Hey guys! I am Ujwal, a fourth-year medical student. I started this channel with the goal of helping students navigate being premed and also provide productivity advice that I have learned throughout my undergraduate and medical school years so far. I hope to be able to help add value to your life and if you have any questions feel free to reach out via instagram or comments.
Пікірлер
I appreciate the essay writing technique on the CARS. Thank you.
Thank you for your in-depth analysis of the resources
healthy gamer gg vibes 👾 not too oversimplified yet straightforward
You've matured a great deal from your early videos. I'm glad I found your channel. Learning how to work youtube and weave your ability to tell a story with your research is going to be critical in medicine moving forward. The best providers will be doing what you're doing now. Looking forward to further videos. Subscribed!
Great advice as always.
very informative vid. do you mind sharing what speciality you are hopeful of matching into? thanks!
Can u pls upload a video regarding the macat prep as a whole
Should we write the statement diverse activities for each paragraph? or one activity for the whole body?
May I ask which videos were made after you had experience on interviewing students?
Great Advice. Thank you
Thank u for this video…I wish that u succeed in every hardship u find in med school and life….
Needed to hear this 💜thank you
Ngl this was deep,, thank you for sharing
Ujwal you’re the fuckin man
Cheers my friend
Great advice, definitely needed to hear this ❤
very helpful info! Thanks
It is similar to the idea of having larger data sets for machine learning systems to "learn." No matter how great the code is, the system is going to need a lot of training to perform at peak levels.
love your videos man
I certainly learned this studying for the MCAT.
When you are using your excel tracker, on top of putting the questions you straight up missed, would you also put in questions that you remember being unsure about/guessing on but you got correct?
Thank you for this video!! I'm very set on medicine and working in pediatrics; coming out of college applications, one of my "goals" is to get into a top-tier university-thank you for showing me how I should really focus on why I want to pursue my goals and what my ultimate plan is.
Man. This is one of the most insightful videos I've seen about medicine. I hear so much about the difficulties of med school, but I never hear the specifics behind those actual challenges and what it actually takes both physically and mentally to be a proactive, motivated student. Thank you so so much for uploading this!! I wish you best of luck on your journey. - from an aspiring physician in high school :)
Thank you so much. I just applied it, so I guess its still early to see, but I have never scored that well on cars as I did with your strategy!
What do medical schools look for in an interview? Also, are interviews in person at all or are they all online now?
Love your advice videos! You made great points and as someone who is also going to turn 25, a lot of your points resonated. I absolutely agree that taking a detour and sometimes a nonlinear path can lead to things you might have never imagined. I recently started work as a pharmacy tech and I was honestly very overwhelmed and am still adjusting but this experience is really molding me into a different person and one that I have always wanted to be. I personally always reinforce the idea that I am a slow learner and that maybe a retail, fast paced environment isn't for me. But, at the end of the day I have realized that often a lot that we think in our minds is an illusion. Retraining your thoughts is a skill, kind of like a muscle. I was scared to work initially as a scribe last year and now its crazy how comfortable I have become working as a telescribe from home and the fact that my fast typing skill has poured into my pharm tech job and given me an extra edge. Skills accumulate and I'm really glad you brought up the point of experiences shape and mold you into a person you thought you might not ever be. Cheers and wishing you the best for finishing med school strong and for becoming a future doc.🍻
How did you create the closed deletions so quickly? In other words, it looks like you made one click and the selected words were placed in closed deletions. Thank you!
🄿🅁🄾🄼🄾🅂🄼 💋
Thanks Ujwals! Appreciate hearing your advice.
Well-spoken and insightful. The last point hit hard for me. Thanks, man.
Thanks for the information man! It's a big help! What do you think about the Kaplan Live Online course? A lot of people say it is the best now. I'm a pre-med grad but I graduated 8 years ago. Needless to say I need the best one!
Thanks for the great tips! What do you think of MCATselfprep?
So I should buy the Kaplan books and anki. Then use aamc and u world online for practice tests ??
All your advice and videos are so genuine. It’s v apparent u aren’t trying to scare ppl or make it seem impossible; I hate when ppl do that lol. Thank you so much!
i was JUST talking about this! This is HANDS DOWN the best advice for people in the middle of their application cycle, and not enough advisors, youtubers, etc are emphasizing this! also the perk of being specific is that you have an avenue that you can be passionate and direct about. You can really hone in on that aspect of medicine and articulate it very well. it really hard to be expressive and passionate when your topic is vague! great job!
As someone going through the application cycle right now, this is some of the best advice I've ever heard, that I'm sure I will be able to come back to time and time again as I progress in the marathon. You seem like a stand up guy who will make a great doctor. Cheers.
congratulations!!
Id like that video on anki cards
I’ve never had someone explain my thought process so well @13:37 also thank you for being so honest about this process.
you remind me of Naval Ravikant philosophy-wise
Yo, I'm going into my second year of medical school. However, I start clinicals in March. What are some ways you're preparing for shelves and what are some things you wish you knew after doing clinicals?
You’re the man
I'm not even in med school (yet) and this surprisingly resonated with me. I've been doing research as an undergrad for a year now and it has not been pleasant. I vastly underestimated the level of commitment needed to work in a lab and definitely felt the imposter syndrome of being a good student. But we all learn from our mistakes, and this semester I'm hoping to do a much better job. Despite the anxiety (and, boy, can it be heavy), I think it's the act of gradually overcoming this anxiety that makes the medical path so thrilling and rewarding. Thanks for sharing your insight!
Ok, so which is more stressful? Step 1 or MCAT?
Probably Step 1. At least in my open, mainly because it’s this anxiety of being able to move to the next point. The MCAT can be redone and it’s not as big a deal to not do well, compared to Step 1.
I’m pretty sure u can retake your step1. Not preferable but hey
Thank you so much for this video! Very insightful!
Thanks to KZread’s algorithm I landed here. Thanks for the advice! Since yesterday I have been very overwhelmed wondering how was I going to read every book and have time for myself. I will take this exam on September. I already took a diagnostic test.
Glad it was helpful, definitely not necessary to read all the books, good luck!
Do they give a certificate or something as evidence that one took the course?
You said we should highlight transitional words but later we shouldn’t highlight and write?
Is it possible if you could share the MCAT notes you made?
sir you have amazingly explained it ! Thanks for the video !!