AlexanderMedic Australian Medical Interviews
Most people prepare for Casper by memorising phrases. That is exactly why their answers sound average. Casper does not reward sounding ethical. It rewards showing your reasoning under pressure. In this episode I work through two publicly available Casper-style scenarios at test pace: the refund scenario and the group contribution scenario. For each one, I show what a low-scoring answer sounds like, what a stronger answer does differently, and where applicants accidentally lose marks by being too black-and-white. We also cover the exact exercise I give students to build the skill Casper is really testing: broader perspective-taking, clearer justification, and adapting your answer when the second question changes the scenario. This is normally a subscriber-only episode, but I've decided to release it on the free feed because I think the exercise alone can significantly improve the way applicants approach Casper preparation. Part 1 explains the research. Part 2 shows how to apply it. For additional premium podcast episodes: https://alexandermedic.supercast.com/ [https://alexandermedic.supercast.com/] Pre-med, IMG, specialty training interview courses and coaching: https://alexandermedic.com [https://alexandermedic.com] Chat GPT Prompt Mentioned: Generate a Casper SJT practice scenario for me. The scenario should present an everyday ethical dilemma — not clinical or medical — involving at least two people with competing needs or perspectives. It should be 3-4 sentences long. Then provide two follow-up questions. The first question should ask what I would do and why. The second question should change one variable from the original scenario and ask how, if at all, this changes my response. After I answer, I will paste my response back to you. At that point, analyse my answer and tell me: which perspectives or stakeholders I failed to consider, which solutions or approaches I didn't mention, and where my reasoning was vague or one-sided. Be direct. Don't praise what I got right — focus only on the gap between my answer and a high-scoring response.
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