Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Med school like law school where the #1 feeder is the undergraduate school?
Med school not like law school
1/3 of Emory med school went to Emory undergrad.
I don’t think you are correct.
That’s a lot. Is that a good thing? No cross fertilization of students?
I don’t know…but it certainly implies that med schools favor their own undergrads.
Perhaps the undergrads get to know the med school staff that makes admission decisions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Med school like law school where the #1 feeder is the undergraduate school?
Med school not like law school
1/3 of Emory med school went to Emory undergrad.
I don’t think you are correct.
That’s a lot. Is that a good thing? No cross fertilization of students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Med school like law school where the #1 feeder is the undergraduate school?
Med school not like law school
1/3 of Emory med school went to Emory undergrad.
I don’t think you are correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Med school like law school where the #1 feeder is the undergraduate school?
Med school not like law school
Anonymous wrote:Emory sends 400 students to medical school every year. For a class size of 1500.
Anonymous wrote:Is Med school like law school where the #1 feeder is the undergraduate school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice, Emory, WashU, Vandy, Duke no particular order. Umich is awful for premed.
This is OP. Why is that? Is it because it is so big with many kids doing premed it is hard to gain extra opportunities?
Low med school acceptance rate. Its around 50% if I remember correctly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everybody in here talks about “good” stem classes, but that’s just window shopping. You need to get to brass tacks.
Most med schools now require applicants to go through a med school coordinator at their (student’s) university. So you want a school with a very very well staffed career/postgrad services office. Some SLACs don’t even have their own, they split one coordinator. I’ve seen it work, but it doesn’t always.
Other big consideration is access to lab and hospital volunteer opportunities. These are de facto requirements for applicants and surprisingly hard to do. For ex, in DC hospitals do intake for volunteers once a year and have very limited spots. So if you’re in a college town with one hospital, good luck.
Doesn't add up with SLAC outcomes at top med schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice, Emory, WashU, Vandy, Duke no particular order. Umich is awful for premed.
This is OP. Why is that? Is it because it is so big with many kids doing premed it is hard to gain extra opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:Everybody in here talks about “good” stem classes, but that’s just window shopping. You need to get to brass tacks.
Most med schools now require applicants to go through a med school coordinator at their (student’s) university. So you want a school with a very very well staffed career/postgrad services office. Some SLACs don’t even have their own, they split one coordinator. I’ve seen it work, but it doesn’t always.
Other big consideration is access to lab and hospital volunteer opportunities. These are de facto requirements for applicants and surprisingly hard to do. For ex, in DC hospitals do intake for volunteers once a year and have very limited spots. So if you’re in a college town with one hospital, good luck.