Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I see your child's other choices include UMD-CP (in-state), Notre Dame, Tufts and Haverford full pay.
May I ask why her top two choices are Yale and BU and not Yale and UMD-CP? Mostly curious why UMD-CP is not in the running since that is extremely affordable even without a scholarship. Also can't believe she did not get a scholarship to UMD-CP given her caliber. There are tons of high performing kids at UMD-CP (I think around 40% of the Blair and RMIB magnet kids end up there for financial reasons) and they seem to do very well with med school admissions.
She likes BU for the possibility of doing the 7 year liberal arts/med school program.
The 7 year accelerated program has a separate admissions process. I don't think she can apply or transfer in later. BU does have an early med school admission program, but you don't shave off a year of school.
Yes, that is my point. She has applied and was accepted to the 7-year medical school program, and would need to maintain a 3.2 GPA and score in the 80th percentile on the MCAT to continue in the program. She also would not be able to apply to other medical schools which we are not sure about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I see your child's other choices include UMD-CP (in-state), Notre Dame, Tufts and Haverford full pay.
May I ask why her top two choices are Yale and BU and not Yale and UMD-CP? Mostly curious why UMD-CP is not in the running since that is extremely affordable even without a scholarship. Also can't believe she did not get a scholarship to UMD-CP given her caliber. There are tons of high performing kids at UMD-CP (I think around 40% of the Blair and RMIB magnet kids end up there for financial reasons) and they seem to do very well with med school admissions.
She likes BU for the possibility of doing the 7 year liberal arts/med school program.
The 7 year accelerated program has a separate admissions process. I don't think she can apply or transfer in later. BU does have an early med school admission program, but you don't shave off a year of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I see your child's other choices include UMD-CP (in-state), Notre Dame, Tufts and Haverford full pay.
May I ask why her top two choices are Yale and BU and not Yale and UMD-CP? Mostly curious why UMD-CP is not in the running since that is extremely affordable even without a scholarship. Also can't believe she did not get a scholarship to UMD-CP given her caliber. There are tons of high performing kids at UMD-CP (I think around 40% of the Blair and RMIB magnet kids end up there for financial reasons) and they seem to do very well with med school admissions.
She likes BU for the possibility of doing the 7 year liberal arts/med school program.
Anonymous wrote:OP I see your child's other choices include UMD-CP (in-state), Notre Dame, Tufts and Haverford full pay.
May I ask why her top two choices are Yale and BU and not Yale and UMD-CP? Mostly curious why UMD-CP is not in the running since that is extremely affordable even without a scholarship. Also can't believe she did not get a scholarship to UMD-CP given her caliber. There are tons of high performing kids at UMD-CP (I think around 40% of the Blair and RMIB magnet kids end up there for financial reasons) and they seem to do very well with med school admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Is it "grace deflation" or honest grading?
Anonymous wrote:I had a similar choice years ago. Princeton vs Uva (virtually full ride). I chose Uva because of no loans and my parents could not afford to pay much for my college. After Uva, I ended up at at Harvard medical school and top residencies afterwards. So going to Uva did not hurt my career and I had no debt until medical school.
However:
1. At least 80 percent of my medical school class came from top 15 universities and top 5 LACs. So undergraduate prestige is not essential, but certainly helps at top medical schools.
2. Over the years, even though I have had a successful medical career, I still wish we had the money to make Princeton work.
IMO, if you can make it work financially, I would choose Yale for my child. Congratulations and best wishes.