Applicants generally had positive experiences at Johns Hopkins Medical School, with many expressing it as their top choice. They appreciated the friendly and welcoming faculty, students, and staff, as well as the relaxed and conversational interview process. Some found the waiting room mingling with 4th-year students evaluating them to be a bit stressful, but overall, they were impressed with the school, its facilities, and the opportunities it offers.
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Loved the school, easy top choice.
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Positive experience as a whole.
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Largely, this wasn't a comfortable or warm interview day. In part this depends on who your interviewers are, but it was also the larger structure of the day.
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I got a very positive impression overall. Hopkins is among my top choices.
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Great day- one of the best interviews of the entire season in terms of complete school overview, tour, and student opinion
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Faculty Interviewer: Repeatedly yawned in front of me during the interview and dressed in sweats. Clearly didn't want to be there.
Student Interviewer: Meh, just got the general vibe he didn't like me - I felt like he thought I wasn't interesting
The Waiting Room: You ARE critqued by interviewers while waiting in the waiting room and talking with them. I don't care what anyone says - it DOES inherently create an awkward and artificial tone.
Overall, really only the prestige, and maybe the public health/disparities side is intriguing. New curriculum seemed good also, but that's it. Interviewed at several other elite schools, and only school where admissions staff and tour guides were openly obnoxious.
Really just did not like it here - not a good fit at all.
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Excellent school in a place where I wouldn't want to live. I could tolerate Baltimore, but I think it would add to my stress level. Contrary to some other reviews, I enjoyed the hang out session with the MS4s and thought it was a good idea.
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<3 Hopkins
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GETTING TO JHMI (TIPS FROM A JHU UNDERGRADUATE) From the airport: Take the MARC train to Baltimore Penn Station (it costs around $5.00). There is a FREE Hopkins shuttle that runs from Penn Station (train station) to the medical school. The shuttle is quite reliable. You will pick it up on the St. Paul side of Penn Station (take a left when you exit the front door of the train station, and wait at the bus stop shelter). The bus will usually be a big blue and white bus that says "Johns Hopkins" on the side, but may also be a school bus or a white bus (if the normal one is broken). You can access the shuttle schedule here: http://www.parking.jhu.edu/shuttles_jhmi_homewood.html Click on the "Shuttle Schedule" link on the right to see the most recent schedule. The next stop after Penn Station is the Peabody Conservatory, so stay on the bus. The next stop after the Peabody Conservatory is the Hampton House on the JHMI campus. GET OFF HERE! Reed Hall is the building next to the Hampton House (same side of the street as the bus stop). If you are heading toward the admissions building, cross the street from where you got off and continue down North Broadway.
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Interviews with 4th year students, individually, are closed file. Interview with the Adcom faculty member are open file. While you're waiting to have your interview you're being evaluated by the 4th years (1-2) that wait in the room with you.
Also, stay with a student host if at all possible. My student host helped me out with a tie when I realized that I hadn't brought one.
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The whole "get a seat in the center of the waiting room so you can talk to the 4th years who are grading you" is bogus. There were 16 people applicants in the waiting room and everyone got involved, chitchatted, and had a pretty awesome time, it wasn't stressful at all. I want to go back there and party with them there! Also, BEWARE: Reed Hall is a dump!
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I went into this interview already knowing some of JHU's greatest strengths and was pleased to see that most are true. You may have a larger interview group like me, but the way that they split us up for specific activities worked well in my opinion. The lunch, and subsequent chat with fourth year students before interviews can be a little awkward at first, but if you have good things to ask and state, you'll be fine. My faculty interviewer was very nice, had access to my whole application, and had a set list of questions already. My student interviewer was very casual but thorough. Just relax and let your true personality shine forth. I had a good day and left with many reasons to consider Johns Hopkins seriously if given the chance.
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Awesome school
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Faculty interview was open file and student interview was closed file.
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Much has been said about the period in which interviewers sit with older med students on the admissions committee...as one doctor there put it to me before my interview, that part is "just to weed out the pricks". On the whole the med students were very kind and we talked about all kinds of things...just show you're a well-mannered and kind person. Both interviewers were very nice, interviews were conversational, I was quite impressed all around. It has also been noted that the school is right in the ghetto, which it definitely is. Other parts of Baltimore are pretty nice though, and the rents are low.
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Johns Hopkins is a pretty impressive school in comparison to many other medical schools I have seen.
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One open-file 45 minute faculty interview and one closed-file 15 minute student interview.
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Everything except my faculty interviewer was great.
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2 interviews: one faculty (30 min) and one student (15-20min). Both were really low-stress
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The tour was nice, there is a ripped Jesus on steroids statue in the bell tower area. We got sent to a lounge area and then were pulled out for interviews. One is a 15 minute closed file with a 4th yr med student. The other is a 45 minute open file with a faculty member. Sitting in the lounge and chatting with the 4th yr meds. By then, we already had so much opportunity to ask questions that we mostly talked about social stuff
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There are two interviews (4th year student closed file and faculty open file) and yet you're being evaluated while in the waiting room with the other applicants and 4th years. I really enjoyed the tour and the lunch. I stayed with a student host who took me around town and gave me more insight into the school. It was a blast.
