Wednesday 30 August 2017

You Got an Offer! Now Work Your Hardest!

When you’ve been made an offer by the university you impressed, you then need to knuckle down and work hard. Now I would recommend quitting volunteering and prioritising your studies over anything else. You may have a part time job, and this isn’t a problem at all. Just make sure you find that perfect balance.

You worked so hard to write your personal statement, get interviewed, get chosen and been made an offer, don’t blow that chance!

Now you need to revise like you’ve never revised before. A-Levels are not like GCSEs at all. GCSEs you could get away with revising three weeks before an exam. A-Levels are completely different.
Please give yourself plenty of time to revise. Prioritise your A-Levels over everything and make sure you master your revision technique! Use as many websites as possible…be videos….be long Word documents from GetRevising... whatever! I would also recommend using your teachers until they break! Challenge them with questions you have about the course or exam, make them review past papers you’ve completed and just ask them questions when you get stuck. Past papers are the main key, use a combination of old spec and new spec to work out your progress. Don’t waste Mock Weeks as they are the most “close” representation you’ll get to the exam.

Never give up. I struggled with all of my A-Levels, there’s no hiding from it! I’ll be honest with you, my results were never perfect through A-Levels – they were shocking. In Year 12, my AS results varied from a C all the way to a B in Biology and Maths (and finished with an A at Maths AS). In Psychology, I got Bs and Cs throughout the year and finished with an A at Psychology AS. Chemistry was the worst! I achieved Us, Es and Cs all through Year 12 and Year 13. This was roughly my progress throughout Year 13 – not once did I reach my offer of AAA:

My grades from Christmas 2016 to Summer 2017 (basically Year 13).

As you can see, there is ALWAYS time to pull it around. What did I change? I prioritised everything after my A-Levels and dedicated all my evenings to staying in my room, sitting at my desk and just revising. I didn’t do anything but. I spoke to my teachers about my course and what I struggled with, and found myself eventually enjoying what I learnt once again (as I did at GCSE). I found loads of videos and support on The Student Room, YouTube and GetRevising, which gave me an additional boost. Do not give up at all, just keep your aspirations high and you’ll do great!

Sunday 27 August 2017

MMI Interviews

It feels like forever, but the day comes! You wake up, login to your emails and see an offer for an interview at your chosen interview! Some universities conduct panel interviews and some universities conduct MMIs, which stand for multiple mini interviews.

I think MMIs are perfect - they are stress-free and go so quickly, you don’t have time to dwell and panic. MMIs are like speed dating. You are set up in small workstations in a rotating carousel that means you’re tested on different skillsets throughout the day. I will be describing MMIs because I have experienced them twice.

How long does it last? It lasts a whole hour in total, with usually ten stations. You tend to get one minute to read a piece of paper describing the task and then five minutes to carry out that task. The task could range from doing a small question booklet for five minutes or describing your volunteer/work experience. I will give you a break down for each MMI that I have researched.

I believe the majority of the MMIs will contain queries on:

