NP. Assuming they went to school in the US, it doesn't matter where they went. Perhaps a bit more important is where they did their training as well as their experience and expertise. You're looking at the wrong information. |
No need for you to diminish someone else bc they made an easier or more financially viable choice. How would Orgo be harder at your kid's school vs. a regional state U? Not everyone has the ability, financially for example, to throw at an expensive private. |
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Be careful with the schools that pad high pre med numbers- many are weeding out and only allowing those with near guarantee of acceptance apply.
For our family, the answer was easy: a top liberal arts college, undergrad research first semester, shadowing and hospital internships during the school year, outside college research afterwards and a Goldwater fellowship. Now at Harvard med. |
No, I look at that too, it’s all there together to see. Wasn’t specifically saying I seek out undergrad, just note it while looking at all training and areas of expertise. |
DP, the med admissions consultant earlier confirmed harder. Doesn’t mean the regional state U is a bad choice by a long stretch for all the reasons you stated. Just confirms they might need more MCAT prep time if scope of class was lighter. |
What is wrong with you? Chem is Chem Physics is physics Biology is Biology No top tier schools are not teaching better these are weed out courses at all schools. Now given we now have the stupidity of MAGA running colleges in Red states like Univeristy of Florida for example there is no way in hell Med schools are going to be taking kids from some of these red state schools. That is going to change quickly. Curriculums are already changing. |
Right, but I would definitely not base my decision on where they went to college or medical school as it’s pretty useless information. All med schools in US are very standardized |
NP. Professor, have taught at a variety of schools. Undergrad science courses(or literature for that matter) are not taught the same at different undergrad institutions, nor do they have the same curves. The amount of material covered per week and the difficulty of the exams is highly variable even when the same text is used. The more capable the average student, the more we are able to push them with long-answer in-depth problem solving, vs mostly multiple choice or straightforward short answer. If one tests too hard at a school with a less capable student body, you find out the hard way when the department makes you make it easier, or has the older professor explain how to water it down. Ask me how I know. Postdoc at a top 10 and now at a large state uni , average SAT 1100. Everything got modified down |
All possible at ivies too, as well as some well ranked state flagships and good but not T10 privates, that are known for smaller yet challenging classes and having a lot of research opportunities —ie William &Mary, Wake, Emory—and do send their very top few to Harvard or similar. Great schools for premeds. “Top lac” is great but that is not the only way to skin the cat |
Gap year and recent? Mine really doesn’t want to and is in a good place not to, but worries it’s now norm enough that it’s an advantage even if you’re ready so apply. |
It'a actually quite difficult to find out where a doctor went to undergrad. Most don't have Linkedin accounts and undergraduate degree is very, very rarely listed on hospitals' websites (only medical school, residency and fellowship). I recently had to try and determine this info for a group of 100 doctors from around the country and it was impossible to find. It's simply not published online. You would have to go to personal Facebook accounts or such. |
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| There is absolutely a difference in classes across colleges. It’s common to hear of people trying to game the system and take a class over summer elsewhere. |
Same for me. And the irony is that while I took the first semester of orgo at my top 5 school, I took the second semester at home at a local public university so that I could go abroad during the school year. The second semester, at the public school, was way better taught than the first semester at the top 5 school was. |
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So the premeds at MIT are taking same level of difficulty pre-req classes as the premeds at a no-name school? Same material, but same difficulty of exams?
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