Applying to Med/PA School, Individual Pre-Health Stories
How I Got Accepted to Wayne State University School of Medicine
About Michael
Michael grew up in Metro Detroit, in between Macomb and Clinton Townships. He graduated from Wayne State University with a B.S. in biological sciences honors and a minor in Spanish. Michael continued his medical education at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, Michigan and is now currently in his fourth year of medical school. For his Atlantis Fellowship, Michael shadowed at the Complexo Hospitalario Universitario de Ourense in Ourense, Spain in summer 2015. Michael intends to become a surgeon after medical school and is particularly interested in pediatric surgery. Michael is an avid traveler and has been to Ecuador, the Galapagos islands, Tanzania, and many areas of Europe. In his free time, Michael is part of a Slovak folk dance group that performs in the tri-state area of Michigan and occasionally performs abroad.
This is just one in a series of blog posts that will feature medical students telling their stories of how they got accepted into medical school. Today, Michael Sobolic shares with us the story of his acceptance to Wayne State University School of Medicine.
Michael, give us a peek into your life. What initially attracted you to pursue medicine?
I think most people don’t like this answer anymore because they say it is cliché, but what attracted me, and I think what attracts most people to medicine — what should attract people to medicine — is the desire to help people and to care for their ailments, so they can live fulfilling lives.
Additionally, growing up, I always excelled in math and science, which is definitely helpful when taking up this track. I really enjoyed anatomy and the courses that you need to take before medical school, which prepared my path towards becoming a doctor. My passion for helping people and my love of the sciences is what drove me to pursue medicine. It is not the most fascinating response, but I think these principles prevent physicians from burnout, which is a hot topic in the medical field these days.
Why did you choose to apply to Wayne State University School of Medicine?
First of all, I applied to a lot of local medical schools because my family and community are very important to me, but I did apply to some bigger names in other states.
What really made me decide that I wanted to go to Wayne State University School of Medicine was their national notoriety for their clinical experience. The clinical experience here in Detroit during your third and fourth years is almost unparalleled in the nation. The residents that Wayne State University pumps out are above and beyond a lot of their peers in terms of clinical skills for this reason.
The stages of pathology that you see in Detroit are also unparalleled. Many of the patients often times don’t have health insurance and don’t seek healthcare until late in the game, so you see things that you wouldn’t see elsewhere. You might see a patient with tertiary syphilis or someone with diabetes that has sugars of 600 – 700 mg/dL. A lot of students, including those at some of the more notable institutions, don’t see similar pathology.
As I have gone through medical school, I have realized more of the real benefits to attending Wayne State, such as the academic partnerships with the Detroit Medical Center, the Henry Ford Health System, and the Beaumont Health System, that are very strong for networking once you finish medical school. Also, we have a really great longitudinal ultrasound program that takes place throughout all four years of medical school, which trains us very well to perform various ultrasound techniques once we leave medical school.
What are three reasons why you think you were accepted?
It is difficult to answer this question because you must put yourself in the shoes of the interviewers and think about why they chose you. You can feel really good about an interview and not get in at that school, and you can feel very bad about an interview and have been accepted. First and foremost, grades and MCAT scores definitely get you in the door. Unfortunately, that is the way that the system is. You need a certain MCAT score and a certain GPA to be considered.
I think that initially got me in the door, but what sold my interview there, and at other places, was my many extracurricular activities. I have a laundry list of extracurricular activities that included volunteering at a hospital, working at that hospital as a nursing assistant, shadowing with the Atlantis Fellowship, tutoring as an undergraduate, conducting research, and going on a mission trip to Tanzania. I think that between all of those, the interviewer was able to see that I am not just numbers on a paper, I am not just an MCAT score, I am not just a GPA. They could tell that the person in front of them had a story to tell and has had all these amazing experiences that would enable him to be a good contribution to their medical school.
“The interviewer was able to see that I am not just numbers on a paper, I am not just an MCAT score, I am not just a GPA. They could tell that the person in front of them had a story to tell and has had all these amazing experiences that would enable him to be a good contribution to their medical school.”
How do you think the Atlantis Fellowship influenced or impacted your acceptance?
It is actually really funny how I happened upon the Atlantis Fellowship. It popped up on my email one day, and the location was the Canary Islands, so I thought, “How cool would it be to go somewhere tropical, but simultaneously get some hospital shadowing experience to see what it is like to be a physician?”
When I got accepted, the Fellowship location was Ourense in northwestern Spain and I said, “What? This is not what we talked about,” but I thought, “This is going to be something different, and I should keep an open mind.” Anyway, I ended up going to Ourense and had an absolutely amazing time. It was the first time I went somewhere where I didn’t know any of the people I was going with, except for one Fellow that I met at the airport here in the States.
The hospital shadowing experience is unbelievable. It was similar to being a third-year medical student in the sense that I was engaged in interactions with the patients as they were discussing their cancer treatment, or I was up close and personal during surgeries, which were things that I didn’t get to see before I was a third-year medical student.