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A little overwhelming. It was my first one so I didn't do as well as I could have, but on the whole everyone was very kind and they gave me lots of opportunities to showcase myself.
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Stayed at Reed Hall (didn't go to Greeters the night before, but I heard that was really great). Breakfast (buy your own) and chatting with other applicants (15 of us there) Orientation (boring), lunch with faculty and student (our student didn't show up), tour by a student, two interviews, one with a M4 (closed file) and the other with a faculty member (open file).
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Two interviews: my first was 15 minutes, with a student, and the second was 45, with a faculty member.
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Financial aid talk, then lunch with faculty, then interviews. Student interview closed file, very informal and very enjoyable, just be ready to talk about your life A LOT. Then hung out in the ''group room'' and then interviewed with faculty which was a little more formal and structured, but still pretty relaxed and conversational.
Oh, the students you hang out with in the group room are on the committee, and get to cast a preliminary vote, but don't get an official final vote, just fyi.
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I was simply blown away by Johns Hopkins. From witnessing the collegiality present between the fellows and the other physicians during a Grand Rounds session to interacting with the current students, it is readily apparent that the greatest asset of Johns Hopkins is its medical community. As such, they invest greatly in making sure every member is as well trained as possible. The curriculum includes journal clubs, clinician shadowing, traditional lectures, small group sessions, and several special courses (like Physician and Society) that cover the issues that will become increasingly pertinent to the profession. I cannot say enough good things about my interview day, the curriculum, and Johns Hopkins in general. It was a great honor just to visit such an amazing institution.
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The day is divided up into two parts: the morning where you are not being evaluated and then a total immersion with admissions people. After the lunch with faculty and the tour, you sit in a room with fourth years and just chat. Hint: don't try too hard to impress them, you look dumb. The student interview is really really laid back, just be yourself. Same advice for the faculty interview, only he or she has all your information and can ask about grades etc. Big hint: look over your experiences you listed on your primary so you don't forget to mention it in the interview!
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Everything I thought about JH was wrong. People are very laid back, friendly, etc. Lecturers are nobel prize winners. apply early. i submitted my application mid july, was one of the first interviewees
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GREAT
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I'd already been accepted to my top choice (Cornell), and went into this interview not really expecting to be impressed enough to choose Baltimore over NYC. But the school is really amazing, and the people (faculty as well as MD-PhD students) were wonderful. Also had incredible crabcakes for dinner.
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The day was planned to maximize your opportunities to learn about the school and show the admissions committee who you are. Day began at 11:30 and ended at 4:30 and there was a looseness to they way that the day progressed. The interviews were entirely conversational and relatively brief.
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Arrived and sat with fellow applicants for 20min, then had introduction by dean and financial aid. Lucnh with faculty and MS3s, followed by a tour with same MS3s. Then back to admissions waiting for interview. You're waiting with fellow applicants and MS4s who are on adcom. There's plenty of time to ask them questions and just chat (be sure to say something). One of the MS4s calls you back for a 15min, closed-file interview. Then back to waiting with others for the longer, open-file faculty interview.
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Two days, four interviews one day, two interviews the next day, lots of time with current students. The MSTP office is exceptionally well run.
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The faculty interviwer wasn't the nicest person ever, but it still went well. The student interview is closed-file, but still counts just as much as the faculty interviewer.
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The day starts at 1130, which is nice because of extra sleep. Starts with brief intro. and financial aid talk, then lunch. Student led tour in small groups was pretty informative. Then there's two interviews: open-file with faculty and close-file with 4th year student. Anytime you're not in an interviews you're in a room with fellow interviewees and 4th years. This is not as bad as it sounds, just don't be stuck in a corner. The students are very nice, so it's easy to feel comfortable.
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We started the day meeting the other interviewees in the waiting room of the admissions office. There is a brief introduction and then a financial aid presentation which in total takes about 25 minutes. There is a lunch that follows. There are MD's as well as medical students at the lunch who are not on the adcomm. They are there to answer questions and are very friendly. Lunch is followed by a quick tour and then back to the admissions office. Once in the admissions office you are joined by several 4th year students who are on the adcomm. They sit and talk with you until the interviewer calls you back. Following the faculty interview, one of the 4th years (who are in the waiting room with you) will take you back into another room for a closed file interview. The rest of the time, you wait for everyone to finish both of their interviews and know it is time to leave when the refreshments are hastily removed from the area. All in all, great interview experience at Hopkins!
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Like I said, very odd. My faculty interviewer talked for about 40 of the 45 minutes.
