The Residency Selection Process
Choosing a residency program, writing personal statements
for residency program applications, and interviewing for residency
positions will take up much of the third and fourth years of
medical school. This section provides information about selecting,
interviewing, and writing personal statements for residenc positions,
and gives links to information about the application and match
processes.
How to select a residency program by Tom Gadacz, MD, FACS (17 K PDF)
How to interview for a residency position by L.D. Brit, MD, FACS (215 K PDF)
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In addition, preparing an effective personal statement is
a vital part of the process of getting into the residency program
that is best for you. Following are tips that you should keep
in mind when considering the direction of your personal statement.
Preparing your personal statement
Medical students worry, sweat and fret over their personal
statements. What should I say? Where should I start? You should
first consider your audience. The first challenge of the personal
statement is that the audience who is reading your personal statement
is varied. Some program directors and others who review candidates
files read the personal statement word for word. Others totally
ignore it. Some essential points to remember:
- Spelling errors are a big glaring error. Especially these
days in light of electronic spell check options. Most spelling
errors are immediately visible to even the most superficial reviewer.
A spelling error indicates a lack of compulsivity on your part,
and most readers consider these oversights to be inexcusable.
- Grammatical errors are almost as big a problem as spelling
errors, although they are not usually detectable by a superficial
look. Please, ask someone else with a strong editorial eye to
read your statement before you submit it.
- Tomes are not acceptable. Remember your audience: busy surgeons.
We do not have the time nor the patience to read two to three
pages of your life story. Keep it short.
- Humor is good. We don't want a stand up comedy act, but a
subtle use of humor (once) can provide a welcome relief to the
tedium.
- Be original. A "your dog had surgery when you were four"
is an old story and one tale that many directors probably are
not interested in reading about again.
Your advisor can be a big help in contributing suggestions
for your personal statement, as can best friends. Mothers, in
general, although a great resource for many things, are not the
best contributors when seeking suggestions for your personal
statement.
Finding and applying to residency programs
Using these links, you can access Web sites providing information
about the match program, finding residency positions, and applying
for those positions.
Association of
Program Directors in Surgery Residency Clearinghouse
National Resident Matching
Program (NRMP/ AAMC)
Fellowship
and Residency Electronic Interactive Database Access FRIEDA (AMA)
Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical EducationACGME
Electronic Residency Application
Service (ERAS)
Universal Application for Residency (UNAR) (PDF file)
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