  • Structure of the NHS – not exactly Clinical Commissioning Groups etc, but the role of doctors, nurses and administrators in the hospital. How do their roles differ? Who is more important?Use your own opinion but do remember, keep an open minded, fair and equal response. Saying doctors are superior and nurses just do the slave work will give a very negative impression!
  • Describe your work experience/volunteer work – they will ask you questions concerning your duties, your role, your responsibilities, what you learned etc. One interview I attended had this in two separate stations, but the other interview asked about both my work experience and volunteer work at the same station.
  • Medical ethics – incredibly important! I will definitely recommend you read on the pillars of medical ethics. You shouldn’t know them perfectly, you haven’t done medicine so how are you supposed to know? They just want to know you have some beginning knowledge. That’s what I did, I learnt the keywords and applied it to my answers regarding ethical questions. It was so satisfying when the interviewer raises their eyebrows with a smile as they start jotting, it’s so rewarding! When given a patient comparison question, doctors never prejudice or discriminate so you should discuss each case separately and then give a conclusion based on what you believe. Practise situational judgement tests that concern and include medical ethics! 
  • Basic mathematics and statistics could be tested, like calculating a dosage or the next time for a dosage. This also includes interpreting a graph and analysing results from a table or chart.
  • You could be asked to describe a photo of a skin condition. Practise looking at a photograph of a rash or infected area of the body and describe what you see. You need to be concise and describe what you see. Include colours, a rough indication of size and area affected and possibly describe the relief (ie. Is there broken skin? Is it bumpy?) Remember you aren’t being assessed on your ability to diagnose, you have got no idea what you’re doing! Just simply describe the photograph being shown, as they’re testing your ability to make concise notes that could be used by a doctor later on. This is done in clerking a patient, which involves taking down initial notes that could be used by a doctor later on to assess how the infected area has changed etc. My next and ultimate tip, make sure you sign and date your work! This is what they do on the ward, and an interviewer smiled at me when I did it! Just sign the bottom, print your full name and add a date and a time! Even if not accurate, just make sure those four things have been done!
  • Describe what healthcare is like in the local area – make sure you have a little read prior to your interview about common health problems in your surrounding area and the surrounding area you’re looking at. You might also want to look at how healthcare differs. 
  • You might have to look at possible factors that affect health, giving reasons for the suggestions you make! Think of common problems (they’re not going to test really difficult health problems!) so think skin conditions, breathing problems, chest pains etc. You could be shown something like cigarettes and asked to describe problems with them. 
  • You could be asked about the university course. I would definitely recommend that you read up about this before you enter the interview. You will be asked about why you have chosen this university’s particular medical course as they all differ. This could be through PBL or CBL, so be prepared to be asked what these terms mean and why you have chosen this course! 
  • You could also be asked about the city and why you have chosen it as a place you would like to study in.
  • Definitely keep up with current medical affairs! Prior to the interview, read the medical news as this could prop up at one of the stations. In the case of discussion, make sure you stay balanced, fight for each case before giving an “In my opinion” conclusion.

One thing I’m really trying to point out about MMIs is that you will be shocked how much they aren’t about you! Having done job interviews, I found I was trying to sell myself constantly and give experiences and point out how it changed me for the better and stuff. In an MMI, the selling has already been done through UCAS with your predicted grades and the personal statement. You’ve sold yourself now. Now they want to see you as a person, are you doctor material?

If you noticed above, I haven’t really dwelled on the personal attributes that will be asked for and tested during the interview. I can’t guarantee they definitely won’t, but I found with MMIs you don’t talk about yourself too much! From my experience, I would say 3/10, 4/10, pushing 5/10 stations will be asking you PERSONAL questions whereas the remaining stations are testing the medical situations, the medical ethics, how you think as a doctor and skills they are looking for.

But, you will get some of the personal things asked about you. I was really thrown off and didn’t expect it in some stations, but you have that one minute thinking time to comprehend the task from the sheet before you have the five minutes to perform.

Some of the “personal” questions I was asked include:

  • What was the biggest mistake you made? What did you do as a result of it? 
  • What is your proudest achievement?
  • Why should you be a doctor? 
  • Why this university? 
  • Surprisingly I wasn’t asked “What are you strengths?” but I was asked “What are my weaknesses?”! 


That was the beauty of MMIs! They are separate stations and only string together at the end of the interview. Your interviewer will be jotting notes down on your performance that are then collated at the end to judge whether or not you get an offer from this university. 

They are separate. If you mess up at one station, move on. Just move on. Put it behind you literally. As the buzzer rings to mark “Move to the next station”, just do that! Get up, walk across, smile, shake the interviewer’s hand and begin reading the introduction sheet at this new station and treat it as a new start. You could fuel yourself to try better at this one, and redeem yourself!

The interviewers are also great at wearing their poker faces. Some may not smile, some may not even maintain eye contact for longer than 30 seconds. They could spend the whole time just writing in their notepad and judging your performance. One interviewer I had didn’t smile once but glared at me with dark open eyes. But you battle it, you still smile and sell yourself! He’s testing how you deal under intimidation, how you deal with pressure! No doctor has perfect smiley patients, so he wants to see how you can communicate with him. 

Just because your interviewer looks bored and unhappy, don’t think you’re doing an awful job at impressing him. The notes he’s making on you could be gleaming! But you wouldn’t know, you just see his stern look and him jotting down notes. 

Saturday 26 August 2017

Personal Statement

You will need to construct a personal statement which sells you to the university. It should advertise you as a person, should be written by you and should make the admissions team reading it go “Wow. Give this person a place!”. You have 4,000 characters to sell yourself, so what should you include?

Firstly, check the university course website. Most universities may post personal requirements that they are looking for. For example, some universities might be looking for a confident resilient individual that has strong communication skills. You want to read across your chosen universities’ websites and refine what you should include. Sometimes there will be an overlap, but you want to sound as appealing to the universities as possible!  Merge all the personal qualities from your chosen universities and construct one personal statement. It is the only one you’ll write and all five universities will receive the same statement.

Don’t fixate TOO much on Medicine in your personal statement. You are applying to five universities, but only a maximum of FOUR of these can be Medicine. Therefore, one university has to be non-Medicine. So this could be Biomedical Sciences, Biochemsitry, Human Anatomy etc. If you apply to Art, they are most likely going to reject you as your personal statement will all be about Medicine!

What should you include?

  • Show don’t tell – If the university is looking for a “confident resilient individual that has strong communication skills”, you could use these words but with caution. Don’t use the string of words exactly how they’re written in the prospectus. So instead, show the admissions team what makes you that individual. Maybe you were a head boy? A peer mentor? An adviser for younger pupils? Don’t just say “I work well in a team”, give examples of team led activities you’ve taken part in. 
  • All your experience journal entries! Mention BRIEFLY what you did, but what you learnt from it. Don’t dwell too much on certain aspects as interviewers may take them as opportunities for you to elaborate on certain points. I’ll give an example later. Say what you’ve learnt and how it changed you as a person. 
  • Your most perfect English, spelling and grammar. Make sure you use spell check! 
  • Be passionate without using the word. Do not say “I am very passionate about medicine” because it’s extremely cliché. You want you just put across your passion and strong interests without saying it. 
  • Don’t say any cliché terms – it is a complete waste of characters and you only have 4,000 of them so use them wisely. You haven’t wanted to study medicine since you were a child, so don’t waste the energy to type it.  
  • Take on board all feedback you receive. Hand your personal statement to anyone that you can! I handed my personal statement to my Villiers Park mentor, two teachers, two doctors and a nurse! I had conflicting feedback, three against three on different parts. One person would say they love one bit where another person would say “Scrap it!”. Personally, it all comes down to you. If you think it should stay, then keep it. If it should go, remove it. You don’t have to take all feedback and act on it – it’s YOUR personal statement. 
  • Use short snappy words if you can. Don’t waste characters as “next” uses less characters than “in addition to this”. Remember, conserve those 4,000 characters wisely. 
  • Avoid cliché terms like “I am passionate for Medicine”, “I really love Medicine”, “I was born a doctor!” 
  • All your own work – do not plagiarise! You will be found and caught out on it. This will affect your opportunity of reading medicine.

Make sure you apply to medical school before the deadline! Then it’s a waiting game….waiting for the university to reply to your application! 

Friday 25 August 2017

Admission Tests

BMAT AND UKCAT

Now you’re brought into the admission test period of becoming a Medical student. There are two admission tests you must know about: BMAT and UKCAT.

BMAT = BioMedical Admissions Test. You only take this test if you are applying to a medical school that uses the BMAT. Examples of universities that require the BMAT include Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial College London, University College London, Leeds, Lancaster etc. The full list can be accessed online as it is subject to change.

UKCAT = UK Clinical Aptitude Test. This is used primarily in the selection process by medical schools to help them choose ‘higher’ capable students. It is believed the UKCAT tests aptitude (which is mental ability and behaviour) as opposed to academic skill. Essentially most of the medical schools require it, although most don’t look at it. So you’re 100% going to need to do this.

