Students at colleges with grade deflation and grad admissions

Anonymous
If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.
Anonymous
[b]
Anonymous wrote:If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.



no need to swear. especially during lent. But go ahead an be crude.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.


Says the person not from VA
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.


Says the person not from VA



I don't understand your comment. My DC went to UVA and is now at my alma mater harvard law
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.


Says the person not from VA


If you're from VA and can't get into UVA then go to WVU for the same price or lower.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you want to go to law school or med school then go to undergrad at your state flagship for Christ sake.


Says the person not from VA


Mine is pre med at uva and agrees! Go to your state school-/ even better if it has a hospital affiliated with it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Trust me folks. For a happy pre-med path, do not go to the best (most competitive) schools that accept you for undergrad. Grade deflation is real. Med School AOs may allow a small discount for top undergrad programs but this will not make things up for most kids. I have two DCs in med school. One Princeton undergrad and another from a T50. Both in about the same place now wrt med school. Princeton grad is in therapy from all the stress.


Grade inflation is real at every selective college in the U.S.

https://gradeinflation.com/


"Every selective college" is not listed on this chart.


Look at the list at the bottom. None have grade deflation. All have grade inflation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Trust me folks. For a happy pre-med path, do not go to the best (most competitive) schools that accept you for undergrad. Grade deflation is real. Med School AOs may allow a small discount for top undergrad programs but this will not make things up for most kids. I have two DCs in med school. One Princeton undergrad and another from a T50. Both in about the same place now wrt med school. Princeton grad is in therapy from all the stress.


Yeah, you want the honors programs at places like Drew, SMCM, Towson and SJU for pre-med.


I know a few that went to Drew and they said it is such a hidden gem.

Beautiful campus, supportive teachers, and a collaborative environment. For them into the same med school as their T25 friends- and they are in a better place mentally.
Anonymous
Colgate was brutal with grading. My freshman seminar professor said he usually gave a C to most kids unless they said something really impressive. Colgate professors made you really work for an A or B.

I found that despite going to a very challenging high school where I took 9 APs, I did not have what it took to get great grades there especially at first. I had to really push my thinking and that took time to learn.

I do think it made applying to grad school difficult for many of us but I am confident I got a great education.
Anonymous
For grad school admissions, letters of recommendation count a lot more. Make sure those are great and in-depth, not generic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Trust me folks. For a happy pre-med path, do not go to the best (most competitive) schools that accept you for undergrad. Grade deflation is real. Med School AOs may allow a small discount for top undergrad programs but this will not make things up for most kids. I have two DCs in med school. One Princeton undergrad and another from a T50. Both in about the same place now wrt med school. Princeton grad is in therapy from all the stress.

+100

Princeton grad who got hosed in top law school admissions.

Prestige wasn’t worth the stress. Would have been better off somewhere chill with easy grading.
Anonymous
Grad schools know the grade inflation landscape. Real question is what level of stress do you want undergrad vs what you will gain from attending a specific school. No free lunches as they say.
Anonymous
I heard this on a tour at Davidson. The tour guide gave the example of a professor who did not believe in giving A’s “because no one is perfect.”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Trust me folks. For a happy pre-med path, do not go to the best (most competitive) schools that accept you for undergrad. Grade deflation is real. Med School AOs may allow a small discount for top undergrad programs but this will not make things up for most kids. I have two DCs in med school. One Princeton undergrad and another from a T50. Both in about the same place now wrt med school. Princeton grad is in therapy from all the stress.

+100

Princeton grad who got hosed in top law school admissions.

Prestige wasn’t worth the stress. Would have been better off somewhere chill with easy grading.


What was your major? STEM or humanities?
Anonymous
Grad schools/med schools/law schools may or may not know the grade deflation situation. It is much better to just go to an easy grading school to be safe.

The same goes for high schools. Most colleges absolutely do not know the grading systems at all of these private high schools, so a low GPA from a private HS can kill your kid's application.
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