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I thought it went really well. much better than i had pictured. i imagined all these hard ethical questions and i really didn't get any!
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I had a great time. There's a meet-and-greet the night before with a tour of Reed Hall. I really like the idea of a dorm setting to create community between the students. The next day, there was the option of visiting classes in the morning. The day formally started at 11:30am with Dean White speaking to us about admissions and financial aid. We had a lunch with students and faculty at small tables, took a brief tour of campus, and returned for an open-file faculty interview and a closed-file student interview. If you get a chance to travel, inner-Harbor is gorgeous.
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All in all, a great visit. Staying in Reed was a lot of fun since it gave me time to bond with other interviewees and talk to more Hopkins students; by the time I actually got to the interview day in the morning, I felt very settled in and comfortable. Dr. White gives a brief talk about the admissions process and financial aid, then you go to a lunch with assigned seating so each table has 3-4 interviewees and a faculty member or student. We talked about sports and city driving, and the food was good. Totally laid back. This is followed by a tour by a student. Then, at 2, you all go to the admissions office and sit with a bunch of 4th years who are on the adcom. They're evaluating you, but it was TOTALLY chill. They were friendly and easy to talk to. Throughout this period, you get taken away for a 15 min closed-file interview with one of these students, and a regular-length one with a faculty member. Both were extremely friendly and easy. My heart rate didn't accelerate all day, and Hopkins left a very positive impression on me!
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It was good. My interviewer was extremely interesting and fun to talk to. The closed-file student interview was also great. We really just chatted for a while about fun stuff.
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I had an amazing time at Hopkins. Every single student I met at Hopkins seemed incredibly happy. Our tour guide was a really kind person who clearly was plugged into the community--he must have greeted at least 3 different doctors during our short tour, who all knew his name in return. The format is excellent. You don't start until 11:30, then have lunch with a faculty and student (who are not on admissions), and then the interviewers call you when it's your turn. You're done by 4pm, and you've met several faculty, the dean, and a ton of students by then. I really thought that the whole experience was excellent. The administration clearly cares a lot about the students, and it's so clear from everyone's attitude, that they absolutely love it there (including the faculty). I was really nervous because it was my first interview, but it must have gone okay because I got in! I left having totally fallen in love with Hopkins.
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Loved the school, facilities, students, etc. Didn't love the interviews. Actually, my interviewees were really nice, but the faculty interview was incredibly short and just glazed the surface, and my student interviewer (closed file, btw) seemed a bit reserved and so the "conversational" exchange I usually enjoy didn't seem possible.
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I was set up with a student to stay with who was absolutely wonderful. She showed me around and answered all my questions and was probably the best part of my visit. While the school seems ideal for med students interested in research or seeing unusual cases in certain specialties, it didn't seem to necessarily excel at its general classroom education or be particularly unusual in its clinical education.
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If you get a chance go to the 8pm meeting with the 1st years at Reed Hall, you get a chance to meet some first years ask questions and meet your fellow interviewees.
The interview day started at 11:30 but there was a housing informational at 10:30 which was pretty informative, at 11:30 we met with the assistant dean, 12ish we had lunch where we had assigned seats with a faculty member and a 3rd year student, a tour from 1-2 and then at 2 you sit down with fourth years and basically socialize and ask questions. They are evaluation you but it's really not stressful at all. The whole day is very social but its nice you get to meet some cool people and learn a lot about hopkins. They pull you out for an interview with a student and a faculty member at various times.
My faculty interviewer was from my home town which really surprised me considering I live in a pretty small city and he was very nice and laid back not stressful at all
The student interviewer is closed file so they ask a lot of questions that you would normally have in your application so be prepared to talk about all that. It's also very laid back and the students are really nice
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The day begins with a talk from Paul White, who is awesome, just going over general admissions things, financial aid, etc. You immediately go to lunch with 4th years and faculty NOT on the admissions committee, so you can have an "evaluation free" time to ask questions and get to know people. Then, we were taken on a brief tour with a 4th year (and believe me, for the size of the place, the tour was too brief to even highlight the top 10 things to see). Then it's back to the room of doom. No, that's a joke. It was not doom at all! You sit in the room waiting to be interviewed by a student and faculty member and you are surrounded by fellow applicants and 4th years. Yes, the 4th years ARE evaluating you, so don't sit and look mad or scared, just relax and have a conversation. This is also a good time to ask questions, but ask question that you really want to know the answers to! They will see right through you if you are just trying to show off. My student interview was very laid back, closed file of course, and went really well. We talked for a long time! The faculty interview came next (which is first or second is pretty random) and I was totally stressed by it. Part of the problem was that this is my 1st choice, so I was nervous and clearly not my usual relaxed and confident self (I am not a babbler, but felt my mouth moving a mile a minute!). He asked some really basic questions and did not seem interested in my answers. It was not conversational at all. It was hard to tell if he was acting like this to seem impartial, or he was really quite unimpressed by me, and maybe wondering why he was wasting his time there. I got the feeling he only reviewed my grades and scores and did not look much at my experiences or letters (other med school interviewers have had praise or at least positively-toned questions regarding these things). I know I did not do as well as I could have, and it was hard to relax enough to be myself with his demeanor. It's odd, because I know a few physicians in his specialty and they all tend to be very friendly and warm. So, maybe it was an act?