To summarise, you’ll definitely need to do the UKCAT and you may need to do the BMAT depending if you’re applying to certain universities.

I really don’t want to go into details about these admission tests as you’ll find more support on other websites. I don’t want this guide becoming outdated quickly, so I’ll give you a rough overview of the tests. They are both timed exams that you will probably not fully complete on the day you are tested. The UKCAT is tested on a computer with multiple choice answers, where you tend to answer the most appropriate or the correct answer. The BMAT is a paper exam which tests mental arithmetic and finishes with an essay that you need to complete on one A4 side from a given list of titles.

The BMAT test is very hard to prepare for, but there are resources available online. Please please please please buy books, borrow them from libraries, print resources off the Internet etc. I even downloaded a “UKCAT Practice Questions” application on my phone. They will be your greatest bet to practising for these horrible exams! I will tell you now, they aren’t nice at all!


WHAT IF I DO REALLY BADLY IN THE ADMISSION TESTS?

You might end up performing poorly in the exams. I’ll be honest, I scored below average in both the UKCAT and the BMAT. In fact, I opened my BMAT results during my Chemistry lesson and was sent out because my teacher thought I was going to break down in tears. It is extremely demoralising. You feel like you’ve written off your opportunity to go to a medical school.

Do not give up. Stay off forums. They will hurt you even more. You’ll score 500 and read on the Student Room about someone complaining if their 690 is good enough, and everyone will batter them down to blowing their one chance to medical school for this year. I did the same with the BMAT. I scored below average and was really disappointed.

But aim high. It is very very rare to receive all 5 offers from your chosen universities – I’m sure you’ve heard this before. So conceal your worries and fears. Ok so you scored low in the UKCAT/BMAT, oh well, move on and wait for the universities to make their decision prior to the interview selection process.

Wednesday 23 August 2017

Selecting the Universities

SELECTING

This process will differ person to person. My sixth form was roughly 60 students large and I’m pretty sure everyone approached the university selection process differently. Some people wanted to live on the other side of the UK to their home, some people wanted to stay local. Some people wanted campus universities whereas some people wanted city universities.

I’m not going to write a great amount on this section, because you may choose another path. But think of all the factors that will affect your living and wellbeing in each university. Luckily, you’ve done Step 1 and chosen your course, which I’m hoping is still Medicine and I haven’t put you off!
Now, you need to choose your medical school. The deadline for UCAS will be in October-ish, so take advantage of the summer of Year 12 to visit open days while they’re advertising themselves to prospective medical students.

Take into consideration these factors:
  • Cost of living (is it an expensive area?) 
  • What’s the medical course like? Spiral curriculum – the university will integrate theory teaching alongside shadowing doctors. Old style of teaching – the university will start with non-clinical years, which is just theory. Then, the university willl end with clinical years, where you will be in the hospital.
  • Do you like the city the university is situated within?
  • Could you see yourself living here? 
  • Distance from home?
  • Entry requirements? Are they realistic and achievable for you? 
  • Other entry requirements that aren’t grades? Do they have a certain amount of volunteering hours you need? 
  • What are the reviews on the university? Are they high in the league table? Are they scoring highly in student pass rate and satisfaction score?
  • Is it a Russell Group University?
  • Do you enjoy the style of teaching? Like case based learning or problem based learning? I definitely recommend you researching the difference between the two.
  • What societies are available? Eg. do they have a pottery club as you’re interested in picking up claywork that you’ve missed since Art GCSE? 

There are many other variables that will determine your chosen universities.

Your FIRM choice will be your #1 choice that you really want to go to. Your INSURANCE choice will be #2 choice. The smart thing to do is be aspiration and aim for the #1 choice as long as it is achievable. If you’re predicted ABB, apply for a medical school with lower grade entry requirements as opposed to a Russell Group university demanding A*A*A. Your INSURANCE choice should back this up. I would recommend your FIRM choice being the university that demands, at maximum, your predicted grades.

