Questions for people who studied situational judgement tests like CASPR, ex books on them, guides on them. Some medical schools require these kind of tests

Ignore people who act like studying for it is “gaming” it Ca$per is a stupid as hell money-grab and I studied philosophy lmao. Egregious responses aside it’s not reflective of your ethics, it’s reflective of how eloquently and coherently you can craft a response on your feet, while also rushed for time.

I got the high “quartile” & 7 of my interviews were Ca$per schools and my best advice to everyone is to practice responding to MMI scenarios timed for 1-2 days before to get used to thinking through the complexities of a situation and getting the nuances of it down. You’ll realize that the more of them you do, the more factors you’ll start to pick up on and be able to present yourself more confidently on the test.

As for your q’s, don’t overthink it, but remember ethics comes first and never make assumptions. If a coworker breaches ethics, they have to be reported. But how I’d answer this is I’d first make sure this actually happened (ie not just word of mouth, I’d talk to them about it first), then give them the chance to report it themselves. If not, I’d report it. Practice how to consider everyone it might impact & your responsibility in each situation

/r/premed Thread