It was just a great experience overall, and it definitely came up in several of my medical school interviews. The interviewers were really interested that I went overseas to do hospital shadowing and wanted to know what I had seen and experienced. Especially in terms of the healthcare debate in the U.S., they were interested to hear my experience with the socialized healthcare system in Spain and how it compares to healthcare in the U.S.
“I was engaged in interactions with the patients as they were discussing their cancer treatment, or I was up close and personal during surgeries, which were things that I didn’t get to see before I was a third-year medical student.”
How did you feel after the interview?
After the Wayne Interview, I felt really good. I think It really helps when you have a connection to your interviewer. Medical school interviews are not job interviews, where they ask about how well you are suited for the job, what your three best qualities are, and all those other typical interview questions. They just want to get to know you and have a simple conversation with you. One friend of mine had a 30-minute conversation about football with one of his interviewers because, again, they just want to see that you can carry a normal conversation, that you are a normal person that can go to school and get along with your peers and will one day get along with your co-workers.
That is what ended up happening in this interview; we had a simple conversation. I got the chance to look up my interviewer beforehand– which I would highly recommend doing. If you have the opportunity to learn about the field of medicine your interviewer is in and the research they are doing, it can only help you guide your conversation. I think that really helped me in my interview.
I mentioned in my interview that I speak Spanish, and that is something that I got to do a lot during my Atlantis Fellowship in Spain. My interviewer ended up being Hispanic, and she was a plastic surgeon, so we had a lot to talk about. The topics ranged from the fact that I knew Spanish (she actually tested me when I walked in and said a sentence to me in Spanish) to Mexican music, to my interest in surgery. I knew that we hit it off during the interview, and I walked out feeling really good about it.
Walk us through the moment you found out you got accepted.
This was right before Christmas. I woke up around 11:30 am, I was flipping through my phone, and I opened up my email and saw that I had an e-mail from Wayne State. I think the whole house heard me scream because my parents came rushing into my bedroom, busting the door open because they thought that I was dying, and I started crying after I read the email.
It is such a strong emotional moment. You work very hard through all of your education– through high school, college, and the whole application process. It is a lot of work, and it is so stressful. To reach the end of the journey where you are accepted into one school– and Wayne State was the first school that I was accepted to– is such an overwhelming feeling of emotion and thankfulness. It was an amazing moment and an amazing early Christmas present. I will never forget it.
Last question: How can others imitate your success?
There are multiple paths to get into medical school, and there shouldn’t be one path to medical school because the journey is what makes people stand out during their interview process. There are certain elements that make or break applications, depending on what school you want to attend. You want to make sure that you have extracurriculars, shadowing, volunteering, or working in the hospital; something that will show that you have done some research and have garnered other experiences along those lines.
Those are the typical things, but the things that get brought up in interviews the most, and what people want to hear and read about in applications, are passions that you’ve developed throughout your life. For example, I tailored my personal statement around the folk dance group that I’m involved in. That is something different that most people don’t have. So it is important to have something that you are passionate about, and it is important that you are developing that passion throughout your education.
The other thing that I would say is: do everything that you do 110% but don’t do a million things 110%, AKA don’t be the jack of all trades and king of none. Quality over quantity. Pick a few things that you are working on, that you are passionate about, and put your all into them because that is how people will notice you. If you are doing a research project, put your all into that one research project, impress your professor, and if he/she is happy with your work, then you will get a good letter of recommendation. So in summary, make sure you have checked all of the required boxes for your application, but then have a couple of things that you are passionate about and give those things your 110%.
“The other thing that I would say is: do everything that you do 110% but don’t do a million things 110%, AKA don’t be the jack of all trades and king of none.”
Our Alumni Enter Great Medical Schools
John Daines
- Atlantis '17
- Brigham Young University '19
- Washington U. in St. Louis MD '23
Zoey Petitt
- Atlantis '17
- U. of Arizona '18
- Duke MD '23
Zoey Petitt
Hungary ’17 || University of Arizona (undergraduate) ’18
Completed Atlantis Program Location and Date:
Hungary, Summer 2017
Do you believe your Atlantis experience helped you get into your graduate program?
I believe it was very helpful.
Generally, why do you think Atlantis helped you get into your graduate program?
For me, my Atlantis experience played a key role in confirming my decision to go into medicine. This was important for me to discuss during the admissions process.
Specifically, did you talk about Atlantis in your interviews?
Yes
Yong-hun Kim
- Atlantis '17
- Stanford '19
- Mayo Clinic MD '24
Yong-Hun Kim
Budapest, Hungary ’17 || Stanford University
Program:
Budapest, Hungary – Winter 2017
Undergraduate:
Stanford University class of 2019
Major:
Computer Science
Honors:
Bio-X Grant (award for research)
Undergraduate Activities:
President and Founder of Stanford Undergraduate Hospice and Palliative Care, Volunteer for Pacific Free Clinic, Research Assistant in Wernig Pathology Lab, President of Hong Kong Student Association, violin performance
Describe Atlantis in three words:
Eye-opening. Spontaneous. Exhilarating.
Why did you choose Atlantis?