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I was too nervous but the people are very nice there and very attentive to your need. the food is good, i like it.
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The student interview was straightforward, just "tell me about yourself," etc. The faculty interview was much more difficult and kind of weird, see above. I was not accepted, but that's really okay since I got the impression Hopkins would be a bad fit for me.
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You don't have to arrive until 11:30am. This is beautiful and allowed me to get a good night's sleep. Dean White begins the day with a short talk on the admissions process, when you should expect a desision, financial aid, etc. You then go to lunch. There are tables of 5 or 6 people with each seat being pre-assigned. They make sure that students from the same school do not sit together, and each table has a faculty member and 3rd or 4th year seated with interviewees. Lunch is buffet-style. After lunch, you go on the tour. Basically, if you want to see something, then tell the tour guide. They will take you there (unless you want to see the OR). Be sure to ask them questions. After the tour, you sit in the admissions office with a handful of 4th years. They are evaluating you. Do NOT stress about this. As long as you are not socially inept, then you're fine. They will approach you. Talk to them, talk to fellow interviewees (these might be your future classmates). Throughout this time (roughly 2pm until 4:30pm), you'll be swept away by both a student and a faculty member. The student interviews are closed file. They just want to get to know you and see if you'd be a good colleague. Faculty interviews depend on who you get, for each interviewer has a different style. Around 4:30pm, you're done.
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It was a good first interview because not stressful once I got there, people were welcoming and the other interviewees were fun. The adminstration doesn't seem to make an effort to sell itself to us whatsoever.
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I enjoyed it.
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So the interview day starts at 11:30 with a talk about admissions and financial aid. We then sit down and eat lunch with a faculty member and student, neither of which is on the board of admissions. Then we take a tour, which isn't so great when it's extremely hot and humid outside. I came back from the tour really sweaty, and then I had to go straight to my interview (at 2pm). The interview with the faculty was alright; she was nice, but some of the questions she posed were a bit tough, though not unreasonable. The student interview was fantastic; he took me to the fountain inside, so it was a very soothing location.
A note on the time when you're sitting in the room with students from the admissions committee: this is definitely not stressful. Some people spaz out about it, but they're probably just gunners who feel compelled to impress them all with their amazing questions and impressive resume. No, it's not a time to be snotty, but just a time to find out info from them and show that you can talk to people on a normal basis. I talked about football for at least 1/3 of the time. Enjoy this session, have a few questions prepared beforehand, and just enjoy the flow. It's rather informal and relaxing. There is NOTHING to fear with this part!
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The interviewers were friendly and very proud of Hopkins. The med student was particularly laid back.
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The 4th year medical students REALLY want to get to know you and made the interview atmostphere so comfortable. I talked about the Pistons, DJing, and other topics with them. Being an undergraduate at the same university helps, but everyone is eager to fill those traveling from other schools about all the details about Baltimore and the medical school.
Always have questions to ask! Review the curriculum, attend visiting sessions beforehand, read the website, but get to know the school thoroughly.
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I came in the night before and did the meet-and-greet at Reed Hall, which I recommend. You'll meet some students and get a feel for the people, who are NOT the stuck-up type or the bookwormy ones either. They were actually extremely cool. Two 20-minute interviews the next afternoon - open-file with faculty and closed-file with student. But you do sit around the admissions lobby for 2+ hours with the group of interviewees and 4 fourth-years who are on the admissions committee and are judging you. It wasn't as unnerving as I thought it would be - they just wanted to see you interact with others. Tour was incredible, the day was great, and I walked out wondering how I could possibly feel like I had actually done it and gotten in. Oh, and they call you to notify you if you're accepted, so it adds a personal touch.
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I didn't plan on doing any interview feedbacks, but after reading the ones posted here and how mild they were, I felt I had to speak up about my experience at Hopkins.
I'm not a very harsh person, but I have to say that Hopkins managed to elicit the strongest negative reaction I have had to anything in recent memory.
1. The students were pompous, insecure, and obnoxious. I heard "we have a nobel laureate teaching our classes" about 40 different times throughout the day (I actually can't think of a single student who didn't mention that). They kept coming back to how awesome Hopkins was and how it's repuation was so good (which I'm sure is true), but it was a stark contrast to the modest confidence that I found at other schools of equal caliber. Harvard and Columbia were great examples of schools where the students never even mentioned how "prestigious" their schools were, but managed to speak about other relevant strengths.
