Of the three, Northwestern, by far, has the nicest campus. There is no comparison. |
| Evanston Hospital nearby for hospital volunteering-it’s a large community hospital with university affiliates and research faculty. Now affiliated with UChicago which is a little odd given the location but I’m sure still get plenty of NU undergrad volunteers. |
+1000. I am a physician and know many: the premed advising and opportunities are much greater at the schools listed than they are at UVA. Average kids (ie GPA 3.6-3.7 at most of those privates) get into med school as long as Mcat is high, and have a much better shot at the top 50 research med schools than coming out of UVA . You have to be a top 10% kid at UVA to have a similar shot. For lower ranked publics top1%. |
Me too, and I disagree. Opportunities to shadow and participate in research will be similar across all three. |
This is a weird post. Not accurate at all. |
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I would pick Vanderbilt.
We live in VA and people LOVE UVA around here. |
When you are a pre-med, you are not in medical school. Why obsess over the location of the medical center? There are hospitals in the area. |
Love Northwestern (attended myself), it's an amazing school. But if you are full pay and plan to attend professional school (med/law/dental/etc), it is not worth the extra costs vs UVA in state. UVA is a great school, save your $40-50K/year and you will have most of med school paid for. |
| Of the three, NW has the reputation of being the least fun, by alot. |
+1 |
+1 When I attended, running joke was 50% of tuition was used to keep the campus beautiful |
If and I am emphasize If, the intent is premed, going to an Ivy or any of the top 20 privates is one of the dumbest things you can do when choosing a college. Especially Cornell, Columbia, Chicago and Penn. Beyond stupid. First, you burn yourself down with trying to get good grades. Two, your competitors are also going to be very competitive for premed which would make it even tougher. Three, you are going to pay a lot of additional money over going to an instate public school. Money that can be used for medical school and beyond as you would essentially not be earning much for 10 years or more. Four, the med school you go to is what matters. No one gives a hoot about what college you went to before the med school. |
| These three were on DSs list (didn't really want UVA, but applied in case he didn't get into his top choice). Liked NU over Vanderbilt. Liked the idea of the quarter system at NU and the ability to double major/minor easily. Also lots of opportunities for co-ops. Both great schools though. DS ended up ED at a t10 |
The reported percentages of premeds gaining acceptance from those schools is typically much higher than from schools like Berkeley, UCLA, Michigan, and UVA. The national acceptance rate of premeds into any accredited medical school is only about 40%. The challenge is to get in. |
Who’s obsessed? I’m correcting misinformation in the PP. |