10 Top Tips for Medical School Interviews
Feeling nervous about your interview? You’re not alone. Here are ten simple ways to prepare and give yourself the best chance.

1. Know why you’re there
The interview is about more than facts. It’s about showing your enthusiasm for medicine, your resilience, and your potential to grow into a good doctor.
2. Understand what’s being looked for
Most interviewers focus on three things: your commitment to medicine, how well you communicate, and how you handle pressure.
3. Practise clear answers
Use simple structures to stay on track. PEE (Point, Evidence, Explain) works for short answers. STARR (Situation, Task, Action, Result, Reflect) helps with scenarios.
4. Show the qualities of a doctor
Empathy, honesty, teamwork, professionalism — let these come through in how you answer.
5. Prepare for common questions
Expect things like “Why medicine?”, “Why this university?”, “What makes a good doctor?”, “What are your strengths and weaknesses?”, and “What challenges face the NHS?”
6. If it’s an MMI, treat each station as new
Don’t drag one poor answer into the next. Read the prompt carefully, reset, and go again.
7. Use your body language
Sit up straight, keep your posture open, and make natural eye contact. Small things like smiling and nodding can make a big difference.
8. Manage your nerves
Plan your journey, pack your bag the night before, and practise calming techniques like deep breathing. Nerves are normal.
9. Dress smart but be comfortable
Pick clean, simple clothes that feel right. Try them on before the day so there are no surprises.
10. Be yourself
Don’t try to act like someone you’re not. Interviewers want to see the real you, not a script.
🎓 Final thought: Interviews are about potential, not perfection. Be genuine, prepared, and positive.
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10 Top Tips for Medical School Interviews
Feeling nervous about your interview? You’re not alone. Here are ten simple ways to prepare and give yourself the best chance.

Table of contents
1. Know why you’re there
The interview is about more than facts. It’s about showing your enthusiasm for medicine, your resilience, and your potential to grow into a good doctor.
2. Understand what’s being looked for
Most interviewers focus on three things: your commitment to medicine, how well you communicate, and how you handle pressure.
3. Practise clear answers
Use simple structures to stay on track. PEE (Point, Evidence, Explain) works for short answers. STARR (Situation, Task, Action, Result, Reflect) helps with scenarios.
4. Show the qualities of a doctor
Empathy, honesty, teamwork, professionalism — let these come through in how you answer.
5. Prepare for common questions
Expect things like “Why medicine?”, “Why this university?”, “What makes a good doctor?”, “What are your strengths and weaknesses?”, and “What challenges face the NHS?”
6. If it’s an MMI, treat each station as new
Don’t drag one poor answer into the next. Read the prompt carefully, reset, and go again.
7. Use your body language
Sit up straight, keep your posture open, and make natural eye contact. Small things like smiling and nodding can make a big difference.
8. Manage your nerves
Plan your journey, pack your bag the night before, and practise calming techniques like deep breathing. Nerves are normal.
9. Dress smart but be comfortable
Pick clean, simple clothes that feel right. Try them on before the day so there are no surprises.
10. Be yourself
Don’t try to act like someone you’re not. Interviewers want to see the real you, not a script.
🎓 Final thought: Interviews are about potential, not perfection. Be genuine, prepared, and positive.
10 Top Tips for Medical School Interviews
Feeling nervous about your interview? You’re not alone. Here are ten simple ways to prepare and give yourself the best chance.

Table of contents
1. Know why you’re there
The interview is about more than facts. It’s about showing your enthusiasm for medicine, your resilience, and your potential to grow into a good doctor.
2. Understand what’s being looked for
Most interviewers focus on three things: your commitment to medicine, how well you communicate, and how you handle pressure.
3. Practise clear answers
Use simple structures to stay on track. PEE (Point, Evidence, Explain) works for short answers. STARR (Situation, Task, Action, Result, Reflect) helps with scenarios.
4. Show the qualities of a doctor
Empathy, honesty, teamwork, professionalism — let these come through in how you answer.
5. Prepare for common questions
Expect things like “Why medicine?”, “Why this university?”, “What makes a good doctor?”, “What are your strengths and weaknesses?”, and “What challenges face the NHS?”
6. If it’s an MMI, treat each station as new
Don’t drag one poor answer into the next. Read the prompt carefully, reset, and go again.
7. Use your body language
Sit up straight, keep your posture open, and make natural eye contact. Small things like smiling and nodding can make a big difference.
8. Manage your nerves
Plan your journey, pack your bag the night before, and practise calming techniques like deep breathing. Nerves are normal.
9. Dress smart but be comfortable
Pick clean, simple clothes that feel right. Try them on before the day so there are no surprises.
10. Be yourself
Don’t try to act like someone you’re not. Interviewers want to see the real you, not a script.
🎓 Final thought: Interviews are about potential, not perfection. Be genuine, prepared, and positive.
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