Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VCU has under a 5% acceptance rate. One thing they do mention is the average accepted applicant has 450 hours of healthcare-related experience.
It's a way of seeing if the kid is genuinely interested in a medical career and has an idea of the commitment they are making.
It’s a way of seeing if a kid has a doctor parent or family friend. Those hours are nearly impossible without connections
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even at not super competitive schools, the BS/MD programs are super competitive. For example, Pitt has a 50% ish acceptance rate but BS-MD acceptance rate is around 6%. Almost all are single digit and some are as low as 2-3%.
Pitt BS/MD acceptance rate is less than 1%. Last year, there were over 6,000 who applied. 600 made it to the second round, which involves additional essays, recommendations, etc (on top of initial extra essays). From those, they interview 60 and accept 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VCU has under a 5% acceptance rate. One thing they do mention is the average accepted applicant has 450 hours of healthcare-related experience.
It's a way of seeing if the kid is genuinely interested in a medical career and has an idea of the commitment they are making.
This is crazy. How do you get these hours?
For the person I know who did a BA/MD, it was a mix of things over the 3 years of high school before applications:
* science research (through a class at school that got her into a lab at the local university for the summer...obviously not an option for every kid)
* EMT class/ambulance ridealongs with the local fire department
* part-time job during school year and summers as a pharmacy tech
* candy striper at local hospital
She had other ECs too, and high test scores and grades. Luckily went to a good suburban public school and had supportive parents, but she's the first doctor in her family.
I have a daughter who is an EMT and she was not allowed to enroll in the course until she had finished high school and was 18 in our state. I thought it was national
What are age restrictions on these, does anyone know?
Anonymous wrote:Even at not super competitive schools, the BS/MD programs are super competitive. For example, Pitt has a 50% ish acceptance rate but BS-MD acceptance rate is around 6%. Almost all are single digit and some are as low as 2-3%.
Anonymous wrote:I have a Brown Pre-Med (denied PLME). I don’t get impression it’s doctor’s kids, strikes me as a curated group much like college admissions classes. The PLME are not necessarily the standouts in the class. Clearly very bright and capable, I think it was their stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child applied to one only because it was her safety that had one. 4.0uw/4.85w/1590, nationally certified EMT and lots of other top extracurricular. Full-ride named scholarship with research funds, no invite to interview for BS-MD. Another kid at scholarship weekend with full-ride also didn’t get invite.
this is insane
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VCU has under a 5% acceptance rate. One thing they do mention is the average accepted applicant has 450 hours of healthcare-related experience.
It's a way of seeing if the kid is genuinely interested in a medical career and has an idea of the commitment they are making.
This is crazy. How do you get these hours?
For the person I know who did a BA/MD, it was a mix of things over the 3 years of high school before applications:
* science research (through a class at school that got her into a lab at the local university for the summer...obviously not an option for every kid)
* EMT class/ambulance ridealongs with the local fire department
* part-time job during school year and summers as a pharmacy tech
* candy striper at local hospital
She had other ECs too, and high test scores and grades. Luckily went to a good suburban public school and had supportive parents, but she's the first doctor in her family.
I have a daughter who is an EMT and she was not allowed to enroll in the course until she had finished high school and was 18 in our state. I thought it was national
What are age restrictions on these, does anyone know?
Anonymous wrote:My child applied to one only because it was her safety that had one. 4.0uw/4.85w/1590, nationally certified EMT and lots of other top extracurricular. Full-ride named scholarship with research funds, no invite to interview for BS-MD. Another kid at scholarship weekend with full-ride also didn’t get invite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VCU has under a 5% acceptance rate. One thing they do mention is the average accepted applicant has 450 hours of healthcare-related experience.
It's a way of seeing if the kid is genuinely interested in a medical career and has an idea of the commitment they are making.
This is crazy. How do you get these hours?
For the person I know who did a BA/MD, it was a mix of things over the 3 years of high school before applications:
* science research (through a class at school that got her into a lab at the local university for the summer...obviously not an option for every kid)
* EMT class/ambulance ridealongs with the local fire department
* part-time job during school year and summers as a pharmacy tech
* candy striper at local hospital
She had other ECs too, and high test scores and grades. Luckily went to a good suburban public school and had supportive parents, but she's the first doctor in her family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VCU has under a 5% acceptance rate. One thing they do mention is the average accepted applicant has 450 hours of healthcare-related experience.
It's a way of seeing if the kid is genuinely interested in a medical career and has an idea of the commitment they are making.
This is crazy. How do you get these hours?