No change
2 out of 10
45 minutes
At the school
2
One-on-one
Closed file
"Tell me about your high school statistics (class size, rank, AP classes, SAT scores, GPA, etc.)" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Why are you interested in medicine?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Where does IU rank on your list?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"none really" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"No real difficult questions -- one very easy ethical problem" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"read their online brochure, read interview feedback" Report Response
"the willingness of the students to be sent to one of 9 regional campuses" Report Response
"The 3rd and 4th year students constant references to how hellish the first two years were" Report Response
"That the out-of-state tuition is OUTRAGEOUS, and that the interview would be with 150 of my closest friends" Report Response
"Indiana just left a bland taste in my mouth. While I liked the city (smaller, seemingly quiet, but very attractive, well layed out, and easy to get around) the school itself left some things to be desired. First, the interview class the day I was there was about 150 people, including nearly 10 people from my undergraduate institution alone. Indiana takes a different philosophy to the interviews, and I think they try to interview as many as possible. That said, the interview itself was uninspiring. It was a 2-on-1 format with a clinician and a PhD, and the PhD did 90% of the talking. I felt pressured in some instances to find a way to involve the clinician in the interview -- basically I directed a few questions his way, and I actually enjoyed my interactions with him more -- it was too bad most of the talking seemed to be from the other direction. The interview was not stressful and quite easy, but didn't really leave me with much of an impression that these people are sold on their school's medical education. The students were very nice, outgoing, but CONSTANTLY complained about the regional medical education system - they are randomly assigned (allowed to state preferece) to one of 9 campuses in IN for their first two years -- much was raised regarding different difficulty and DIFFERENT GRADING SYSTEMS! in place at different campuses. The students also complained about the difficulty of the first two years, something which I had not encountered before or since at any of the other schools I have visited. Overall, it was a fine experience but didn't leave me with a feeling that it was a place I would realy want to be. The out-of-state tuition (around $53k) was another huge turn-off." Report Response
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