
Undergrad: University of Georgia
Medical School: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine
Before attending the UNC School of Medicine, Dr. Goodhue graduated from the University of Georgia, where he was awarded the Foundation Fellowship, the university's premier undergraduate merit scholarship. As a Foundation Fellow, he joined a community of scholars who studied at the University of Oxford, traveled internationally, and convened regularly to network and share ideas. Through this program, he received extensive coaching on building narrative-driven applications alongside other Fellows, including multiple Marshall, Truman, and Rhodes scholars.
At the University of Georgia, Dr. Goodhue majored in anthropology and romance languages (French and Spanish) with a minor in biology. In his junior year, Dr. Goodhue was awarded a federal Boren Scholarship for critical language study of Wolof, which allowed him to spend a year in Senegal studying Wolof, French, and international development. After graduating, he worked at a refugee resettlement agency in Atlanta before enrolling in medical school.
At the UNC School of Medicine, Dr. Goodhue was a member of the Comprehensive Advanced Medical Program of Spanish (CAMPOS) program and became certified as a Spanish-speaking medical provider. Now an emergency medicine resident at the Mount Sinai/Elmhurst program in New York City, Dr. Goodhue is involved in mass-casualty incident training and other disaster preparedness efforts.
As a medical school admissions coach, Dr. Goodhue's approach focuses on identifying the unique and special aspects of each applicant's life journey to create a compelling story. He loves helping applicants achieve their career ambitions and is happy to be a calming, reassuring presence throughout the medical school application process. With a background in foreign languages and international development, he has extensive experience navigating high-stakes application cycles and leveraging assets from traditional and non-traditional backgrounds to succeed within the highly competitive field of medical education.