If I was predicted ABB, my FIRM would be possibly ABB maximum and my INSURANCE would be BBB. But, you want to manipulate this decision by how much you love the university. If you love Southampton that much but hate the A*AA entry requirement, use it as a fuel motivation to push you to get a place, you might be guessing too harsh so aim higher! With caution though, keep realistic. It’s hard to go from ABB to A*AA if your teachers aren’t predicting it already.


EXHIBITIONS

Make sure you make use of the summer and go to as many university open days as possible. Go and explore the accomodation, ask loads of questions and take a notepad. If you’re not impressed, don’t apply! If you are really impressed, then aim high and go for it! You have a choice in line for Year 13 when you apply to university.

At UCAS Exhibit Days, I’m pretty sure it was our head of sixth form that advised, don’t get attracted by free pens. Don’t hand your email address willy nilly to get a free iPad … I’m still getting emails now from one uni to study Economics because I wanted to win the trip to New York. (I didn’t by the way!)

The main underline thing is to answer questions. Be that annoying student with their hand constantly up. You want your parents to turn around and go “Where is he?” and they spot you speaking to another tour guide student. Any question you may have, any doubt or query, ask! I took advantage of this and I felt so prepared knowing all my questions had been answered.

You should visit your university’s website to find details about open days throughout the summer of Year 12 and September-December of Year 13. You can also visit more than once! If you are limited on time and transport, only visit the universities you’re really debating on applying to. I would recommend you visit open days to at least 5 universities during your Year 12 summer.


UNIVERSITY RESIDENTIAL COURSES

Some university courses offer residential courses that can be completed by Year 12 and Year 13 students to explore a subject they may be passionate about studying at university. These are perfect for two reasons: you can find out if the course you’re interested in is really what you want to do and you can get a taste of the university you’re at.

I attended a Biomedical Sciences residential course at the university I'm currently studying at. With this, I was exploring different aspects of Biomedical Science across 9 weeks. The course days ran across 9 Wednesday evenings, which meant I had to catch a train at lunch time and come back to my hometown at 6ish. It wasn’t detrimental massively to my studies, but I defintely needed to spend my free time catching up with work I had missed. In the course, I learnt about what the uni had on offer and in each lesson was a different aspect, so I would do anatomy, then dentistry, then medicine, then cell physiology etc. This did actually help with my EPQ!

As well as this, you can sometimes get advantages for taking part in the university residential courses. Some universities offer special bursaries, possibly a reduced conditional offer or a guaranteed place or interview. For medicine, I was guaranteed an interview at my university for being part of their residential course. If I wasn’t applying for medicine, but say Biomedical Sciences, I would have a guaranteed offer.

Visit your chosen universities’ websites to see what they have on offer! Some universities offer courses in Autumn and Spring of Year 12 and Autumn of Year 13.

Tuesday 22 August 2017

Work Experience Tip and Year 12 Wrap-Up!

LITTLE WORK EXPERIENCE TIP

One little thing I came across online was about the comparison of GP surgeries to the hospital. I would definitely read around this topic as it is a common interview question.

My best recommendation – do what I did. Get a feel of it yourself. I completed 5 days work experience at a GP surgery. Here, I shadowed GPs and sat in while they observed and dealt with patients. I completed 5 days work experience the following week at the local Hospital on the cancer ward.

From doing this, I had my own opinion of the differences between GPs and hospitals.


WRAP UP

The main thing I want you to take from the past few posts is that Year 12 may not be your “academically most special” time as you will have no Year 12 summer exams, I would spend this time building up your portfolio of extra-curricular activities and filling in that experience journal.

Before you know it, here comes Year 13. Your deadline will be in October-ish, so make sure you have some universties lined up. Use the summer to take advantage of open days that are being ran by your chosen universities. Remember the deadline for Oxbridge (University of Oxford and University of Cambridge) and Medicine, Vetenary Sciences and Dentistry are all earlier (October-ish) compared to everyone else’s UCAS deadline

Monday 21 August 2017

MOOCs

MOOC stands for Massive Open Online Course and I recommend you complete at least one of these! They’re short, they’re fun and they’re interesting. You basically teach yourself something on the side that may be beyond the specification (meaning you are indirectly wider reading!)

