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| Allopathic MD student topics. For current medical students. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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Please respond
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i'm all for affirmative action if it is used to actually help the people who came from unfortunate circumstances. however, in search for black/latino med students, have admissions accepted candidates with too low scores? does this ruin the hard work of all the asians/whites who got accepted as well as black students who got accepted by their own merit and will be looked down upon because of the negative perception of racial preference. also, the med school system will do anything to help med school students graduate including letting them take another year or a leave of absence. this causes them to spend additional resources on a candidate that shouldn't have been accepted in the first place. blacks with a 25 MCAT and 3.1 GPA having a 20% higher acceptance rate than asians with a 28 MCAT and 3.5 GPA? i wonder how many med students who remediated or dropped out were accepted because of race or nepotism and had no business being in med school in the first place... |
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#2 |
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New Member
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Where did you get those statistics? Please list your source
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#3 |
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Banned
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https://www.aamc.org/data/facts/appl...ethnicity.html
Affirmative Action is the most racist legislation that we have in effect. Basically, people use it as a crutch to "even out" things that happened in the past. Well here is news for you, my family came from a poor country in Europe and we never owned people like the Americans did. So why am I now discriminated against because of my skin color (white)? I say go the way that California did and Michigan. Ban it and let everyone be at a level playing field (strict meritocracy) by only taking into consideration GPA, MCAT, extracurriculars and other objective factors. Also take a look at the attrition rates based on race: https://www.aamc.org/download/102346...aibvol7no2.pdf Table1, Page 2 "As a society, the US has made the implicit decision to sacrifice patients' health to political correctness." Last edited by Shnurek; 02-25-2012 at 12:03 AM. |
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#4 |
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The Truth
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If we have to have AA, it should be based on economics far more than race.
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#5 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 553
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#6 |
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1K Member
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#7 |
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Fortuna Adaces Favet
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__________________
They call me "doc" in the service. Looking forward to being called "doc" everywhere else.
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#8 |
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balls involved
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#9 |
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Junior Member
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Don't you even start.
Of the 5 universities I applied to, I was accepted at the only one without a racial quota - oddly also the one considered more prestigious. |
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#10 |
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Senior Member
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Wow, have you heard of cultural competency? When you graduate, you're more likely to serve people like you. Blacks and Latinos are well under represented, and their populations need more doctors that can understand their situation. Believe it or not, racism in America still exists. That's why diversity in professional fields is so important.
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#11 |
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Senior Member
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Test scores and gpa aren't the only factors in determining who gets in. As an Asian American and immigrant, I've seen the importance of
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#12 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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Quote:
![]() not really
__________________
"First comes smiles, then lies. Last is gunfire." |
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#13 |
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Senior Member
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...(finishing post) racial and cultural understanding. Poor patient interaction with healthcare results in poorer health for the patient because they distrust the healthcare system.
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#14 |
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Senior Member
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What's worse than the inherent unfairness of AA is the actual lack of URM physicians in the US. Our current generation is paying for the sins of our fathers by using different yard sticks in medical admissions, but there's no other way in the short term. To reverse the education problems in URM populations the correct way (i.e. socioeconomic, cultural change) would take decades, and I can't blame admissions committees for using AA as a band-aid to reverse the racism that was built into the medical profession for decades.
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#15 |
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Senior Member
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*poor patient interaction with POOR healthcare PROVIDERS (due to lack of racial and cultural understanding)
Sorry for the typo. Replying from my iPod. |
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#16 |
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Senior Member
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While I agree that racism in the traditional sense is rare in the US these days, the effects of racism prior are alive and well. In practically every major US city, and the remnants of segregation and white flight are obvious. And you don't have to think very hard to imagine how this lingering segregation leads to education inequalities, and so on.
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#17 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#18 |
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Senior Member
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Tough question. I don't have any good answers.
