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June 21st MCAT
I know there is an MCAT thread with the same title, but are there any pre-pods on here that are registered for that day?
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I was, but then changed it to July 14th to allow more time for preparation (our last day of school is May 30)
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Eww, so will your whole summer be shot studying for it then? I really wanted to take it on May 30th, but it isn't offered in the Midwest that day.....
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I was registered for May 24th MCAT but I'm pushing it a month back to get more studying in. I haven't had enough time with school, unfortunately.
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Yeah, I did the 8 hours ten week thing. It was so much research! The last three weekends I had to come in on Sunday's and Saturday's to try and finish my project. It basically ruined my summer, haha that's why I want to get the MCAT out of the way ASAP so I can have one last summer of enjoyment - something I haven't had since 9th grade!!
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True, I just felt bad for not doing anything besides studying for MCAT since everyone else in my major is doing research of some kind. I figured the volunteer research may work the best in this case. My high school years had been memories of SAT/AP prep classes, and college is that all over again. I can't wait for my senior year though, since I will be graduating a semester early. Time to enjoy life for a bit.
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I considered graduating early - I'll have the credits. I think I might go to Washington DC next spring for an internship program my school has. The APMA has an office in Bethesda, which could potentially work out, but I kinda wanna do something fun while I'm there like work for a senator or lib of congress, etc. We'll see if I go at all though.
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Hey guys, Im new to this side of the forums. Recently changed my career path to Podiatry. Wanted to be an Orthopedist for the longest, but found the lifestyle of a Podiatrist more appealing (time for family, but still exposed to many aspects of medicine including ortho :) ). With that said, I too will be taking the June 21st mcat! (took it previously, but didnt do so well :\) However, I have been finding it hard to find time to study, anyone else working full time, full time student, shadowing, research, and studying for mcat???? How long are you all devoting to study for the exams??!?!?! Im really excited! Also, what schools are you all considering?
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I'm a full-time student but luckily the semester is ending soon. After that it's just MCAT studying all day, everyday.
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Right now I'm thinking: DMU, AZPOD, NYCPM, OCPM, and Scholl. But, there's a few more months until the cycle opens so my list will probably evolve by then. You? |
I will study MCAT for 5 hrs/day beginning June 1st, hopefully that's enough time for me to get prepared by July 14th. I feel like that I need some discipline, otherwise just reading the books is not sufficient. I will be applying to Western, DMU, AZPOD, Scholl and Temple. Western is my top choice for now since I live 15 minutes away from the campus. I will just go where's the cheapest for me and offering a good education as well. In that sense Western and DMU are my top choices.
Doing fulltime job/research and studying MCAT can be done, however you will get burned out pretty soon. I am just doing some volunteer research now so the hours are flexible. It all depends on how desperate you are for money and what priority you place first. |
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I know there's some wisdom in visiting a variety of places and getting the vibes, but I would strongly discourage anyone with reasonable stats who applies early from applying to a ton of places just to be sure they "get an interview somewhere" or "get in somewhere". I would advise only applying to schools you would actually want to attend or cities you would actually want to live in. Unless there's a grievous red flag you will get interviews everywhere you apply and more than likely acceptances there if you put on a tie and a smile and can answer "why do you want to be a podiatrist".
Anyway - just wanted to butt in and toss that out there. Perhaps ya'll are legitimately interested in finding out about all those schools, but interviewing is expensive and if you can save yourself some money in the application process not applying at places you don't want to attend then I would advise it. |
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And... NOOOOOOO!!!! Don't apply for HPSP!! I am applying for that and I hear there are only 2-3 openings for 4-year podiatry students! I don't want the competition!! Hahaha |
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Ah I know, I anticipate getting interviews at all the places I apply, but I really want to find the program that's "right" for me, ya know? I know that plane tickets and everything else for applying to 5 schools will probably run me between $2-3k, but in the long term, isn't finding the right school worth it? |
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The army has one pod residency at Ft Braggs, but the HPSP podiatry is only available through the Navy. So, realistically you can do a civilian residency if you choose to.
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Not for podiatry... You obviously didn't talk to a medical recruiter...
