Personal Statement
The personal statement accomplishes a variety of goals:
- It explains why you are choosing a career in medicine.
 - It puts a "face" to your application.
 - It helps medical schools understand your experiences, interests and values.
 
What Medical Schools Look For
- Evidence that you understand the realities of medicine.
 - Your view on why you have chosen a career in medicine.
 - Your life story - How did you get to this point?
 - Your values/experiences - Why is medicine a good fit for you?
 
Common Pitfalls
- Writing only about medicine and not about yourself.
 - Not giving yourself enough time to revise multiple drafts.
 - Cutting and pasting the statement from a Word document into the application, which introduces formatting errors. Make sure to write statement in a text-only program like Notepad or directly into the essay.
 - Not proofing the final draft carefully.
 - Not being aware of the tone of essay; coming across as arrogant or entitled to a career in medicine.
 - Relying only on your ideas of medicine and not showing how you tested your decision with experiences.
 - Writing a personal statement that could apply to any applicant.
 - Repeating information that can be found elsewhere in the application.
 
Tips
- Start early. If you procrastinate on a personal statement, you delay the whole application process.
 - Overwrite at the beginning of the process. Any extra material can often be used in secondary applications and preparing for interviews.
 - Edit the final draft to 5,300 characters (including spaces) for AMCAS statements (usually a page and a half single spaced).
 
Resources
- Personal statement workshops are held in winter and spring quarters. They are designed to help you begin the writing process. See our events page for upcoming workshops.
 - Individual advising appointments are available for preparation and feedback. Book an appointment to meet with an advisor.
 - You can review examples of successful personal statements at the HPA office. They are available for viewing at the reception desk.
 - Check out Essay Workshop 101 on the Student Doctor Network website for tips and considerations.
 - If you need style help, The Writing Place can help with grammar and expression (but not with content).