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Medical Residency – Personal Statement – Writing Resource Links


As one of the top online writing help experts, I have frequently been asked over the years, to write or edit medical residency personal statements for MDs transitioning from medical school to residency positions in teaching hospitals. Sometimes I have written them from scratch, while in other cases I have edited the statement as already drafted by my client.

I estimate that I have worked on hundreds of these by now, covering numerous medical specialties, and targeting scores of institutions worldwide. So, after years of writing and/or revising these medical residency personal statements for people from all over the world, I think it’s fair to say that I can be considered somewhat of an expert on the subject.

Of course, being a writing help how-to expert, I do more than just write and edit these medical residency personal letters for people; I also write about “how-to” write them.

Accordingly, below are links to a few articles I have written on the subject of how-to write an effective medical residency personal statement.

Your Medical Specialty Is NOT the Key to your Residency Personal Statement
http://www.writingprompts.com/medical-residency-key.html

How To Custom-Target Your Medical Residency Personal Statement
http://www.writingprompts.com/medical-residency-target.html

10 Tips To Write An Effective Medical Residency Personal Statement
http://www.writingprompts.com/medical-residency-tips.html

In addition to the above, I recently decided to write down everything I know about writing medical residency personal statements in one place. To check out my comprehensive ebook on this subject — including downloadable real-life personal statement templates — click on the following link:
http://www.medical-residency-statement.com

Filed Under: Education, Education Applications

Medical Residency – Personal Statement – Your Specialty is NOT the Key


As stated elsewhere on this site, I have written and/or edited scores of medical residency personal statements over the years. As a result, I can tell you unequivocally that your chosen medical specialty is NOT the most important factor in writing your personal statement when applying for a residency appointment.

You would be amazed at how many personal statements for medical residencies that I have received in draft form for editing, in which the focus of the draft is almost entirely on the applicant’s knowledge and expertise, with very little about them as a person or a professional. This is a big mistake!

To illustrate this point, below is a set of actual questions posed to medical residency applicants by a major teaching hospital:

“Xxxxxxxx University Requirement:

A personal letter incorporating the following is required:

  1. Interest in Neurosurgery;

  2. Interest in Hxxxxxx University;

  3. Career goals and aspirations;

  4. Interests and extracurricular activities.”

To what extent are the above questions focused on the candidate’s specific medical knowledge as it relates to the specialty? Not very much, right? Overall, they are much more oriented towards the applicant as a person and a professional.

It makes sense when you really think about it. After all, the institution already knows, by definition, that the candidate is a recent graduate of a medical school. So, they assume that the basic medical knowledge is there. What they really want to know at this point is whether you are the type of person and professional that they believe is best suited for specialty training at their institution.

So, no matter what your chosen medical specialty may be, the approach that you take to the writing of your statement in terms of strategy, style, and phrasing should be exactly the same. That’s right — whether you are applying for a residency as a family physician, a general surgeon, an internist, or a neurologist, or whatever specialty; the way you approach and write your statement should be virtually identical.

Once you have decided on an overall approach, in terms of what you want to cover in your statement – and how you want to structure and organize it – you simply insert the technical terminology that is specific to your specialty, wherever appropriate. Really.

Accordingly, before trying to impress reviewers with your knowledge of your preferred specialty, your first priority should be to make sure you tell them enough about you, both as a person and a medical professional. What is different or unique about you that will make you stand out from the crowd of other well-qualified medical school graduates? Make it clear as to why they should they pick you — as both a person and a professional — over many other similarly qualified candidates.

Bottom Line:
In the final analysis, the personal statement is more about selling yourself as a person and a professional than it is about your knowledge level in your chosen medical specialty (although that of course, is important too). However, more often than not, it is how you approach and structure your medical residency personal statement that will make the difference – not your knowledge of the specialty that you have chosen.

Filed Under: Education, Education Applications

Application Letter – Teaching


(print Job Application Letter on personal letterhead paper)
705 Grand Central Street
Trenton, NJ
08620

September 15, 20xx
Robert Zewicki
Vice Chief of Staff
Florida Central Hospital
1201 Tampa General Square
Tampa, FL 33607

Dear Robert Zewicki:

Please regard this as my application for the tenure-track assistant professor position that is currently vacant in the Department of Epidemiology at your hospital. This is exactly the type of position I have been looking for. Enclosed please find my curriculum vitae, research statement, teaching philosophy, and a copy of my graduate transcripts.

I am currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Communicable Diseases at the University of Connecticut and expect to graduate by July 20xx. My primary area of research is biostatistics, specifically longitudinal data analysis and survival analysis. I am also interested in clinical trials, epidemiological studies, and bioinformatics. My thesis is about the development of metaparametric methods for the analysis of panel count data. I was invited to present part of my thesis at the 20xx IDSA Applied Statistics Symposium and for that I won the 20xx ICSA Student Prize.

In addition to my academic research, I have been a graduate instructor and adviser since 20XX. I have independently taught an introductory statistics course and instructed some recitation classes. Besides that, I also served as a graduate consultant in my department in the spring of 20xx and I worked full-time as a graduate intern during the summer of 20xx.

In closing, I believe that my research background, plus my teaching and intern experiences, combined with my superior communication skills, make me an excellent fit for the position you are staffing. I have arranged to have three letters of recommendation sent to you directly by the referees. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me by phone at xxx-xxxx or by email at xxxxxxxxxx.

Thank you for your time and consideration. I am looking forward to speaking with you and/or your colleagues in the near future.

Sincerely,


William Wong

Encl.

Filed Under: Education Applications, Job Applications, Letter Writing, Templates

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