Anonymous wrote:Yes but go for a school that gives easy As
Anonymous wrote:I teach at a med school. Lots of college athletes here, including plenty of D1, so it's certainly more than doable.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone’s DC has any positive experience?
If it’s doable, which college setting makes it easier? Small liberal arts? Mid-sized research universities?
Anonymous wrote:the only major that has been discouraged for our D1 recruit is engineering.
Sciences seem ok
Anonymous wrote:A good number of athletes at my WASP went to medical school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possible to be “pre-med”- yes, of course.
Chances of successfully being admitted to a US medical school straight from undergrad (no post bacc, research/retake MCAT year, etc) without completely giving up your social life in college- very unlikely.
Why is being a “college athlete” so important to you? Could those same goals be achieved if you played your sport on a less competitive level (local games vs traveling out of state, for example)?
Very unlikely? I know four including my niece, her boyfriend, my nephew, and a friends daughter. Two of them were athletes. One D1, one D3.
Huh? Out of the grand total of four doctors that you know, two of them were college athletes. I don’t think your example proves what you think it does.
Doctors? No, kids in med school right now who went directly from undergrad. It takes discipline but it’s very doable.
Anonymous wrote:It is impossible and at some schools not allowed — to be a D1 athlete and major in ore-med, any lab based science, definite no on nursing.
We know one girl whose school she’d committed to told her during high school senior year that she could not major in Biology. She claims to have asked previously and everyone said she could do it. And then, bam! No. She decommitted and went D3 smarty pants school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possible to be “pre-med”- yes, of course.
Chances of successfully being admitted to a US medical school straight from undergrad (no post bacc, research/retake MCAT year, etc) without completely giving up your social life in college- very unlikely.
Why is being a “college athlete” so important to you? Could those same goals be achieved if you played your sport on a less competitive level (local games vs traveling out of state, for example)?
Very unlikely? I know four including my niece, her boyfriend, my nephew, and a friends daughter. Two of them were athletes. One D1, one D3.
Huh? Out of the grand total of four doctors that you know, two of them were college athletes. I don’t think your example proves what you think it does.