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Residency Personal Statement |
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Written by Ram
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Wednesday, 26 October 2005 |
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Residency Personal Statement
Residency personal statement is an essay you write about your background, your reasons for choosing the residency specialty and your medical career plans. During the initial screening process, most residency program selection committees rely on the USMLE test scores to eliminate applicants. At the time of the medical interview, the Personal statement becomes an important component of the residency program’s selection process. What you say and more importantly, what you don’t say in your residency personal statement can make a significant difference to your medical career.
- Most medical residency program directors spend an average of three minutes scanning through your personal statement. So be brief about what you wish to express and don’t exceed one page.
- If you are applying for fellowships, don’t use the same personal statement from your residency match. Your medical goals have changed and your skills have improved.
- Residency program directors are looking for an academically sound residency applicant who is willing to work and learn under a closely supervised and structured program.
- Fellowship program directors, on the other hand, are looking for a mature physician who will be able to handle stress and manage patients independently. In other words, they are not looking for a medical student. They are looking for a colleague who will work with them. This is a whole different ball game. You have to spice up your personal statement to meet this expectation.
- Typically, Personal statements are one page long and contain 5-6 small paragraphs. Each paragraph deals with one or two topics.
- Keep sentences short. Text should flow eloquently. Your residency personal statement should show you as a confident, mature and well-rounded Physician.
- The final paragraph should summarize your expectations of the residency program and your future medical career plans.
- Do not forget to align your right and left borders by selecting (highlight) the whole page (text) and clicking Justify. Most residents forget to do this and leave their personal statement looking uneven with right margin indents.
- While ERAS residency applicants transmit their documents electronically, fellowship applicants are required to print and mail their work. Don’t compromise on quality when printing your CV and Personal statement. Use a laser printer and professional heavyweight resume paper. Ivory and White are safe colors.
- Request your colleagues, professors or residency program director to proofread your personal statement.
- If you are still not satisfied, consider hiring a professional writer
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