Resources
Here are some helpful sites that you may want to look at. If you have any resources that you would like posted onto the website, please email the link and the website summary to Janice Tsai (tsai2@wisc.edu).

http://www.jmu.edu/orgs/nationalaed/
This is the national office website for Alpha Epsilon Delta.


http://www.aspiringdocs.org/site/c.luIUL9MUJtE/b.2011035/k.C6A4/WELCOME/apps/lk/content3.aspx
This is a resource of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

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http://studentdoctor.net/
This is the largest medical resource available on the internet, bringing together people who are applying to medical school, taking the boards, or moving onto residency. This is the one website every pre-medical student should have in his/her list of bookmarks.

http://www.amsa.org/premed/medsurvey/
Feedback from medical students on their schools -- great place to get honest responses on educational quality, clinical exposure, and life experience at various medical schools.

http://www.aamc.org/students/amcas/start.htm
The American Medial College Application Service website. Register for the MCAT, start filling out the primary application for medical schools, find out more about the medical school application process, etc.

http://www.interviewfeedback.com/
Have you ever wondered what interviews are like at various medical schools? Check out Medical Interview Feedback for a database full of questionnaires containing information about medical school applicants' interviews at U.S., Canadian, Puerto Rican, and other medical schools and schools of osteopathy.

http://www.lssaa.wisc.edu/lsac/med/advise.php
This is the website for pre-med advising through the Letters and Science Advising Center It provides useful information such as the application process, financing medical school, scholarships and fellowships, research opportunities, summer programs, how to write a personal statement, and pre-health organizations and websites.

http://www.medsite.com/Default.asp?bhcp=1
"Find discount medical books, discount medical supplies, CME credits, CEU credits, medical office supplies, medical journals, and medical software at the physician's home on the Internet."

http://ahana.rso.wisc.edu/index2.htm
AHANA is the only organizations of its kind at the undergraduate level. AHANA includes African/Black Americans, Hispanic/Latino Americans, Asian Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans, which incorporates Alaskan Natives. It aims to support, encourage, and maintain the interests of minority students in pre-health professional careers, by providing them with a platform through which to share experiences which are common to students entering health professions. In addition, it aims to build fellowship among students interested in minority concerns by engaging in social and educational meetings.

http://www.secretsof300aplusstudents.com/
The uthor surveyed 300 A+ students from schools around the world and documented their academic strategies. The book is a tool for people who want to know how to establish and maintain high grades. There is also advice from A+ students on ways to manage time, stress, lack of interest, and finance, as well as suggestions for educators. The students who participated in the A+ survey for this book are from America, Australia, Botswana, Canada, China, Denmark, Egypt, England, France, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Poland, and Portugal.

http://www.aacom.org/InfoFor/applicants/Pages/default.aspx
A helpful website for those who are interested in choosing a career in osteopathic medicine.