Planning for Residency
Residency Planning
The tools you need to get started
The key to making a good specialty decision is research and preparation. You will research the characteristics important to you and the specialties that meet those characteristics; it is this preparation that will help you unlock your specialty choice. By putting some thought and effort now into what you want to do in your future career as a physician, you'll find that achieving success will be less difficult.
Residency Timeline
What to Do During Pre-Clinical Years:
- Begin to explore your unique personal values, interests, and skills
- Attend special interest groups and specialty speaker presentations
- Start to think about which medical specialty you might pursue
- Prepare for and take and discuss taking with the residency advising team and learning specialists
What to Do During Year Three:
- Explore a variety of associations and specialty organizations
- Conduct informational interviews and/or participate in preceptorships
- Research residency training programs through
- Register for account
- Begin preparing your CV, and personal statement and begin requesting letters of recommendation
- Prepare for and discuss taking with the residency advising team and learning specialists
What to Do During Year Three into Year Four:
- Take
- Register for the
- Register for other matches if applicable (Military, , )
- Note match deadlines
- Complete applications for residency programs
- Interview with residency programs
- Submit rank order list
- Match Day!
Understanding Yourself - Choosing a skill to match your values, skills, and interests
People whose choice of careers matches their values, skills, and interests tend to be more satisfied and successful in their working lives. Self-assessment or understanding yourself is the process of gathering and understanding information about yourself. Ultimately, the knowledge you gain can help you get more out of your clerkship opportunities and allow you to present yourself more confidently in residency interviews.
Knowing and Exploring Your Options
Conducting thorough career research requires you to seek out information from a variety of sources. Your career exploration will be much more meaningful and useful if you compare your likes, dislikes, personality and values to a variety of specialties.
Use your clerkships as valuable sources of information; collect contact names and take every opportunity to interact with physicians and residents in the specialty areas you are considering. These individuals will provide you with valuable inside information. The human element always plays an integral role in the residency application and selection process!