Accepted: Jeanine - James Madison University

Accepted (3).png

Undergraduate education: B.S. Biopsychology, Cognition, and Neuroscience and a Minor in Medical Anthropology from the University of Michigan.

Overall GPA: 3.4

Science GPA: 3.2

GRE: 315

Total PCE hours: ~1500 (at time of submission): EMT-B as an ER Technician

Total HCE hours: 300

Shadowing hours: ~50 hours (Oncology PA, Ortho PA, Vascular Surgery PA, Trauma PA, Sports Medicine MD)

Other Volunteer hours: ~400 (Philanthropy through sorority in undergrad, volunteering at homeless shelter in Ann Arbor, one month abroad in Ecuador working in Diabetes clinic and teaching nutrition to women/children)

LORs: 1 NP and 1 Nurse Manager from ER I work at and my Microbiology professor from post-bacc class

How many times did you apply?:  1

Age: 27

Gender: Female

Why PA? This is a second career path for me. It took some introspection and research to really decide what healthcare profession would fulfill my different desires. I chose PA because I wanted to be a healthcare provider that had a lot of patient interaction but also the chance to use hands on skills and make autonomous clinical decisions. The other main reason is to be able to have the lateral flexibility between specialties. I know myself, and being able to constantly grow and learn between specialties is something that NP or MD wouldn’t be able to exactly provide. Finally, I really wanted to be able to have a work life balance. Coming from a 5 day a week 9-5 job, I appreciate structure for my fitness and cooking routine!

How many programs did you apply to? 9

How many programs did you interview with and what were the outcomes? 1 interview and 1 acceptance

Where will you be attending? James Madison University! It has an international rotation and a real cadaver lab which were two really important things for me to have in a program.

Anything you found surprising about interviews? How relaxed and comfortable I felt! I was definitely nervous about this being my first and only MMI style interview, but they definitely did not try and intimidate us. There were current students there to ask questions about the program before the interview which definitely allowed for some tension to be released. Also, during the actual interview, I definitely felt as if the interviewers wanted us to succeed! For the role play sections, they didn’t ask any questions to try and stump you but just to direct you to an answer that was truthful and honest.

Were there any helpful resources (books, websites, apps) you used to get through prerequisite courses, the application or interview process? I used Magoosh for GRE review and was able to raise my score by 6 points. They did a really good job of breaking stuff down and making you see similarities between questions. For the interview, I mainly used ”Physician Assistant Interview Guide: Tips, Tricks, and Techniques to Impress your Interviewers”. I wanted a book that specifically reviewed MMI but also how to generally think and prepare for an interview. I felt confident with my preparation from there and obviously, something worked! :)

Any other advice for other pre-PA students? Do not give up! I made the decision I wanted the go the PA route 2 years after my undergrad. I had 4 outstanding prerequisites, a 2.9 undergrad science GPA, and ZERO patient care hours, but I knew this is what I wanted to do. Slowly but surely, I took night classes after my 9-5 job, got my EMT license, then I was finally able to get a job in a level 1 trauma center. It felt like it was never going to happen. I was completely prepared to have to reapply next year, as I realized that my low patient care hours might not outweigh my lower science GPA. I was retaking Gen Chem 1 (because it expired) when I found out I got in! If this is something you truly want, then do not look back. Keep taking classes to boost your science GPA, keep volunteering, keep shadowing, and keep breathing until it happens!

Where can we find you? @jaberboo if you have any questions!