Anonymous wrote:Do your reseaerch as some US colleges do this. Brown University has PLME (8 year automatic admission to its medical school). I think Penn State and Thomas Jefferson Medical School still has this too (7 years for undergrad/MD degrees).
There are others...of course you have to keep up the minimum GPA etc.
Anonymous wrote:Title says it all. In some European countries, Med School is direct admit.
Students still take PChem and Bio and what not, but so long ad student is passing they progress to the Medicine-specific courses without further ado. And the resulting medical knowledge is the same. They still have national licensing exams before one can practice.
Anonymous wrote:No, but I do with they didn’t need hundreds upon hundreds of hours in clinical, research, and volunteering to prove worthiness requiring a new norm of gap years. Mine doesn’t need one, but as the age increases worries it’s a negative not to even if ready. It’s a long path, don’t want it to be longer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title says it all. In some European countries, Med School is direct admit.
Students still take PChem and Bio and what not, but so long ad student is passing they progress to the Medicine-specific courses without further ado. And the resulting medical knowledge is the same. They still have national licensing exams before one can practice.
Absolutely not and I actually went to one. At 17, I too young to make a life long commitment.
Anonymous wrote:Title says it all. In some European countries, Med School is direct admit.
Students still take PChem and Bio and what not, but so long ad student is passing they progress to the Medicine-specific courses without further ado. And the resulting medical knowledge is the same. They still have national licensing exams before one can practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your reseaerch as some US colleges do this. Brown University has PLME (8 year automatic admission to its medical school). I think Penn State and Thomas Jefferson Medical School still has this too (7 years for undergrad/MD degrees).
There are others...of course you have to keep up the minimum GPA etc.
George Washington.Univ has a 7 year BS + MD. Not for the weak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, but I do with they didn’t need hundreds upon hundreds of hours in clinical, research, and volunteering to prove worthiness requiring a new norm of gap years. Mine doesn’t need one, but as the age increases worries it’s a negative not to even if ready. It’s a long path, don’t want it to be longer.
Agree with this. At the UG level, I want my kid to have a well-rounded liberal arts education.
Anonymous wrote:No, but I do with they didn’t need hundreds upon hundreds of hours in clinical, research, and volunteering to prove worthiness requiring a new norm of gap years. Mine doesn’t need one, but as the age increases worries it’s a negative not to even if ready. It’s a long path, don’t want it to be longer.
Anonymous wrote:Better to be admitted at 22 or 23 years of age than at 17 or 18 years of age. Some are ready at 17 or 18, have resources to help them (e.g. a parent who is already in the field, money) and the drive it needs to succeed. Others should take the few years of undergrad to figure it out. Had heard one parent say they encouraged their kid to do the 3+4 program (apply as a high school senior) so kid was more likely to stick with that plan and actually go through with med school and not be bogged down thinking about applying as an undergrad. Have also heard of others who got into the 3+4 program but end up not doing med school in the end (kid went to business school instead, the horror!