2. They are singularly focused on dispelling their reputation as a school full of gunners. You can tell a lot about a person based on what he/she is defensive about, and I think you can tell a lot about a school based on what it is defensive about. If I hear "oh, we pass along class notes and make summary sheets all the time" one more time from anybody, I'm going to go crazy.
I went to 13 interviews, and my second-worst impression of a school was actually pretty positive. I wouldn't have minded going to that school. However, I would consider reapplying if the only school I got into was Hopkins.
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I arrived a bit early and then waited around in a room with the other applicants for about an hour. We then moved to a conference room for an hour of lunch and talking to faculty and 4th year students who were not involved with the admissions process. Then a tour with a 4th year. We were then returned to the waiting room and were met by 4th years who were part of the admissions process and were called away to do interviews with students or faculty one-by-one. A long day.
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It was good. I liked it. People were nice and down to earth. They say it's not competitive at all, and it showed. The SNMA dinner was great too.
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Fairly good experience. I was asked why I wanted to come to Johns Hopkins, and the interviewer made sure to figure out if the school was a right fit for me. Other than that we talked about his specialty some of the work he's done, which I happened to have an interest in. The other interview was conducted by was of the students. It was closed file, so I spent the time going over the major parts of my resume, filling in details that weren't already in my application.
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I stayed with a student in Charles Village, and I found out a lot of useful info about the school from her. Also, since I was staying at such a close proximity to the school, I had a lot of time to get ready and go to my interview.
Overall, I had a great experience at JHMS. The students seemed genuinely nice, the facilities were impressive, and while people at Hopkins seemed to have a lot of Hopkins pride, they didn't have the arrogance many times found in peer institutions.
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I really thought that my interview day went great except for the actual interview itself. The students were really cool and interesting people, not just book smart. And all the fuculty from the secretaries in the office to the physicians at the lunch were super nice. My problem was with my interviewer. From my name and appearance one can easily deduce that I am a Muslim. So Dr. McHugh asked me several questions about the war in Iraq and why we are encountering so much resistance. I felt that these questions were inappropraite, how the hell I am I supposed to know, it was like he was saying, you're one of them so why don't you tell me about it. Also I had expressed that I was interested in getting involved in humanitarian work so he questioned me about that and suggested that I should be doing public health. It was my first interview and I was nervous so I don't think that I gave the greatest responses but he was not being very accomodating. Perhaps he wanted me to take a stand and say how the hell should I know what's in the mind of the insurgents, or maybe he wanted me to appologise to him. In any case it didn't go well for me but I still thought the school was very good.
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My faculty interviewer was, by far, the most relaxed, no-pressure interviewer I've had. He put me entirely at ease. Overall, I really enjoyed my day here.
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Both interviews went well. both the faculty and student interviewers were there to listen and were very friendly and approachable. the whole experience ended up being kind of cheesy as the faculty interviewer switched to more of a recruiting tone than an interviewing one. but who knows, maybe that is how he approaches every interviewee.
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Overall, I left feeling like I must have missed something, because I SHOULD have liked it, right? I recommend stopping by the new public health building. It has great study spaces and is really quite nice.
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I was really impressed by the school. you have lunch w/students and faculty. the interviews were conversational and the interviewers i had were extremely friendly and easy to talk with. i would say the stressful portion is just sitting the the room w/everyone.
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Interviewers were really laid back and just wanted to get to know me. They did this by really reviewing my file beforehand (the faculty member that is) and asking really pointed questions. The student interviewer is closed file, which creates a more laid back and free-flowing,conversational atmosphere. Again, a pretty satisfying experience and a great school...
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There were two interviews-- a closed file 15 minute interview with a 4th year student, and a 45 minute open-file interview with a faculty or admissions committee member. Also, all your down time (from approximately 2 PM after lunch until you can leave [they say to stay at least until 4:30]) is in a group interview-type setting with 4th years who are on the admissions committee. This is relatively informal, but still a little stressful because there is a sense of being evaluated. The student and faculty interviews went smoothly and were low stress. No one tried to stump me with hard questions or anything like that. The campus seemed a lot nicer than everyone had been describing it. I didn't feel unsafe or see too many security guards, etc-- it seems that the "ghetto" description is unfair. Besides, the community that is served by the hospital seemed great-- very diverse ethnically and socioeconomically.
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The student and faculty interviews were as expected. However, the group mingling with the med students on the admissions council was very very long and drawn out. I was out of questions to ask the students after 30 minutes, so for the other 2 hours, I basically had to ask irrelevant questions and make small talk.
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I had expected to like JH, but not as much as I did. The students were wonderful. My interviews were relaxed and yet quite productive.