You login, dedicate 15 minutes or so a day on learning new things, complete an online test and move to the next screen. But there are so many MOOCs available. So if you’re interested in drugs, mental health, paediatric health, oncology or neurology – there is a MOOC out there for you!

I completed a MOOC on cancer biology which was being run by the university I applied to, so I used this to further my knowledge. Not only did it compensate my own knowledge, but it “fuelled that passion for Medicine” and I could use it for research in my EPQ.

Sunday 20 August 2017

EPQ - To do or not to do?

This is your opinion. For me, the EPQ is an exciting opportunity to do something different. It’s not like any other subject, it’s like a really long (few months duration) rewarding essay homework. You explore sources, dissect scientific literature, and evaluate sources to then produce a finished final piece to showcase your dedication and work. But I won’t lie – it’s fairly hard. It’s hard to start but once you’re in, it becomes so much easier.

I’ll give you the EPQ in a nutshell: it’s what you make it. You can dedicate all your time and efforts into it like I did, and it’ll pay off. When I wasn’t volunteering or working, I would sit on my computer, download PDF scientific literature to deduce and write sections of my EPQ. 5,000 words sounds way too much and a long task, but you know you’re doing it right if you end up in the 6,000 mark and need to start cutting paragraphs and concisely chopping your work down to the word limit.

The EPQ is time consuming – no argument there. You will need to be an expert at time management. For me, I got an A* in the EPQ through dedicating practically all my summer and evenings at the beginning of Year 13 to refining material and writing a 5,000 word piece on how two chemotherapy drugs work. I described their mechanism of action in combating colorectal disease that was becoming metastatic before comparing them in terms of effectiveness. I had a 21 page document explaining my findings accompanied by a 50 page sources table that evaluated each source I used. This was OVERBOARD. People get A*s in the EPQ in much less work than this. But the EPQ will reward you with a high grade if you feed it with time and dedication!

So what’s good about the EPQ? It shows which students are commited, dedicated, love a challenge and demonstrate a variety of skills. They can deduce literature into an understanding that makes sense to them – like at uni. They handle primary sourced and secondary sourced data – like at uni. They show which students can work hard and follow a path to create a journey from start, research, refine, produce, finish – like at uni. They show students that have a passion in the subject (eg. Music students may produce a song or write about a particular music style and how it may have developed over time etc).

The EPQ makes your UCAS application even more attractive. It kinda makes you look like the perfect university candidate, so they’ll offer you that interview! It’s very different, so I will recommend it highly! It’s literally the A-Level version of blood, sweat and tears.

It is an A-Level, so an A* is available. Some schools give a small timeframe for the EPQ, so you need to try and craft two years worth of work (similar to an A-Level) into that timeframe to produce a final piece.

The "selling points" of the EPQ (eg. making your UCAS application more attractive etc) is what I have heard from teachers in my sixth forms and speaking to some student tour guides at different university open days.

Saturday 19 August 2017

Experience Journal

Document everything you do! The reason I have found this document fairly easy to put together is all because I documented every experience I did. Villiers Park gave me a template that worked perfectly in crafting my personal statement and discussing in interviews.

So an experience journal, how will that help? I would recommend buying a small notebook that you’ll keep from Year 12 all the way to the end of Year 13. All you got to do is plan something you’ll do, like work experience or an extra-curricular activity and then write a short description about it.

For every experience or work you do, answer the following questions:

  • What is the date/time I did it?
  • What exactly did I do?
  • Where was it?
  • What did I learn?
  • How did this fuel my passion for Medicine?
  • How has it changed me/led me to do?

