Residency Interview Prep

Practice answers before the interview pressure starts.

Search residency interview questions, review answer guidance, save prompts, mark what you have studied, and use practice mode to rehearse with structure.

Full MDSteps access is $27/month and includes interview prep, USMLE QBank access, Step 3 CCS cases, explanations, analytics, flashcards, and study planning.

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What this page helps you do

Turn a question list into actual interview rehearsal.
  • Filter questions by category and sort your practice set.
  • Open guidance for best practices, mistakes, purpose, and background.
  • Use keyboard shortcuts to move quickly through prompts.
  • Save questions and mark prompts as studied in your browser.
  • Launch practice mode when you want a more focused rehearsal flow.
482
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Showing 481–482 of 482

A time you led from behind?

Why this question?
Assess judgment, communication, and professionalism in realistic residency contexts, including reflection and patient-centered decision-making.
Best practices
  • Set the scene briefly (role, setting, constraints).
  • Explain your reasoning and options considered.
  • Name stakeholders and how you communicated with each.
  • Close with outcomes and what you learned or would adapt next time.
What to avoid
  • Vague timelines or missing your specific role.
  • Focusing only on medical facts without communication or systems steps.
  • Blaming others; skipping reflection or follow-up.
  • Ignoring patient preferences or safety checks.
Background
Programs probe authentic scenarios to gauge readiness for supervised autonomy, situational awareness, and a growth mindset.

Resolving conflict between patient preferences and best practice?

Why this question?
Assess judgment, communication, and professionalism in realistic residency contexts, including reflection and patient-centered decision-making.
Best practices
  • Set the scene briefly (role, setting, constraints).
  • Explain your reasoning and options considered.
  • Name stakeholders and how you communicated with each.
  • Close with outcomes and what you learned or would adapt next time.
What to avoid
  • Vague timelines or missing your specific role.
  • Focusing only on medical facts without communication or systems steps.
  • Blaming others; skipping reflection or follow-up.
  • Ignoring patient preferences or safety checks.
Background
Programs probe authentic scenarios to gauge readiness for supervised autonomy, situational awareness, and a growth mindset.
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