommendation Letters


Book Description

When they prepare for medical school, few candidates take the time to acquire the caliber of recommendation letters they will need to distinguish themselves in a highly competitive applicant pool. This book, which was written by an Ivy League admissions expert, offers detailed advice to write (and get) persuasive letters that highlight the personal, academic and professional strengths the committee expects to see. It also includes 45 successful recommendation letters, including several that "explain" extenuating circumstances in a candidate's history (such as disappointing grades, a gap in employment, and low MCAT scores). At top medical schools, where the competition is fierce, the quality and depth of a candidate's reference letters can make the difference between acceptance and rejection. Whether you are an applicant who needs a persuasive letter of recommendation, or someone who has been asked to write one, this exceptional book is mandatory reading.




Cracking Med School Admissions


Book Description

There's a unique perspective on medical school admissions that only near-peers who have recently gone through the application process can provide. Stanford Medical Students Rachel Rizal, Rishi Mediratta, and James Xie, along with Devin Nambiar wrote Cracking Med School Admissions to provide timely, specific, and relevant tips about medical school admissions. The book's highlights include 1) 50 primary AND secondary essays from medical students accepted at elite medical schools, 2) Practical examples and tips about completing the primary medical school application, letters of recommendation, medical school interviews, and selecting medical schools, and 3) Profiles of successful MD/PhD, clinical researchers, post-baccalaureate, and global health applicants. The Collective Experience of the Cracking Med Admissions Team Includes: - Current Stanford Medical Students - College and Medical School Admissions Interviewers - Graduates from Princeton University, Stanford University, Columbia University, Johns Hopkins University, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and School of Oriental and African Studies - A British Marshall Scholar - A Fulbright Scholar - Backgrounds in business, computer science, public health, education, global health, and entrepreneurship - Hundreds of pre-med clients successfully advised and accepted to medical school




The Unofficial Guide to Getting Into Medical School


Book Description

This book is designed to help you become one of the few applicants to get into a highly competitive medicine degree, based on the insights of over 300 medical students across 32 UK medical schools. Written in a clear and engaging style, the Unofficial Guide offers unique content to help you stand out from the crowd with useful tips and information at every stage of the process. It demystifies what you can expect from the degree, talks you though writing the application, covers what you need to know (and appear to know) for the interview, and provides a full guide to exam preparation. Updated to incorporate recent post-COVID changes to the admission process, and full of real-life examples from those who have succeeded before you, this will be a much-cherished companion for every would-be doctor. Unique, highly relevant and inspirational content, all based on real-life experiences Complete approach that focuses on every aspect of getting into medical school Written by doctors and medical students – full of tips and tricks that work Improve your application - covers what admission tutors are looking for when making their selection Blitz the interview – strategies and techniques, the top 120 most commonly encountered questions, plus all the extra-curricular background reading required Ace your entrance exams – 20-hour preparation strategy Write a fantastic personal statement - step-by-step support using previous successful examples Graduate medicine applications and dedicated section for international students Includes a section dedicated to international students Content updated to include post-COVID changes to the process More real-life examples How to select the best medical school to increase your chances New diagrams




The International Medical Graduate's Guide to US Medicine & Residency Training


Book Description

Written in cooperation with the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, this is the one-source reference tool IMGs need to succeed in U.S. medicine and residency training.







Model Rules of Professional Conduct


Book Description

The Model Rules of Professional Conduct provides an up-to-date resource for information on legal ethics. Federal, state and local courts in all jurisdictions look to the Rules for guidance in solving lawyer malpractice cases, disciplinary actions, disqualification issues, sanctions questions and much more. In this volume, black-letter Rules of Professional Conduct are followed by numbered Comments that explain each Rule's purpose and provide suggestions for its practical application. The Rules will help you identify proper conduct in a variety of given situations, review those instances where discretionary action is possible, and define the nature of the relationship between you and your clients, colleagues and the courts.




The Best 167 Medical Schools, 2016 Edition


Book Description

The Princeton Review's The Best 167 Medical Schools gives you complete and up-to-date info about the best allopathic, osteopathic, and naturopathic schools in the U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico.







Federal Register


Book Description




Getting In


Book Description

Getting In: How Not To Apply to Medical School is a tough, practical guide for people storming the ramparts of medical school admission boards. Paul Jung takes the pre-med or second-career aspirant from pre-application experiences through the application process with a very practical approach. The book is filled with the pitfalls and misconceptions applicants frequently make, rendering the subtitle particularly apt and (for those terrified of the unknowns) eminently appealing. The volume also includes self-diagnostic sections and common pitfalls to avoid when applying to medical school. Contrary to popular belief, applying to medical school doesn′t have to be stressful and time-consuming. Getting In shows students caught in the web of medical school admissions boards how to apply to medical school the right way—setting themselves apart from the rest of the crowd. Jung takes pre-med and second-career aspirants through the entire ordeal and lets them know how important it is to apply as early as possible. From preparation and finding ways to obtain an application noticed by the admissions committee to information on the MCAT and getting through common interview traps, the book gives inside tips and helps applicants through what can be a stressful and uncertain time. The author allows readers a glimpse into common errors that others have made in their quests for acceptance, such as taking all required science courses in one semester or leaving large chunks of a medical application blank. Taking a down-to-earth, realistic approach, Jung acknowledges the pitfalls and misconceptions frequently made by applicants and even provides alternative solutions for discouraged students. The result is a well-written book that describes hardships and blunders but also gives good, practical information on how to succeed.