You wouldn’t believe it, but universities only really care about the final three bullet points of that template. You could go complete work experience in India and observe a baby being delivered. But what did you actually benefit from that? If you can’t explain, you clearly didn’t develop yourself. This is to deal with opportunity that is separate from all medical candidates. Some candidates have family working at the NHS so can get readily available work experience. Some candidates can fundraise the money to go to India to undergo medical shadowing and support. Some candidates live in rural areas where there are no surrounding hospitals or surgeries in reach to volunteer or work at. So they’re primarily interested on what you have learnt, how this has fuelled your passion for studying medicine and how it has changed you (whether you did something else after that experience or learnt something).

Make sure you fill this out closer to when you have completed or doing the experience. The purpose of this is to make sure every detail is retained for later recall in your personal statement building or interview practice.

If you write this, you’ve basically got the skeleton to your personal statement and the answers to those questions in your interviews.

Friday 18 August 2017

Year 12 - Where to begin?

WHAT SHOULD I DO DURING YEAR 12?

1. Do not waste this valuable time! I spent it as a “toedipping into A-Level, I’m not doing any real exams this year so I can revise and pick up definitely next year and smash those exams”. Yeah that doesn’t happen. Work mounts up pretty fast. My tips would include:
a. Complete homework pretty much as soon as possible. It’s so relaxing doing one piece of work a night rather than four that are all due tomorrow. Breaking it up helps. I’m not saying “Do it the night it’s set” because you do that once and can never repeat … so just make sure you complete every homework and keep on top.
b. Pretty notes are good, but do they really benefit you? This differs person to person. One girl in my class would write scrap notes in class to then copy out neatly when she got home. Her folder was the best in the class, but you want to spend this time valuable doing past paper questions and/or applying your notes to answers.
c. Literally use class time to jot notes. Get into practise of writing quickly and concisely as I’ve been recommended to develop this skill in preparation for university.
d. Definitely read around topics. It’ll wow your teacher and fill in any knowledge gaps. You learn about stereoisomers in Chemistry and chiral carbons and it makes no sense why biological catalysts are better than lab experiments in synthesising drugs. You WIDER READ online and find this the reason Thalidomide was responsible for causing mutations in Thalidomide babies. It really does help reading around a subject.

2. Volunteer. But volunteer in a medical or care setting. Some people volunteer in a care home or some people volunteer on hospital wards. Volunteering is a lot easier than you think. You’re not being unpaid to save lives or clean bodily liquids. It’s mainly an opportunity to observe how the hospital environment works, the hierarchy of the staff on the ward and how patients are cared for. Your main role really is serving hot drinks and dinners from the ward kitchen. Mainly prospective med students will volunteer, so take it is an opportunity to make friends! I had no friends at sixth form interested in studying Medicine, but through volunteering I found myself in a small group where we’d keep each other updated on what we learnt, interviews etc. I would definitely recommend doing this upwards from 6 months – 12 months. I volunteered at my local Hospital on the ward dedicated to caring for dementia patients. Here I learned how doctors and nurses communicate with dementia patients as well as how dementia patients communicate themselves with me. My main responsibilities were serving hot drinks, dinners and making beds for new patients.

3. Next, attend some kind of residential course which will deepen your knowledge in your interest. Let it be related, like biology, cell biology, drug physiology etc. I attended a Villiers Park Residential Course on Biology in Foxton. I really enjoyed this experience because I learnt about cancer in terms of its biological side as opposed to the emotional side. In this residential, I developed interpersonal skills, how to work in a team of people I haven’t worked with before with a task I’m not familiar with and dissecting an understanding from research journals and papers that I will be doing in university.

4. Summer of Year 11-Year 12 is a perfect time for work experience. Make sure it is relevant again, so maybe explore a particular field of medicine you’re most interested in. Apply online by contacting the hospital or surgery directly. I completed work experience at my local Hospital on the ward dedicated for the treatment and care of cancer patients because of my passion for cancer that had stemmed from completing the Villiers Park residential. Here I shadowed doctors and understood everything from treatment to care to admin in dealing with cancer patients.


WHAT EXTRA THINGS SHOULD I COMPLETE?

1. Maybe a first aid course? I did first aid training at the hospital and at my school to understand and learn basic lifesaving procedures.

