for his carms interviews, “there are certainly advantages and disadvantages to virtual interviews,” he says. “it is more difficult for my personality to come through in a virtual format … and to build a connection with the interviewer.
“however, a virtual interview allows me to be in a space (home) that i am more comfortable in and feels less intimidating. it also allows for less time, energy and money spent on traveling to and from different cities across canada.”
aman has been practising virtually with friends and medical residents for his carms interviews, which began nationally on feb. 28 and continue until march 20.
for a large family medicine residency program, the switch to a virtual process has been highly successful, says stuart murdoch, family medicine program director at the university of toronto.
last year, there were concerns about doing 800 interviews virtually, he says. would the zoom technology work? would internet connections hold up?
“we practised, probably four times with a big group (of our staff), and it went really well,” says murdoch.
in fact, “because we could do it virtually, we could interview more people in a session. before, we had a rate-limiting step of how many offices we could use. we had 23 offices so we could only interview 23 people at a time … now we are up to 68 virtual offices.”