Wednesday, September 30, 2020

George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences Secondary Application Essay Tips [2020 – 2021]

George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences Secondary Application Essay Tips
George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences Secondary Application Essay Tips

George Washington SMHS centers its curriculum and mission on its ability to graduate “Physician Citizens.” Since the school is located in the most powerful city in the U.S., Washington D.C., GW emphasizes the opportunities to treat the area’s diverse communities. It is essential to have experience working in diverse communities as a member of a clinical or nonclinical team. Also it is critical to hold sensitivity for vulnerable populations as a key value while building advocacy skills. Applicants need to demonstrate their “proven ability to work with people” – meaning both diverse communities and collaborative teams.

George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences 2020-21 secondary application essay questions

GW SMHS essay #1

Please provide the Admissions Committee with a brief summary of your activities, academics, employment or other occupations to account for full-time activity (approx. 30-40 hours/week) from the point of application through matriculation in 2021. (750 characters)

If you are taking a gap year, this is the “what are you doing in your gap year” prompt. The best way to approach this question is to show continuity in your commitment to activities you’ve already begun, and to use this time to deepen your understanding of communities. What else can you do during this time that adds deeper knowledge to your understanding of diversity and health care disparities, both of which are core values of George Washingtom SMHS. Your answer to this prompt should not be about aspirations; it should be about what you are already doing and what else you will do, concretely explained.

If you are in school, discuss the more challenging classes or projects that you are involved in and what makes them challenging. However, if you are active in your community, highlight that activism especially if you will assume a more responsible position or launch or lead a new initiative. 

GW SMHS essay #2

The MD Program includes substantial content in Clinical Public Health (population health, health systems science, health policy, and community health) to prepare GW graduates for an expanded scope of practice required to be successful 21st century physicians. What are your specific interests and experiences related to that aspect of the MD Program? (350 characters)

In 2020, there’s a new dean of The George Washington SMHS. She is committed to a “forward-focus” for the school of medicine. Surely, the integrated curriculum in public health is part of how they focus on the future. To answer this prompt, if you have taken a course in “health policy” explain the relationship between health policy and patient outcomes, or explain what population health is in light of a community-based activity you participated in during a mission trip abroad or in your own community during the pandemic.

GW SMHS essay #3

What is your most meaningful clinical experience to date, involving direct patient contact? (350 characters)

For this question, consider the range of your experience and the level of responsibility that you’ve taken on in a clinical setting. Choose the one that required you to provide the most support or hands-on assistance. Effective examples would be if you’ve traveled to another country for a medical mission or translated at a free clinic. Educating patients on any aspect of preventative health or taking a patient’s medical history would also work. Close this brief response stating a successful outcome for the patient(s), a significant change in your understanding of diversity and medicine, or a humble moment of wisdom about adjusting to a difficult challenge. 

GW SMHS essay #4

What makes you a unique individual? What challenges have you faced? How will these factors help you contribute to the diversity of the student body at GW? (1000 characters)

How are you different from a typical student? By this, I mean, demographics: race, identity, class, culture, religion, and ability. How does your difference make you stand out? Applicants have a little bit of room to elaborate when answering this prompt, so turn this prompt into a story to tell, one that brings out the challenge, lesson, and triumph associated with a diversity experience. One note: your answer should correct a divisive stance, if relevant, not further entrench one. How did you ever make a polarized encounter better, not just for oneself, but others too.

GW SMHS essay #5

What is your specific interest in the MD Program at GW? What opportunities would you take advantage of as a student here? Why? (2000 characters)

Do your research for this question. There are lots of wonderful, special programs at GW. Again, it’s essential to be authentic in your response. What does a doctor’s future entail as told through the eyes (mission / opportunity) of one of their programs? You may reach out to a student or advisor at GW about one of their programs, so that when you write about it, you are correctly informed. How does this program serve future doctors?

If you would like professional guidance with your George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences application materials, check out Accepted’s Medical School Admissions Consulting and Editing Services, which include advising, editing, and interview coaching for GW SMHS’s application materials.

George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences 2020-21 application timeline

AMCAS application due December 14, 2020
Secondary application due February 1, 2021

Source: GW SMHS website

***Disclaimer: Information is subject to change. Please check with individual programs to verify the essay questions, instructions and deadlines.***

Mary-Mahoney-admissions-consultantDr. Mary Mahoney, Ph.D. has over 20 years of experience as an advisor and essay reviewer for med school applicants. She is a tenured English Professor with an MFA in Creative Writing from Sarah Lawrence College and a PhD in Literature and Writing from the University of Houston. For the last twenty years, Mary has served as a grad school advisor and essay reviewer for med school applicants. Want Mary to help you get Accepted? Click here to get in touch!


Alicia McNease Nimonkar admissions expertAlicia McNease Nimonkar worked for 5 years as the Student Advisor & Director at the UC Davis School of Medicine's postbac program where she both evaluated applications and advised students applying successfully to med school and other health professional programs. She has served Accepted's clients since 2012 with roughly a 90% success rate. She has a Master of Arts in Composition and Rhetoric as well as Literature. Want Alicia to help you get Accepted? Click here to get in touch!

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