You’ve registered for the Optometry Residency Match (ORMatch), sent in all of your application materials to residency coordinators, interviewed at residency sites, and now comes the HARDEST part of the entire process, submitting your ORMatch Rank Order List!
This part can be extremely stressful as it determines the next pathway that you will take in your optometric career.
Where you end up for your residency year is a huge stepping stone that will help you determine where you want to practice, what type of setting you will practice in, and which specialty that you will focus on within the profession.
I vividly remember the feelings that I experienced leading up to submitting my residency rank order list. I had interviewed at four different residency sites, two of them being VA Hospitals, and two of them were part of a large HMO group.
There was one program that I decided after my interview would not be a great fit for me, so I opted to withdraw my application and not rank them in my list. Ranking the remaining three sites was very difficult. Each program had its pros and cons and after I thought I took all of the most important items into consideration, I decided how I wanted to rank each program and submitted and certified my rankings a couple of days early.
I originally thought that I was really confident in my decisions; however, I started to second guess myself. On the very LAST day of the deadline, I went back into the system and re-ranked my list! Call me crazy, but it worked out for the best. I had a great residency year, learned a ton, met a lot of amazing doctors, networked in the area, and ended up continuing my career in the same location.
Moral of the story here is to follow your gut! Don’t choose a residency site that your friends or family think is best for you. Don’t rank the sites based purely on location. And don’t rank a site solely based on other people’s experiences. Rank your top choices based on what is best for YOU and YOUR career!
Not only can the rank be stressful because of the tough decisions that you will need to make, but it is also stressful because the process itself can be hard to understand. Below we will break down the steps you will need to take in order to confidently submit and certify your ORMatch rank order list.
Match participants may begin to submit Rank Order Lists for the ORMatch on February 8th, 2016. The final deadline for submission of Rank Order Lists is February 26th, 2016.
Results of the ORMatch are released to applicants and program coordinators on March 7th, 2016.
Your Rank Order List should accurately portray your true desirability to become a resident at that location, regardless of how you think the programs will rank you. Some people will try to tell you to rank programs a certain way if you feel as though the residency site may rank you lower, but don’t try to overthink this! If there is a site that you love and want to be a part of, rank it first on your list! And be confident in yourself!
In most years, there are generally more applicants than residency positions available. By submitting a longer ranking list, this may increase your likelihood of becoming matched with a program. Ranking more sites will not change your chances of matching with your top choices. You should submit a Rank Order List for all programs in which you are prepared to accept a position if matched.
Remember to only rank programs that you are interested in actually attending. You do not have to rank all of the programs in which you applied or interviewed with. It is ok to contact a residency program and withdraw your application if you know for sure that you won’t be ranking them. There is a chance that you will be matched with your very last choice, so just be sure that you would still be OK if you ended up at that location.
If you are having second thoughts like I did, know that it is OK to go back into the ORMatch website and edit your Rank Order List up until the deadline, even if you have already certified your information. Just make sure that any time you change your rankings, you will have to re-certify your list in order for it to be used in the ORMatch.
If you decide after all of your interviews that a residency is not the next best step for you, you will be able to withdraw yourself from the ORMatch prior to the Rank Order List deadline. On the other hand, if you previously withdrew from the ORMatch and would like to be reinstated, that is possible as well.
Applicants may indicate their desire to participate in the ORMatch as a member of a couple. This is for applicants who wish to coordinate their matches with another individual so that they may try to obtain programs within the same geographic location. Participation in the ORMatch as a couple has no impact on applications to programs, and the residency sites will not know this information. Identifying yourself as part of a couple only affects the rankings of the programs submitted for the Match and how those rankings are processed in the Match.
The matching algorithm is run with a goal of placing each applicant with the most preferred program on the applicant’s Rank Order List that ranks the applicant and does not fill all its positions with more preferred applications. Similarly, each program is matched with the most preferred applicants on it’s list, up to the number of positions available, who rank the program and do not receive positions at programs they prefer more.
As noted in the Applicant Protocols on the ORMatch website, the results of the ORMatch constitute an obligation between you and the program. If you are matched to a program, you must accept your ORMatch result and attend that program.
Every year, there are programs that don’t fill all positions, and applicants who don’t match with a program. When the results of the ORMatch are released (March 7, 2016), information regarding unfulfilled positions will be provided to those who did not match, the same goes with residency programs that have openings. Unmatched applicants and programs are free to contact each other and negotiated directly (independently of ORMatch) to fill available positions.
Good Luck!
-Dr. Dexter
In order to do so, there are 10 tips we have identified you must cover before you get started!
Some of the Top 10 Tips include: