The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) defines foundational competencies for aspiring medical students. The first list of Premed Competencies for Entering Medical Students was released in 2011. Every few years, they update the list and definitions to reflect the changes in medicine and medical education.
In late 2023, the AAMC made a few significant changes to these competencies that will impact applicants during the 2024/25 cycle. Let’s take a look.
As one of the core organizations in the medical education space, the AAMC uses its “Premed Competencies” to put language to what predicts a person’s ability to excel as a medical student and physician.
If you exemplify these qualities, you’re likely a person who can excel in the academic and people-focused steps it takes to be a physician.
Ideally, you’ll show admissions committee members your competencies through a combination of test scores and grades, your extracurriculars, a compelling personal statement, well-structured secondaries, and interviews. (In other words, the medical school application process is designed to identify these competencies.)
These competencies, as defined by the AAMC, are broken into 3 categories: Professional, Science, and Thinking & Reasoning.
In late 2023, the AAMC updated the core competencies for use in the 2024/25 application cycle. Here’s what changed:
Your medical school application and subsequent secondaries and interviews should all point to these competencies.
But the premed competencies aren’t simply buzzwords to include in your vocabulary when writing a personal statement or describing an extracurricular activity. They are qualities that you should be able to “show, not tell” as a person based on the experiences and education that have made you the person you are today.
Here are a few ideas on how to demonstrate these competencies when preparing your application:
MedSchoolCoach’s Advisors have a combined 500,000 hours helping pre-meds refine their application and get into medical school.
Dr. Mehta is the founder of MedSchoolCoach and has guided thousands of successful medical school applicants. He is also a practicing physician in Boston where he specializes in vascular and interventional radiology.