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My faculty interview was great - very conversational. It's open-file, and my interviewer really took the time to get to know me and what motivates me. She also told me a lot about the school, the MD program at Hopkins, and what life in Baltimore is like. The 4th yr student interview is short - only about 15 minutes. It's closed-file and very laid-back. Most of the time is spent telling your interviewer about yourself and what you have done during college, etc. The time spent with the 4th yrs is great - it's really nothing to worry about. They are awesome people who are interested in getting to know you and telling you all about Hopkins.
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The interviews were not stressful, sitting around the room with med students and interviewees was fine, but it was kind of a weird situation as you all know you're being "watched." the student interview was closed file, relaxed and low-stress. the faculty interview was great & both really made me feel like I would love hopkins. i was trying to figure out why they get such a bad rep for being cutthroat, etc. and can only think that people are intimidated by hopkins. i suppose it could seem overwhelming...i thought it was incredible.
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The interviewers gave me quite a hard time and pressed me on many scientific problems. I felt grilled. However, I was really impressed with the degree to which they treat their interviewees and how important selecting qualified candidates is to them. The program is really well run and the research done is quite fascinating. The area is not as great though, but that's also one of the traits of this medical school.
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This is my top choice now after visiting the school. I felt I got a very good look into the school because I stayed at the residence halls for two nights. I was able to hang out with first year students, go into the city and enjoy the night life with another interviewee staying in the res hall, and spend time with 4th years without worrying about getting back to a hotel. I felt like they value all their interviewees. I would advise people to stay in Reed. Yes, it's a dump, but my interviewer told me that when the students were given the option to renovate, they opted to allocate the money elsewhere into the school - and you can handle anything for one or two nights. Plus you get the option of hanging out with students there, and that was very cool.
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After a talk, lunch, and a tour they bring you back to a lounge where there are 4th year students that you are to talk to. This part counts as part of the evaluation process. It isnt stressful, just try and be part of a conversation at least some of the time. My complaint with that part was that it was really long. I mean there are only so many questions you can ask. The student interview was longer than they said it was supposed to be, but I am not complaining because I feel like they got a better sense of me that way. The faculty interview was pretty relaxed too. They seem to ask a lot about future plans.
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I was impressed. They deserve their reputation - this is a serious medical school. However, I still don't know about Baltimore.
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I thought that the room was set up really wierdly for the 4th year student led "discussion"... the couches were set up so that a few people were sort of off to the side of the main group.
The faculty interview was open file and about 30 mins, the student interview was closed file and about 15 mins.
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Nothing amazing, but it is Hopkins, hard not to be impressed. Overall, I left definitely seeing myself possibly coming here more than before, since the opportunities at Hopkins are just great.
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Fantastic school. Don't sweat the group interview. Its more like a question and answer session with students. Find out as much from them as you can about Hopkins, you will be impressed.
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Just amazing. I loved this place, Baltimore isnt as bad as people say. There really is a guard on every corner of the medical campus, it isnt just a sound bite. The students are the best part, no doubt.
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I loved the school. It was amazing to see the history and beauty of the school, but I was very turned off by the area around the campus. Something about cops every 10 steps is not very appealing.
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Very impressive place. It is great getting to talk to the M4s while waiting to interview and finding out about the school.
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It's tough for to imagine any school that can measure up to Hopkins. The clinical and research facilities are superb, and the faculty are supposedly fairly accessible. People complain a lot about Baltimore, but the indigent population base actually provides for rigorous clinical training. And several faculty noted the fact that you feel like you're actually helping the surrounding population by practicing in Baltimore. The students are extremely accomplished, highly brilliant, and very humble.
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Very informal. They have constructed a new building where the Admissions Office is now housed; a great deal of time is spent in one room of that building simply talking to 4th year medical students. They do have a voice in the admission process, but it is not high stress by any means. Unfortunately, it does become tedious making small talk for almost two hours. Entirely too much time is spent in that one room. I was impressed by the doctors who I met, many of whom were teachers. However, I was not particularly impressed by the campus or facilities. A small recreation center, a poor dorm hall, etc.
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These interviews were very easy and conversational. You can pretty much count on getting only 2 major questions: what is your research experience and why do you want a combined degree instead of one or the other? If you have good answers for those, you'll sail through!
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It was a great interview experience with one closed-file, short student interview and one open-file longer faculty interview. Don't let the small talk with fourth-year students who are on the committee scare you because they're really cool and just want to get to know you and answer questions for you. There's really no reason to stress and it was a much more relaxed day than I thought it would be. Also, my interview experience was slightly hectic because they had just moved into their new building and the hurricane was a-comin! oof was that a mess. Anyway, they're not all about research or competition either - you'll see when you get there how laid back the students and faculty really are.
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Hopkins rules! The reputation scared me, but each time I visited I like the place more. The people are amazing but down to earth. We have so much free time in the first year - I'm taking outside courses and volunteering. Don't get scared off by rumors other med students start - this place is an amazing place to study medicine.
