Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is the best route to Med school a SLAC, Mid, or large?
Top30 private or public with a med school on or close to campus, ideally one where the median in Stem classes is a B+ or A-, as long as the prospective student has the skills to be top half or better. SLACs in the Top10-13 range can be good if med school is close enough.
For top students go to an ivy/elite with a med school on or close to campus. Those schools place the largest portion of applicants into T20 med, necessary for targeting certain subspecialties. These schools also have below-average (3.5-3.6) students get in to medical school in the US all the time.
Basically all of this is wrong. But what is especially wrong is that not being at a T20 med school will rule you out of some subspecialties.
True. I know several from vcu who matched into dermatology vs Harvard. The step scores and class rank are the most crucial. Fit is also important, hence why EP and orthopedic surgery are full of bro, lacrosse type entitled a**es.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
Ok, I will bite.
Among the three, Duke no brainer.
You can do it at Cornell, but it only makes it a lot more difficult. Premed is already a stressful process, it's not necessary to make it more complicated.
UVA is not particularly know for premed, acceptance rate to medical school is not comparable to Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is the best route to Med school a SLAC, Mid, or large?
Top30 private or public with a med school on or close to campus, ideally one where the median in Stem classes is a B+ or A-, as long as the prospective student has the skills to be top half or better. SLACs in the Top10-13 range can be good if med school is close enough.
For top students go to an ivy/elite with a med school on or close to campus. Those schools place the largest portion of applicants into T20 med, necessary for targeting certain subspecialties. These schools also have below-average (3.5-3.6) students get in to medical school in the US all the time.
Basically all of this is wrong. But what is especially wrong is that not being at a T20 med school will rule you out of some subspecialties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
Ok, I will bite.
Among the three, Duke no brainer.
You can do it at Cornell, but it only makes it a lot more difficult. Premed is already a stressful process, it's not necessary to make it more complicated.
UVA is not particularly know for premed, acceptance rate to medical school is not comparable to Duke.
Uhhhh….uva has a medical school, teaching hospital with opportunities for clinical hours, and ample opportunities for research. Many students are pre-med there. As a parent of one, I have sat through several sessions and seen percentages of med school acceptances. It was close to the national average range after a gap year. Without a gap year, the percentage was lower but I think that’s to be expected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
Ok, I will bite.
Among the three, Duke no brainer.
You can do it at Cornell, but it only makes it a lot more difficult. Premed is already a stressful process, it's not necessary to make it more complicated.
UVA is not particularly know for premed, acceptance rate to medical school is not comparable to Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is the best route to Med school a SLAC, Mid, or large?
Top30 private or public with a med school on or close to campus, ideally one where the median in Stem classes is a B+ or A-, as long as the prospective student has the skills to be top half or better. SLACs in the Top10-13 range can be good if med school is close enough.
For top students go to an ivy/elite with a med school on or close to campus. Those schools place the largest portion of applicants into T20 med, necessary for targeting certain subspecialties. These schools also have below-average (3.5-3.6) students get in to medical school in the US all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
That depends what you mean by not a super star. Not top 10% in a public high school or not top25% in a good private? All of those schools will likely be too hard to stand out against peers.
Struggled with AP chem, AP calc or AP bio, AP physics C? Those should all be 5s or mostly 5s to be able to compete at ivies. Uva will have an easier peer group to compete against for grades but it could be tough if not focused with good study habits. Premed requires focus and study to get the grades needed.
If the 1530 was one sitting and no extra time that is a good indication mcat will be easily within range for success, likely 515+.
1430 one sitting no extra time is around the score that corresponds to a 510+, the minimum needed for an unhooked med applicant to MD schools in the US with presumed good gpa.
1530 one sitting, self study.
Top 10% public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
That depends what you mean by not a super star. Not top 10% in a public high school or not top25% in a good private? All of those schools will likely be too hard to stand out against peers.
Struggled with AP chem, AP calc or AP bio, AP physics C? Those should all be 5s or mostly 5s to be able to compete at ivies. Uva will have an easier peer group to compete against for grades but it could be tough if not focused with good study habits. Premed requires focus and study to get the grades needed.
If the 1530 was one sitting and no extra time that is a good indication mcat will be easily within range for success, likely 515+.
1430 one sitting no extra time is around the score that corresponds to a 510+, the minimum needed for an unhooked med applicant to MD schools in the US with presumed good gpa.
Anonymous wrote:Suppose you are a good but not super star student. SAT 1530. Which would you choose in what order for premed? Cornell, Duke, UVA.
Anonymous wrote:State flagship with a hospital for clinicals and lab research positions.
Anonymous wrote:Which is the best route to Med school a SLAC, Mid, or large?