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While I agree that financial reasons should not dictate your choice for HPSP, I think you discount it's ability to be lucrative too quickly. Essentially, HPSP will give you free tuition (30k x 4) and 2k a month (2k x 12 x 4), this number is about 200k (that's a conservative estimate, as tuition prices increase, so will the stipend, and active duty pays more, and they cover books and fees, and insurance, etc etc).
You'll make about 60k after taxes for 4 years (pay is something like 50k, then all the other "bonuses" and "allowances" will add an additional 20-30k for a podiatrist) = 240k in those four years. So, after As a civilian pod, you'll be in debt about 150k after school (I believe that is average...). Then four years after residency, let's say you "take home" 120k a year, or 480k total (I'm just saying you'll make more than double as a civilian, which might even be a little generous as a new pod...). So, four years out of residency, the HPSP pod has 240k earned, and the civilian pod has 330k earned (480 earned less 150k loans). So initially, you think: "HEY! Four years out of residency I'll have earned about 100k more than my buddy in the military!" NOT SO FAST! Debt. Debt. debt. debt. debt. debt. and interest rates. and debt. In your first four years out of residency you will not have paid off your 150k in debt, and not only will you not have paid off that 150k in debt, but your debt will have. According to aamc, your unsubsidized student loans will have a 6.8 percent, BUT you can only borrow 32k unsubsidized and 8k subsidized per year. So, assuming you don't go over the 40k per year you are entitled to (most pod schools assume about 50k comprehensive a year, so I hope you've got a spouse working or Daddy Warbucks waiting around for you). Anyways, if you borrow 150k at the 6.8 interest rate, and pay it back for 20 years, it will end up costing you about 124k in interest alone, so you'll actually be 24k behind your militant counterparts. And this is all assuming you DIDN'T defer during residency! There are other points to be made such as, during that 4 year period you make more money you could invest it and therefore "ease" your interest rates in this fashion, and you could make more connections in the private sector, and inflation will make your payments in the future mean less to you, etc etc. Anyways, there was a post earlier showing that civilians made WAY MORE MONEY than HPSP folk, and I just wanted to show you that it isn't all that true - especially in areas of medicine that don't pay very well (eg podiatry). If you were contemplating HPSP and you were on track for plastic, ortho, or derm, I would call you crazy. But family med and pod make way more sense. Okay, we can continue to talk about the MCAT now. :hijacked: |
So how's everyone's studying going?
Mine is.... subpar. |
Took mine September of last year.
Best of luck! |
I take my MCAT in two days, lol
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I would advise you to stop studying at this point, relax, and let your brain unwind a little. Relative benefits of a good night's sleep outweighs sponging in last minute info. Good luck! |
Changed to July, studying all day everyday right now. It sucks.
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But seriously, I never know if i should really hardcore study, or it's not a big deal... Every practice test I've taken it's been a few points above pod school acceptance avg, so I don't know if I should try really hard and try to get in the thirties to "see how well I can do" or if I should just be cool with a 26 that will get me in and not stress about it.... Anyone's thoughts? |
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I would study. 3 pod schools told me that they base their scholarships almost directly off MCAT scores. The reason for this is that there are so many students with similar, impressive GPAs and the MCAT is really what differentiates them.
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I'm kind of hoping it's my MCAT that lands me interviews since it is well-above average and my GPA is pretty sub-par.
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AAMC Practice #7: 29! (10,9,10)! Woo!
This is potentially terrible news as my super motivation to study is probably gone..... |
Am I the only pre-pod on here that is taking it tomorrow?
I feel like June 21st is an optimal date for our application cycle....? |
good luck you will do fine, I'm glad I don't ever have to take that test again *shiver*
Sent from my SPH-D600 using SDN Mobile |
I don't know why I said to tomorrow, I meant next week. But thanks!!
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my score is released this monday, was successful in keeping the MCAT out of my thoughts but it has a way of subliminally haunting you while waiting for a score. Go all out on that thing so you can have peace of mind! And if youre the praying type, pray for me please!
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A little late for praying, your score is already calculated, not even the divine can alter that!!;) Try to be busy tomorrow and don't check your mcat account every 5 minutes like I did...
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Oh, yea about refreshing my page every 5 minutes. I am going to do it. lol |
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