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I was really impressed by everything there and I'm convinced that the opportunities outweigh the bad weather (compared to Cali) and the bad neighborhoods. Also you eat lunch with faculty and students who aren't on the admissions committee and they give you soft drinks all day long, which is cool. The big scary room with the 4th year interviews isn't as bad as it sounds, either.
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The interview experience was very unique in that the applicants have numerous opportunities to talk with each other and with 4th year students. the atmosphere is very relaxed and everybody were friendly and helpful. the interviewers just wants to know you, not to bust your chops.
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I went up to Baltimore not considering Johns Hopkins as much of an option. They are now either my #1 or #2 choice, probably #1. It is common knowledge that Johns Hopkins has an impressive reputation, but I did not expect for the atmosphere and attitudes of the people to be so welcoming, friendly, and down to earth. I kept looking for the down-side of this school... I didn't find it. The only thing that I would consider a down-side is that it is a private school, so obviously their costs are a little higher... but I would suck it up and go a little further in debt to go there. I read a lot of other comments that kind of scared me about that whole part where you are in the room with 4th year students on the admissions committee and how aweful it was.... I didn't think so at all. Just be yourself... they are just there to keep you occupied from 2-4 pm while you are waiting for your interviews. No one was left out, we all talked in groups. It wasn't like you were fighting to have one-on-one conversations with them or anything. JUST RELAX AND BE YOURSELF... THAT IS ALL THAT THEY EXPECT! :-)
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The interviews themselves were really great. The interviewers were warm, asked only fair questions, and I felt that they were really interested in getting to know the applicant.
However...
There is a part of the interview process where all the interviewees are sitting in a large room with 4th year medical students who were on the admissions committee. We were told only that this was a chance to "mingle" with Hopkins students. As soon as the mingling started, it felt like the first episode of "Joe Millionaire." Everyone was trying to catch the attention of various students, struggling to turn casual conversation into a meaningful interaction that the students would remember. But it felt so fake! I even saw some of the other interviewees turn to each other after talking with one of the 4th years and whisper, "That conversation felt so artificial." It also felt like the entire group of 4th years were gradually starting to hone in on their chosen stars. One of the 4th years told an interviewee, "Yeah, I will totally call you when I'm down in LA and we will hang out." I found this to be highly unprofessional and inappropriate. The rest of us non-stars started to feel demoralized just at the time when we needed to be psyching ourselves up for our formal interviews. I have no idea how much this part impacts the final admissions decision. But I feel like half of the interviewees (the stars) left feeling great about Hopkins, and the other half (the non-stars) left feeling like there was absolutely zero chance of acceptance.
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The rumors of hypercompetitiveness among the students appear to be bogus--why should they compete with each other when 95% of them get their 1st or 2nd choice of residency? The "competitive mingling" everyone worries about isn't that big a deal. If you are competent in social situations with strangers, you will be fine.
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Overall, the experience was much more relaxed than I had expected. The day starts at 11:30am with an introduction to Hopkins and how the interview day will work. Then, lunch at noon with students and faculty (seats are assigned to assure that each table has at least one student or faculty member). The tour of the campus at 1:00pm was pretty good, but did not include Reed Hall, so go to the greeters program at 8pm the night before, or the housing session at 10:30am if you want to see the housing. Next, at 2:00pm, all of the interviewees return to the waiting room area, and 4-5 fourth year students that are on the admissions committee (they tell you that they are) introduce themselves and spend time "mingling"/sitting with different groups of interviewees. They are supposed to be evaluating interviewees during this mingling time, but all they did was take questions--they were very nice, and did not make any effort to make us feel as if we were being judged. It was casual, and seemed like mingling at a dinner party. The students have a preliminary vote that determines the order in which files will be considered during admissions committee meetings, but they have no final vote. During the mingling, you are pulled out for a 30-minute, open-file faculty interview, and then a 15-minute, closed-file student interview. My faculty interview was about 45 minutes, and my students interview was about 35 minutes, so they are not strict on time. Both interviews were very relaxed and conversational, and both asked pretty standard questions. It was MUCH less stressful than I had anticipated. The day ends around 5pm when the fourth year students thank everyone for coming and say goodbye. Overall, a relaxed, informative day with LOTS of opportunities to ask questions--so come prepared with lots to ask!
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Friendly advice: Baltimore is not a bad city! I grew up in the Bay area (CA), and besides the weather, think that Baltimore is great! Check out Canton, Fell's Point and Federal Hill areas and you will find great neighborhood with rent from 400 to 600 (even cheaper in some spots).
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It was a very enjoyable experience, especially considering this was both my first interview and first choice, so i was a bit nervous. The dean was really nice and funny and he had a very welcoming talk. Everyone was really nice. My interview was no stress at all, and it was more like a conversation. The interview with the med student was really hurried, but that was again because people were on break so they had fewer staff around.
