I've always had a lot of ideas about a blog such as this, and it looks like I've been subconsciously collecting ideas for posts. In fact, some of my posts will come directly from previously written Notes on Facebook. With that said, here are some upcoming posts in the near future:
- Why Korean-Canadian students fail in the admissions process- simple observations
- 3 main reasons stemming from Korean social culture, ethnicity and familial background
- General advice for Korean-Canadian students aiming for medical School
- Why you should
neverNOT listen to your parents (sometimes). Seriously - Things to avoid
- Comprehensive guide to Canadian med school admissions
- Up-to-date admissions profiles for Canadian Med Schools- 캐나다 의대 집중탐구
- Statistics, Processes, Unknown Facts
- 1 post per medical school with the most up-to-date information and analyses
- How to destroy the MCAT with minimal study time (<1 month)
- Writing sample strategy, and so-called "MCAT secrets" (but really just information and documents you can find online with careful searching)
- Mental conditioning, proper resting, test day preparations
- Queen's Life Sciences- it's not as terrible as they say
...and more to come. For the above listed, I already have prewritten rough drafts which may take some time to complete. Posts related to admissions, statistics, etc, will definitely take a while as I gather all my data/previously written stuff. Again, I hope to post regularly so that this blog doesn't become a pathetic waste of server space. Stay tuned.
Matt
3 comments:
Btw, I read from somewhere that a good blog post/popular blog post needs to have at least one interesting picture or link. You might wanna do that if you want this blog to become superfamous and make you filthy rich :P
"Why Korean-Canadian students fail in the admissions process- simple observations
3 main reasons stemming from Korean social culture, ethnicity and familial background"
This relates to one of (potential) grad school research interest: why East Asian students get GREAT marks in highschool and university but often fail to get high paying jobs. I will be looking forward to the three points that you will provide in near future.
Pictures will come (actually, more like diagrams). Will post very soon!
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