2. Fundraise? My school didn’t have an AED (defibrillator) which I thought was very dangerous, so I fundraised for one and raised £1400 at school which now means someone’s life could be saved at my school if they were to experience a cardiac arrest.

3. Duke of Edinburgh Award? This is quite a good topic to write about in your personal statement and you can say about how you’ve learnt a variety of skills whilst completing the award.

4. EPQ? This is debatable … see later post.

5. Keep an experience journal… see later post.

6. MOOC – Massive Open Online Courses … see later post.

7. If you see something on your work experience, research more into it! Produce a small paper or document on it! When I completed my work experience on paediatrics, I was amazed to meet a patient with tracheoesophageal fistula (TOF). I then went home, researched more about it and produced a document that I took with me to my interviews.

Thursday 17 August 2017

Subjects - What A-Levels do I choose?

SUBJECTS - WHAT DID I CHOOSE AND WHY?

So I began at my secondary school's sixth form where I decided to study Psychology, Maths, Biology and Chemistry. The standard university offer for Medicine is Chemistry and usually two other sciences that includes Maths – they essentially won’t accept Critical Thinking or General Studies. Check any universities you may be interested in and mould your options around them.

It is also important that at GCSE you have aimed to get mostly A*s or As (now 7-9 in the new GCSE Grading System from 2017). It is vital you get the minimum GCSEs to study the A-Levels listed above. For example, you may require to get a B (or equivalent) in Biology GCSE to study Biology A-Level.

I chose Psychology because you study memory and case studies into dementia and have a beginning “foot-in-the-door” to understanding mental health issues. You also learn biological processes like synapses and neurones which you met at GCSE but will need to understand a little bit more (…which definitely goes hand-inhand with Biology A-Level). I chose Maths because I enjoyed it and Biology because I found it more interesting than Physics.

My word of advice: do not choose Biology A-Level if you are going to regard it as an "easier" subject compared to the other sciences. Don't learn this the hard way...


WHY HAVE I GOT TO DO A-LEVEL CHEMISTRY TO BE A DOCTOR?

You might be reacting how I first did reading uni prospectuses. Why Chemistry? Surely body anatomy and physiology outweighs the effects of temperature on the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide in a lab? Surely Biology is more important than Chemistry for a doctor? Well yeah I guess it is, but I have asked a doctor about this question.

She told me that it’s all about the skills you learn whilst studying Chemistry A-Level. I will dwell on this in the science subject section, but you learn a lot about logical working, critical thinking and investigations. The doctor said this is a perfect representation of Medicine. Someone comes in with a problem showing symptom A, B and C – you will diagnose their condition based on visual symptoms and results from tests. This is similar to Chemistry. If you have four beakers on a workbench containing clear liquids that all look and smell the same, you can work out which one is an iodide by adding silver nitrate and observing a yellow precipitate forming – you ‘diagnose’ it as an iodide.


SCIENCE A-LEVELS - WHAT'S INVOLVED EXACTLY?

So that explains choosing A-Levels… but I didn’t go into too much detail about the sciences, just that word of warning about Biology. You will hear it in the science department as banter that "Biology consists of respiration, photosynthesis and more on plants." Biology is the WHAT, Chemistry is the HOW and Physics is the WHY. They are all as hard as each other.

I can’t speak on behalf of Physics as I didn’t do it. But from what I hear from my physicist friends, Physics sounds similar to Chemistry in the way there is complicated theory endorsed by mathematical elements. This is very similar to Chemistry. If you like Maths, I would definitely recommend Chemistry and Physics. You will be taught things in both subjects that cross-link, eg. you’ll be taught logarithms in Maths and made to use logarithms in Arrhenius’ Equation questions in Chemistry.

Biology is not easy. You could say most of the content is easy as you may be familiar with parts. For example, closed keeping of chickens to conserve energy so they produce more meat. Or that all your genetic code is kept in a double strand of DNA. But the difference is quantity. There is sooo much to learn for Biology which makes it more challenging. My Year 2 Biology A-Level textbook was the same size as Year 1, whereas Year 2 Chemistry ALevel textbook was half the size of Year 1!