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The day starts with a very short orientation, followed by lunch with a faculty member (ours was this very sweet old man, he was great), then a tour. In the afternoon, you sit with all the other interviewees and fourth-years who are on the committee. Interviewers pop in and take students, the faculty interview is open file. After the faculty interview one of the fourth-years will interview you, that one is closed-file. The interview was made more stressful because after the tour and meeting students, I really wanted to go to Hopkins, so I was more concerned than normal about making a good impression.
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All in all, the day was organized and very productive. After a tour and lunch, we sat in a room with food and current med students talking. They made a point of telling us that these students were on the committee and would be evaluating us, but our students happened to be super cool, as did our interview group, so it was not stressful at all. I could definately see how it could be however. At different intervals, each interviewee was pulled out to have a faculty interview and a student interview. The day was pretty long as interview days go (11:30-5) so get a good nights rest the night before.
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It was alright. We didnt get an indepth info session and it would have been nice to hear from Financial aid and learn about the various opportunities that the school offers. I also didnt meet any first year students...hmm i wonder why
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We had lunch with a 4th-year student and a faculty member, followed by a tour, then the interviews. One 15 minute interview with a 4th-year and one 30 minute interview with a faculty member. I really enjoyed the students, but the faculty member I interviewed with did not impress me at all. She was not welcoming at all, and I felt like she didn't want to be there. It left me with a bad taste in my mouth. The facilities are good and the atmosphere is obviously top-notch, but I wasn't as impressed as I was hoping to be. The are is not as bad as everyone says, and there is plenty of security around, so that really shouldn't affect a decision. Overall, I guess I just wasn't as impressed as I thought I was going to be.
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The faculty interviewer didn't seem to listen to what I had to say and would cut off my answers. My student interviewer was really nice, just wanting to get to know more about me (this was a closed-file interview).
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It was a really nice visit. My impression of Hopkins went up dramatically. The interviews were with a student and a faculty member. Student was closed file and faculty was open.
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Hopkins is the best. Everyone is super accomplished but also warm and friendly. Clinical experience and flexibility is unmatched. 2 interviews, one with faculty open file 30 minutes, another very informal interview with student, closed file 15 minutes. interviews are no stress at all. also, waiting in the room talking to the 4th years is no stress either, unless you're the type of person that psyches yourself out for no reason.
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It was a very great time. We learned about the traditions of Johns hopkins and I really felt a sense of history. The facilities were not all that great but the hospital and the people outweighed that negative.
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The school, faculty, and students are ultra impressive and they're not afraid to let you know it when you get there. The emphasized over and over that they were not competitive and that it was the undergraduate institution that is competitive. I thought the sitting around in a room with all the other applicants for so long was stressful and created a strange environment; knowing straight out that only about 2-3 of the 10 would be accepted furthered that feeling.
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I really was nervous for this one. I felt fine all morning, but being stuck in the room with all the other interviewees and fourth year admissions committee members all afternoon was stressful. I am a non-traditional applicant with a quirky sense of humor, and judging from the fourth years I met, this might not be the place for me. They seemed a little rigid... But the admissions staff was so nice, and the other interviewees were a fun group. As always, it's hard to get a really good idea of the entire student body after meeting a few people, but the people I did meet confirmed my preconceptions about the type of person Hopkins attracts.
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Very low-stress. If I am accepted I will very likely go here.
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Good interview. Lunch was excellent, the tour was also good. I found the waiting period with fourth years to be pretty low stress and informative. The student interview was closed-file and lasted about 15 minutes. The faculty interview was wonderful, open-file, and lasted about 45 minutes.
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The school isn't as competitive as people say - it is intense, people work hard, so you have to as well. the interviews are fairly relaxed, no one is out to get you.
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After going to the interview, I was dead set on attending Hopkins (unfortunately i was not accepted). There are so many famous researchers there who also love to teach and will sit down at any time to talk about what they are doing. The impact that Hopkins has on medicine is unmatched in my opinion. The med students are definitely not cut-throat like some people think (they are referring more to the undergrad students; the undergrad campus is on the other side of town)
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Johns Hopkins seemed less competitive and friendlier thatn I had been led to believe
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Hopkins is such an awesome place, don't believe the rumors you hear about the school being super competitive, that might be true at JHU undergrad, but the med students here seem like a nice, cooperative, and cool bunch! Relax and enjoy the interview experience, and don't try too hard to catch the attention of the fourth years when you are sitting around together.... they just want to make sure you aren't a wallflower (don't be anti-social.. talk to the people around you) or otherwise a wierdo (don't try TOO hard to be the center of attention.... you might come off as obnoxious) Just be yourself and R-E-L-A-X! Good luck!
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Overall, very positive. The only thing I didnt like was the area around the campus. The campus itself is OK, there are uniformed guards on every corner on the campus, but once you step off campus, watch out.
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Wow, what an amazing group of people at JHU, and an amazing place to learn medicine - it was practically born there and it is just all around impressive.