Workshop: Writing essays for health profession school applications
Sunday, February 1, 2026, 2:00-5:00 p.m. ET, on Zoom
This is an interactive workshop open to anyone who is hoping or intending to submit their applications within the next year.
This is an interactive workshop open to anyone who is hoping or intending to submit their applications within the next year.
Essay prompts from 2026 cycle (most 2027 cycle essay prompts will be available over the spring and summer)
Multiple sample essays with reader comments (includes the "Barbara" essay that was read in the workshop)
Central application services' generative AI policies, as of February 2026
List of AAMC pre-medical competencies
Instructions and resources for "life maps" exercise
MHC pre-health website: parts of the application
How to Write an Impactful Personal Statement (video)
Online workshop from University of Minnesota pre-health
University of Colorado Boulder: Guidelines for Writing Your Personal Statement
From Write for Success: Preparing a Successful Essay for Your Application to Health Professions School, published by the National Association of Advisors for the Health Professions
"If you are reapplying to health professions school, you may be curious whether or not you should change your personal statement. The simple answer is 'yes.' It has been our experience that it is difficult for students to rewrite an old essay. It is going to be easier to start with a blank page. You are not the same person you were when you applied previously. Permit yourself to speak as the person you are today.
Place yourself in a position of hiring someone and reviewing that person's credentials. How would it make you feel about the candidate for the position if the letters of reference were a year old? Similarly, admissions committees will want to know who you are at present and what you have done since your last application.
Should you say anything about your unsuccessful application? We suggest that you could consider the following:
• Your initial reaction to the letter of non-acceptance
• Your subsequent reaction after the 'shock' of the letter
• Whether or not you asked for a post interview with the admissions officer
• Your reaction to the interview and behavior subsequent to the interview
• What you have done since the post interview
• Progress made during the time between applications
• Significant changes in your grades, orientation to classes, work experiences
• Reasons you are now a better candidate than you were twelve months ago
Significant attention should now be on the last item mentioned above. Why are you now a much better applicant than you were previously?"