Will my interview be in person or online? When will it happen?Â
The logistics of your interview are program-dependent. For example, professional school interviews can be:
in-person or asynchronous/synchronous online with recorded/live responses
held on one day or multiple days (weekdays/weekends)
held between mid-January to early May
30 to 120 minutes in length
Some programs publish interview information on the program website, while other programs only share this information with candidates they invite for an interview.
You might be able to choose your preferred format, day, and time or this may be automatically selected for you. If you identify a scheduling conflict, reach out to program directly to learn more about what options you have.
How do I prepare for a professional school interview?
There’s no right way for everyone to prepare. You need to do what is right for you.
Consider:
Reflecting on questions you’re confident answering and which ones you feel less confident responding to – focus your energy on questions you are less confident responding to.
Research the school(s) you are interviewing with to understand the number of stations, time between each station, time in each station, past station types and other interview conventions.
Learn about your prospective field including scope of practice, key priorities, and issues through podcasts, documentaries, articles and books.
Prepare stories, reflections and anecdotes related to the program competencies.
Familiarize yourself with question types and possible answer structures.
Practice according to known interview logistics. Consider practicing on your own, with a friend, family member, co-worker or a member of the Centre for Career Development team until you feel comfortable and confident.
Start your own practice group or join one organized through a club.
Attend the Professional School Interview preparation workshops and MMI simulations through Centre for Career Development.
What is the Multiple Mini Interview (MMI)?
Multiple Mini Interview or MMI, is used to support admissions to programs and is often used by those in health programs (e.g., Medicine, Pharmacy etc.). MMI consists of a series of structured interview stations, with each station featuring:
MMIs are designed to allow you to show your characteristics and demonstrate your competencies to the interviewers.
What do I do during the reflection and preparation time?
Take a deep breath
Read or listen to the question carefully
Identify the type of question so you have a better idea of what to expect next
Organize your answer, using a model where applicable
Take notes if your school allows this
What kinds of questions will I be asked?
In MMIs, you can anticipate reflecting on and responding to different types of questions:
 General questions
General interview questions ask about your goals, characteristics, fit with the program, past experiences and coping skills.
How do I prepare for a general interview question?
Reflect on your experiences, growth, and motivation for the profession Review possible questions online and practice responding according to your interview’s known conventions.
 Behaviour-based questions
Behaviour-based questions are interview questions that prompt you for a specific time when you used a skill or dealt with a situation in the past.
It combines a prompt for one specific example (e.g. “tell me about a time when”) with a skill you need or situation you will face in your program or profession (e.g. “you had to communicate complex information”).
How do I prepare for a behaviour-based question?
To help prepare for behaviour-based questions: Review relevant frameworks, skills and competencies essential to your prospective profession. Identify related personal experiences to start building your library of experiences you want to pull from in your responses. Consider reflecting on: What you did Why you did what you did What options you considered What you learned from the experience How you would handle things differently in hindsight.
 Difficult conversations
Difficult conversation questions will prompt you to share how you would deliver bad news or handle an uncomfortable conversation.
Examples: How would you communicate a cancer diagnosis to a 65-year-old patient? If you hit another vehicle with your car, what would you say to the other driver?
Difficult conversation questions provide an opportunity to demonstrate your interpersonal communication. You will be evaluated on how well you demonstrate your skill set, rather than on solving the problem.
How do I prepare for a difficult conversation question?
If you find frameworks helpful to structure your responses:
practice with friends, family and peers so you feel comfortable in an interview
review frameworks for sharing bad news. (e.g., SPIKES model and ).
 Critical thinking and ethical questions
Critical thinking and ethical questions are designed to let the interviewer see how you think as you walk through a complex problem that doesn’t have a clear answer.
Examples:
Should Canada have presumed consent for organ donation?
You are a student working in a free clinic. After reviewing the scheduling for the day, you notice some appointment times are double-booked. Discuss the scheduling with the receptionist.
How do I prepare for an ethical or critical thinking question?
Ethical and critical thinking questions can be complex. There are various ways to prepare for these types of questions. You might:
Identify how you like to work through a problem
Review common ethical scenarios in your field
Search for critical thinking/ethical questions and practice responding out loud in a structured way
While responding to ethical or critical thinking questions, it may be helpful to:
Summarize the question in your own words to help the interviewer understand your sense of the question
Identify missing information or state assumptions or note the key issue to narrow the scope of the question
Structure the response to systemically work through the factors and perspectives
Incorporate information from other sources when applicable (personal experiences, articles, class content)
Propose a new initiative, training or information gathering mechanism that could improve your suggested solution
Summarize your response with a clear decision