I chose the Atlantis program because it combines opportunities to shadow physicians and travel abroad, both of which I had little prior exposure to.
What was your favorite experience as an Atlantis participant?
My favorite experience as an Atlantis participant came in the stories exchanged over meals or excursions and the breadth of conversation that reflected the diversity of backgrounds within our cohort and site managers.
What was the most meaningful aspect of your time shadowing?
I appreciated the chance to speak with physicians in Budapest and hear their personal motivations for pursuing medicine because it really helped better contextualize and validate my own interest in medicine. The physicians were also just really welcoming, relatable, and down-to-earth people.
How has Atlantis helped equip you for the future?
The Atlantis program has equipped me with a better understanding of what a career in medicine looks like, which I think is an invaluable gift considering the long road ahead of those who aspire to be a physician.
How has Atlantis equipped you for active leadership in the medical field?
The ability to interact and empathize with patients of diverse backgrounds and communities is a necessity to be a leader in the medical field. I think the Atlantis program, through my interactions with mentors and their patients, has helped me take my first steps toward attaining the cultural vocabulary and literacy required of a physician.
Megan Branson
- Atlantis '18
- U. of Montana '19
- U. of Washington MD '24
Sarah Emerick
- Atlantis '19
- Eckerd College '20
- Indiana U. MD '25
Snow Nwankwo
- Atlantis '19
- Catholic U. of America '21
- Georgetown U. MD '26
Tiffany Hu
- Atlantis '16
- U. of Maryland '17
- U. of Michigan MD '22
Tiffany Hu
Tereul, Spain ’16 || U Michigan Medical School
Program:
Teruel, Spain – Summer 2016
Undergraduate:
University of Maryland class of 2017
Admitted medical student at:
University of Michigan Medical School
Major:
Neurobiology
Honors:
Honors Integrated Life Sciences Program, Banneker/Key Scholarship
Extracurricular Activities:
American Medical Student Association Co-President & Advocacy Day Liaison, Alternative Breaks Experience Leader, Health Professions Advising Office Student Advisory Board, Biology Teach Assistant, Health Leads, Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation, NIH Research Intern, Physicians for Social Responsibility Environment & Health Intern
Describe Atlantis in Three Words:
Educational. Eye-opening. Exhilarating.
Why did you choose Atlantis?
I wanted to expand my horizons and understand a culture of health different from the ones I am accustomed to. I had shadowed doctors in the United States and Taiwan prior to my Atlantis program experience, and being able to see first-hand the healthcare system in Spain allowed me to draw comparisons between the different complex healthcare systems.
What was your favorite experience as an Atlantis participant?
Bonding with the other participants and celebrating our time together along with the doctors we shadowed. We would discuss our interests, passions, and motivation for medicine, and it was an incredible experience to learn from and alongside them.
What was your experience with the doctors you were shadowing?
Because of the pre-established relationships with the hospitals in which we shadowed, all the doctors were very welcoming and accommodating. They were willing to translate for us and explain in detail all of their medical decisions. My doctors and I had wonderful conversations about the differences between life in Spain vs. the United States.
What was the most meaningful aspect of your time shadowing?
I was excited to scrub in on surgeries and watch as the doctor explained what he was doing throughout the operation. Before and after surgeries, as well as in my other rotations, I observed how the doctors reassured and communicated with their patients. I was able to glean insight into differences between the experience of health in Spain versus the United States through observation as well as conversations with the doctors.
How has Atlantis helped equip you for the future?
Besides the wealth of medical knowledge I gained from shadowing the doctors, I challenged myself to step outside of my cultural comfort zone and explore more than I thought I was capable of. Atlantis allowed me to make connections with people from all around the United States and abroad, and the friendships I gained helped me learn so much more than I would have on my own.
Lauren Cox
- Atlantis '18
- Louisiana Tech '20
- U. of Arkansas MD '24
Lauren Cox
Libson, Portugal ’18 || Louisiana Tech
Completed Atlantis Program Location(s):
Lisbon, Portugal
Year of most recent program:
Fall ’17 – Summer ’18
Season of most recent program:
Summer
Do you believe your Atlantis experience helped you get into your graduate program?
Extremely helpful
Generally, why do you think Atlantis helped you get into your graduate program?
It exposed me to shadowing that was hard to come by in the states. It also gave me a chance to see other systems of healthcare.
Specifically, did you talk about Atlantis in your interviews? If so, how much relative to other topics?
Yes – they wanted to know about my experience, and specifically how the healthcare I saw in another country compared to what I had seen in the USA.
Kayla Riegler
- Atlantis '18
- U. of Kentucky '20
- U. of Kentucky MD '24
About Atlantis
Atlantis is the leader in pre-health shadowing and clinical experience, offering short-term programs (1-10 weeks) over academic breaks for U.S. pre-health undergraduates. Medical schools want 3 things: (1)healthcare exposure, (2)GPA/MCAT, and (3)certain competencies. Atlantis gives you a great version of (1), frees you to focus on (2), and cultivates/shows (3) to medical school admissions committees.
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