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INFORMATION EVENING 2010: DENTISTRY AND MEDICINE. THE ADMISSION PROCESS. Professor Stewart Dunn | Associate Dean (Medical Program Admissions). GETTING INTO DENTISTRY OR MEDICINE. THE GRADUATE-ENTRY ROUTE. Bachelor’s Degree in any subject Dentistry GPA 4.0 / 7.0 (USyd pass average)
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THE ADMISSION PROCESS Professor Stewart Dunn | Associate Dean (Medical Program Admissions)
GETTING INTO DENTISTRY OR MEDICINE THE GRADUATE-ENTRY ROUTE • Bachelor’s Degree in any subject • Dentistry GPA 4.0 / 7.0 (USyd pass average) • Medicine GPA 5.5 / 7.0 (USyd credit average) • Admissions Test • GAMSAT - domestic applicants must sit this (minimum score 50 in each section) • MCAT - international applicants can sit this or GAMSAT • In addition, international dentistry applicants can also sit the DAT or Canadian DAT • Multiple Mini Interview
STUDENT DIVERSITY: DENTISTRY FIRST DEGREES OF DOMESTIC STUDENTS COMMENCING IN 2010
STUDENT DIVERSITY: MEDICINE FIRST DEGREES OF DOMESTIC STUDENTS COMMENCING IN 2010
STEP 1: SIT GAMSAT • A GAMSAT cut-off will be one of the criteria used to determine if applicants are invited for interview
STEP 2: APPLY FOR ADMISSION • All applications are handled by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) and must be submitted to ACER • International dentistry applicants may apply directly to the Faculty • Medicine applicants in Canada may apply through ACER or AustraLearn • Closing dates for 2011 entry: • Domestic applicants: 4 June 2010 • International applicants: 25 June 2010
STEP 3: SELECTION FOR INTERVIEW • Applicants who meet the minimum GPA requirement and the minimum GAMSAT cut-off are invited for interview • Number of interviews is approx. 1.4 times the total number of places available • Invitations will be sent in August • Applicants who are not offered an interview will have their applications forwarded to their next preference
INTERNATIONAL APPLICANTS • International applicants are assessed on the same basis as domestic applicants • International applicants may sit GAMSAT or MCAT (North American Medical College Admission Test) • Dentistry applicants may also sit US or Canadian DAT (Dental Admissions Test) at the discretion of the Faculty • International dentistry applicants apply direct to the Faculty • International medicine applicants apply through ACER; applicants in Canada may apply through ACER or AustraLearn • Interviews are conducted in overseas locations
COMBINED DEGREES • Undergraduate (Year 12) entry to the Combined Medical Degree Program: • Bachelor of Science/Bachelor of Medical Science • Bachelor of Arts (Advanced) (Honours) • Bachelor of Music Studies • Bachelor of Economics/Bachelor of Commerce • Highly competitive – ATAR of 99.95 plus interview • Music Medicine – ATAR of 99.5 plus interview and audition • Apply through UAC • Vice-Chancellor’s Outstanding Achievement Award scholarships for ATAR of 99.95 • National scholarships for interstate students
THE MULTIPLE MINI INTERVIEW Professor David Tiller | Admissions Committee
THE MULTIPLE MINI INTERVIEW (MMI) • 9 mini-interviews • 7 minutes each • 2 minutes break in between • One-on-one • To determine how you will manage in the program
MMI INTERVIEWERS • Gender balance • Optimally 50% faculty staff • Community members • Students and alumni
ATTRIBUTES • Integrity • Respect for diversity • Sensitivity to the needs of others • Effective communicator • Demonstrates insight • Effective decision-maker • Information manager • Ability to make a shared plan • Self-directed learner • Understands the role of health professionals in society
CATEGORIES • Ethical understanding • Communication • Working in teams • Continuous teaching and learning • Personal well-being • Practitioner and society
A SAMPLE MMI QUESTION • Your mother rings you and asks you to come round to help them with a major decision. Your maternal grandfather is 70 years old and has been diagnosed with a condition that will kill him some time in the next five years. He can have a procedure that will correct the disease and not leave him with any long-term problems, but the procedure has a 10% mortality rate. He wants to have the procedure but your mother does not want him to. • How would you help mediate this issue?