The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Thursday, 28 August 2014
  4 Replies
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I'm an M3 with a 230's Step 1 score, from a good school in new england, with good research (5 pubs, 1 high impact/5-6 presentations), hopefully good grades this year, with a strong desire to match ortho.

In other words, I'm in the pack, with an OK Step 1 score.

I've been trying to get a handle on what it takes to match ortho, and how to stand out of the crowd of excellent applicants. There is a lot of good advice out there, but essentially it seems to come down to:

1) kill step (which I didn't, but I didn't **** the bed either)
2) honors surgery (which I hope to)
3) kill your aways
4) get strong letters
5) be a cool, normal person

But from where I'm standing, it seems like 90% of applicants will accomplish all 5 of these things. So I guess my question to the residents is: when you are reading applications, what were some of the other factors that "tipped" applicants, and helped them go from strong applicant to someone you actually want to interview? Thanks in advance!
11 years ago
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#58496
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I'm an ortho resident at a big program out west and sit on our selection committee - I help review initial applications and also interview applicants.

First off, you sound like a solid candidate, so relax. You're doing all the right things.

In terms of the application, your goal is to get your foot in the door. Beyond the numbers (grades, Step 1 score, publications), your highest impact will come from letters. Aim to get GLOWING letters from well known national faculty. Away rotations help a lot as well, but only at the program you're rotating through. Lastly, a solid personal statement that highlights your personality, work ethic, and leadership can make a real difference. As you suggested, a lot of orthopedic residents are very competitive and hard to distinguish on paper. The only place in your application where your personality really shows is in your essay, so make it count. This is where you can show that you're a cool, normal person before we meet you at the interview.

Lastly, most essays we read are honestly rather terrible. Mostly they're just poorly written and boring, but some really try to get overly creative and come off ridiculous. Both can hurt your chances. My advise, have people read your essay. For some, it may be worth spending a little $ to have a professional look at it - this is your future after all. When I went through I had the guys at PlasticsMatch look at my essay. They did an incredible job. Have no experience with any competitors so you'd have to look around.
11 years ago
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#58497
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Hey plasticsmatch, stop posing as residents/applicants and spamming orthogate. No one wants to use your crappy service. Anyone who's talked to an actual ortho advisor or PD knows damn well that letters and personal statements aren't going to have a huge impact on your match. The entire package matters, and LORs are just one part of the package. Obviously you need good letters, but 99% of applicants have good letters. Why else would programs be using those supplemental eval forms these days? PD's can't rely on LORs because most writers play it safe.

Man, this message board has really gone to sh**. Half of these threads are plasticsmatch shills going unnoticed by the mods, and the other half are unanswered questions or paranoid M3's/applicants looking for reassurance.
11 years ago
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#58498
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Thanks very much Sam, that was helpful! This can be an anxiety-inducing process, even to those who normally aren't prone to anxiety, so every little bit of info helps. Much appreciated.
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