Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other retort I read a lot is do you know where your doctor went to undergrad which makes me laugh, when I’m comparing I do look. Am I really that unusual?
No i have patients who tell me they picked me because of my undergrad and med school degrees. They mention both. Both are T10/T5
Ok but 99+% of patients in the country don’t know or care where their doc went to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other retort I read a lot is do you know where your doctor went to undergrad which makes me laugh, when I’m comparing I do look. Am I really that unusual?
No i have patients who tell me they picked me because of my undergrad and med school degrees. They mention both. Both are T10/T5
I can also understand how high SAT/ACT led to prestigious undergrad schools which led to high MCAT
Anonymous wrote:The other retort I read a lot is do you know where your doctor went to undergrad which makes me laugh, when I’m comparing I do look. Am I really that unusual?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s commonly said prestige does not matter, and most say cheapest option with highest GPA and MCAT you can. I get that logic.
I can also understand how high SAT/ACT led to prestigious undergrad schools which led to high MCAT and that’s the correlation to strong med school application success.
I could also see top schools covering more in-depth thus making MCAT prep easier or is it truly directional school orgo is same as T5 orgo and it truly does not matter?
I am part-owner of a med school admissions consultant group, all docs from UVa and above undergrads, all MD schools in the top75 some T5, yet we mentor everyone even a current pharmD student who started at a no name undergrad. There are very large differences in the course content of the basic premed courses, including orgo, at non-flagship state schools (ie well below traditional T50)/lesser known lacs and T20/T10 LACs. Top students who have the basic smarts to score above 512 on the mcat have to study significantly more (9-12 months)than a similar student at a T20 or 30 (2-3 months) to be hitting goal scores.
“Similar” is based on SAT(1400 is a good baseline score indicating a 512 is possible with study) and high school prep(stem AP experience and scoring more 5s than 4s in those areas).
Additionally students from the much lower ranked schools have often taken the wrong classes sometimes due to lack of premed advising and other times due to poor advice. We recommend masters in sciences for many, and waiting on mcat until the background is better.
For the parents who often reach out before undergrad is chosen, we say pick the most rigorous school (highest academic reputation& has premed advising) where the kid has a good chance to be above the mean in stem classes. For some that is VCU, for others that is William&Mary/UVa, for others they can go to ivies and have no trouble being top half.
Anonymous wrote:We are in this right now.
My son is pre-med and his college counselor stressed how important it was to find a school he could get the major he wanted and be able to research. For instance, he is auto admit to UT Austin, but even though it is a great school overall, it is not great for pre-med due to huge class sizes, lack of faculty interaction, competition for research, etc. Do people go to medical school from UT Austin? Of course they do, but it is not the best path, imho. He has now gotten into a more prestigious school and we will pay the money, not only because it is a better fit for him at this time in his life, but it also because - if he succeeds at college like he did in high school - he has a lot more resources to get into med school.
Obviously a lot of factors here - really it comes down to the kid and what they need and what they want their next 4 years to look like...and then of course financial resources and being able to pay.
Take a look here https://texadmissions.com/blog/2023/7/27/applying-for-pre-med-to-ut-austin
We are not following that advice, but we did consider it.
We have another child who was pre-med (changed major for other reasons) at a large public university. There was limited access to volunteer opportunities, almost no research, difficult to interact one on one with professors due to no structures being in place to find mentors - again, people go to med school, but it is a huge uphill climb even for the ones with very good grades...and several we know had to take the mcat 2 or 3 times (maybe that is common - I don't know)...which seems to prove your point.
Anonymous wrote:We are in this right now.
My son is pre-med and his college counselor stressed how important it was to find a school he could get the major he wanted and be able to research. For instance, he is auto admit to UT Austin, but even though it is a great school overall, it is not great for pre-med due to huge class sizes, lack of faculty interaction, competition for research, etc. Do people go to medical school from UT Austin? Of course they do, but it is not the best path, imho. He has now gotten into a more prestigious school and we will pay the money, not only because it is a better fit for him at this time in his life, but it also because - if he succeeds at college like he did in high school - he has a lot more resources to get into med school.
Obviously a lot of factors here - really it comes down to the kid and what they need and what they want their next 4 years to look like...and then of course financial resources and being able to pay.
Take a look here https://texadmissions.com/blog/2023/7/27/applying-for-pre-med-to-ut-austin
We are not following that advice, but we did consider it.
We have another child who was pre-med (changed major for other reasons) at a large public university. There was limited access to volunteer opportunities, almost no research, difficult to interact one on one with professors due to no structures being in place to find mentors - again, people go to med school, but it is a huge uphill climb even for the ones with very good grades...and several we know had to take the mcat 2 or 3 times (maybe that is common - I don't know)...which seems to prove your point.
Anonymous wrote:It’s commonly said prestige does not matter, and most say cheapest option with highest GPA and MCAT you can. I get that logic.
I can also understand how high SAT/ACT led to prestigious undergrad schools which led to high MCAT and that’s the correlation to strong med school application success.
I could also see top schools covering more in-depth thus making MCAT prep easier or is it truly directional school orgo is same as T5 orgo and it truly does not matter?
Anonymous wrote:We are in this right now.
My son is pre-med and his college counselor stressed how important it was to find a school he could get the major he wanted and be able to research. For instance, he is auto admit to UT Austin, but even though it is a great school overall, it is not great for pre-med due to huge class sizes, lack of faculty interaction, competition for research, etc. Do people go to medical school from UT Austin? Of course they do, but it is not the best path, imho. He has now gotten into a more prestigious school and we will pay the money, not only because it is a better fit for him at this time in his life, but it also because - if he succeeds at college like he did in high school - he has a lot more resources to get into med school.
Obviously a lot of factors here - really it comes down to the kid and what they need and what they want their next 4 years to look like...and then of course financial resources and being able to pay.
Take a look here https://texadmissions.com/blog/2023/7/27/applying-for-pre-med-to-ut-austin
We are not following that advice, but we did consider it.
We have another child who was pre-med (changed major for other reasons) at a large public university. There was limited access to volunteer opportunities, almost no research, difficult to interact one on one with professors due to no structures being in place to find mentors - again, people go to med school, but it is a huge uphill climb even for the ones with very good grades...and several we know had to take the mcat 2 or 3 times (maybe that is common - I don't know)...which seems to prove your point.