We are currently reworking all of our prices and packages. Check back soon for the changes or message us if you have any questions!
We are currently reworking all of our prices and packages. Check back soon for the changes or message us if you have any questions!
Your Cart is Empty
by Fei Zhang January 11, 2022 8 min read
For access to over 49 videos and 150+ interview questions with sample answers, check out our Online Interview Resource!
You've submitted your personal statement, aced the UCAT or BMAT and now it's time for the all-important med school interview. This can be a daunting prospect but the key to success as always is practice, in order to ensure that you can be as prepared and calm as possible on the day of your medicine interview.
In this blog post we have listed some commonly asked medical school interview questions, as well as some tips to help you prepare and some frequently asked questions about interview prep.
Much of your communication skills are based on your answers to other questions, however, you should also consider the following questions:
We appreciate this may be a lot of information for many of you that might have left you overwhelmed, so below we have compiled some frequent MMI questions and answers that might help clarify any uncertainties you still have.
The answers you provide will have to closely follow the question you’re being asked, but there are always certain topics you should aim to include in your answers. Whether your interviewer has asked you to provide an example of a time you showed teamwork or a time you witnessed empathy, always remember what the main point of that interview is - to ensure that you are a good fit for a medical career. As such, every answer needs to relate back to medicine. Of course you should answer the question asked of you and provide an example of a time you showed teamwork or an example of a time you witnessed empathy, but you should ask yourself - “What does this have to do with medicine?” and realise that these are important qualities medical schools like to see in their students that are considered crucial for a successful career. It is, therefore, your responsibility to ensure you link your answers back to medicine and explain why you think these qualities are important for a good doctor or why you feel these experiences would make you a good fit for medicine.
We have already established that in order to ensure the best delivery during your interview and consequently the best chance of success, your answers will need to be well structured and easy to follow. The structure you will need to use during your interview will largely depend on the type of question you will be asked. They fall in several broad categories and each requires a different structure that better tackles the information you will be delivering. We cover the topic of how to structure your medical school interview answers on our YouTube channel and in our Online Interview Resource, so make sure you familiarise yourself with the frameworks suggested and learn to implement them in your answers.
This will obviously vary from medical school to medical school but the bottom line for all interview setups this year is that they will all be carried out virtually. What this may mean for your schools of choice is that in order to facilitate the interview process, they might have switched their interview format from an MMI setup to a panel interview or to an asynchronous one. This may potentially mean that some of the content will have to be amended in order to accommodate the change in setup, but the core values that interviews are designed to test will still be their priority and you can still expect to encounter similar content during your interview.
Once again, the window of interviewing is pretty wide and will vary substantially across different medical schools, usually starting in November and spanning all the way to the end of March. Depending on what period within that timeframe your school picks to conduct their interviews, the time at which announcements for interview and offer emails come through might also vary substantially. This also means that you might receive an offer to attend an interview for one medical school in November but not receive another all the way until after the new year. Especially considering the fact that this year all interviews are being conducted online, offers may not be sent with as much notice as they had been before, considering that travel and accommodation arrangements do not have to be made. As such, you might receive as little as a week’s notice to attend your interview. This is why the best strategy you could adopt is not to await an interview offer to start your preparation but instead start as early as possible to ensure you have gotten plenty of practice in.
We hope this question bank of medical interview questions is helpful in preparing for your interview. However, if you would like more help or the opportunity to practice your medical school interview answers with a qualified doctor or interview expert then make sure to check out our live online medical school interview course and 1-1 coaching, or learn from home and take our medical school online interview course. If you have any other questions or worries, don’t hesitate to contact us at hello@themsag.com. Good luck!