UCAT

Undergraduate Medical Interview Calculator

Interview Offer Calculator Using the most up-to-date data available and our UCAT partners
Published on
July 7, 2021

PLEASE NOTE: This is a beta tool and can only provide you with an estimate. It does not guarantee that you will or will not get an interview offer.
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Why Are Medical Interviews Important?

Medical interviews are technically the backbone of the entire medical school admission process.  They have a defined purpose - to gauge your interpersonal skills and reactiveness to a broad range of general and medical scenarios that you will encounter throughout your clinical internship and subsequent profession.

Not to forget that medical interviews are also utilised by both postgraduate and undergraduate medical shcools to effectively determine a student’s readiness to undertake a rigorous medical curriculum. 

Another reason for the importance of medical interviews is its focus on your core skills such as communication, emotional intelligence, problem-solving, and attention to detail as well as your knowledge of the local and global healthcare systems. By demonstrating a succinct understanding of the hospital functionalities, you are highlighting that you have set aside considerbale time to improve your base knowledge of what it takes to become a doctor.

What are the Skills Assessed During a Medical Interview?

As disscused earlier, medical schools are designed to interpret specific skill sets that are highly deemed to be crucial for a medical practitioner. These skills include, but are not limited to:

  1. Communication skills
  2. Decision making
  3. Empathetic reasoning
  4. Integrity
  5. Moral and ethical thinking
  6. Awareness of local and global health issues
  7. Teamwork and leadership qualities
  8. Motivation to study medicine

On What Basis Do Medical Schools Release Medical Interview Offers?

Medical interviews are the last step of a dreaded medical school admissions process. Making it to the interview stage is in itself a commendable achievement, as you have already proven your academic intelligence to medical schools. 

A majority of undergraduate medical schools in ANZ take into account your ATAR from high school and assess it in combination with your competitive UCAT score to finally invite you for a medical interview. 

Additionally, medical interviews give you an unique opportunity to showcase yourself as more than the culmination of these aforementioned academic metrics. But without having a presumption of what ATAR and UCAT score can get you that well-deserved interview offer, you will remain uninformed of medical school acceptance rates. 

To reduce your levels of stress and anxiety, we have developed this powerful interview calculator, utilising the most up-to-the-minute statisctics available to help estimate your chances of receiving an interview call from your preferred undergrad medical shcool list.

How To Use This Interview Calculator?

  1. One of the advantages of this calculator is its built-in, user-interface that allows you to adjust your ATAR and UCAT scores, without having to refresh the page each time.
  2. The scale for ATAR ranges from 75 - 100. Between this scale range, you can adjust the rank as per what you wish to achieve in your senior secondary schooling years.
  3. The scale for UCAT percentile score, on the other hand, ranges from 50 - 100. Within this scale, you can adjust your scores to your ideal UCAT score for medical school entry.
  4. Once you have set the scores across both unit scales, you will be able to click on the icon, ‘Get Your Results’.
  5.  Based on your ‘adjusted scores’ entry, you will see a list of undergraduate medical schools and your odds of getting a medical interview.

How Is This Calculator Beneficial To You?

To put it blatantly, the interview calculator gives you an estimate, if not assured, outcome of getting a medical interview from an undergraduate university based on your acquired ATAR and UCAT marks.

Say, for instance, you secure an ATAR of 98.1 and manage to obtain a percentile score of 90 in the UCAT. In this case, universities of Queensland, Western Australia, Adelaide Curtin and a few others, are likely to accept you as their prospective medical student. Now, if these medical schools do not top your list of dream universities and say, Flinders University is your preferred choice, then you can adjust the scores on these scales to observe what is the threshold for entry into Flinders.

The calculator can be of great significance to your UCAT and high school study curriculum. It gives you an approximate ATAR and UCAT score deemed essential for entry into a majority of undergraduate medical schools. Hence, you can use the outcome from this calculator to improve in the respective assessments. 

Be mindful, however, that this is not the only method beneficial to gauge your outcome of receiving a medical interview offer. You have to be motivated, develop people skills, work hard to maintain a good academic record as well as strengthen your healthcare system knowledge to be amongst the lucky few who embark on their medical journeyes. 

We wish you the best of luck!

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