But I don't think living separately is an issue itself, except that it leads to a segregation of resources. If you look at historically Black/Hispanic areas of big US cities, you find a dearth of economic opportunities, which shows that it's more than just an issue of different ethnicities living in the same neighborhood. |
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#19 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#20 | |
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Enjoying the Dark Side
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Money essentially evens the playing field - you get access to better schools, extra tutoring and prep courses, and your parent(s) are around to encourage and foster learning vs having to work multiple jobs. I don't know the stats but I wonder if a URM who isn't disadvantaged is any more likely to do primary care than a white or asian from a similar economic background. I've faced racism on an individual basis but I have not dealt with the institutionalized racism that comes with being a poor minority. I knew I deserved my spot because I had decent stats (33 MCAT) but I still felt like as an URM I had to go above and beyond in med school and it was just another motivating factor. |
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#21 | |
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Dr. Mantis Toboggan
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"And mom don't cry, ya son can handle this; I got her out the hood and put her in the hills"
__________________
"I like toast..........they're not all winners" |
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#22 | |
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Senior Member
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The issue gets even more complex when you start to consider the institutional racism that hung around until the late 70's (banks denying blacks mortgages in certain parts of town, employer discrimination, and so on). A lot of the inequality we see today is the result of real discrimination from just a few decades ago. |
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
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#24 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#25 |
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Senior Member
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If the definition of racism is to judge or treat someone differently based upon their race/ethnicity then affirmative action would be considered racist. It's simply an ugly form of collectivism where we put people into groups instead of treating them like individuals. Let's start treating people as individuals rather than putting them into categories.
I'm all for factoring in socio-economic characteristics of applicants and giving a leg up to those who did not have the same opportunities as persons from more prosperous backgrounds; however, I believe basing admissions on the color of one's skin is an antiquated practice that makes no sense to me in this day and age. Last edited by SoundofSilver; 02-25-2012 at 06:55 AM. |
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#26 |
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1K Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,957
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As a white guy, I don't have a problem with it and think its good for the healthcare system. In something like medicine, there is a huge value provided by having a wide variety of cultural backgrounds and values present.
Also, we always talk about the lack of access to healthcare providers, while there is a shortage in absolute terms, what the even bigger problem is that we have a hard time getting doctors to practice in certain areas. So many state schools give preference to students from the most underserved counties in their state b/c their stats have shown that those are the people who are most likely to choose to practice in undeserved areas. |
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#27 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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For what it's worth, I do appreciate that you're more likely to get someone to go back to rural or inner city patient populations if they have already come from those populations. To that end I do think there is some utility in saving a few spots in a medical school class for people from those populations who make it clear that their interest is going back to those populations.
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#28 |
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Senior Member
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I'm not saying whitey is the cause of the current inequalities, but the sentiment of "THIS IS 'MERICA, PULL YER SELF UP BY YER BOOT STRAPS' kind of misses the point. There's a lot of segregation and inequality that still exists in this country, and the cause of it is complex. Institutional discrimination definitely played a part.
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#29 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#30 | |
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Senior Member
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#31 | |||
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Banned
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For those of you that want to hear genetic theories (neanderthals interbreeding with homo sapiens) or other possible explanations of these racial differences there is a multitude of information on other websites and I won't go into this because it is extremely un-PC. But in any case we have to realize this problem is not going to go away anytime soon. Having lived in NYC my whole life I see the racial disparities even though this is a supposed "liberal" city. White neighborhoods are 50%-200% more expensive to live in and people will pay these numbers in order to be away from the ghetto areas. The city has tried integrating neighborhoods by putting in cheap rent (government subsidized) projects throughout white neighborhoods but all it did was increase crime rate in these neighborhoods and decrease the property values. The people that lived in these projects didn't magically become successful. For those of you in isolated small towns where it is 99% white I'd suggest you come to the big cities, take a ride or live here for a few months and see how it really is. Not how you see it on the news or other filtered sources. |
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#32 | |
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Senior Member
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#33 | ||
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Senior Member
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), but using the colloquial definition, "racism" is very rare. Our respective opinions likely can't be changed on this, so I'll stop here. Quote:
Bottom line: under-represented minorities are..... under-represented. I think representation is the motive for AA, not socio-economic status (yes, it is less "fair" I agree). |
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#34 | |
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Enjoying the Dark Side
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The general idea of AA was to level the playing field for minorities who didn't have access to the same quality schools, teachers, and extra tutoring. I'm a URM who grew up in the burbs and I'm going into rads. Pretty sure folks like me aren't the purpose of med school AA. Just because someone is a URM doesn't mean they want to do PC in a lower income area. That's why I believe economic background should hold more weight. Maybe more schools should have primary care tracks and use AA there. |
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#35 | |
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Enjoying the Dark Side
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#36 |
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Senior Member
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Unpopular, Devil's advocate opinion:
I am white + Hispanic. I had every advantage growing up in an upper-middle class household. I went to private schools. I had two married parents who were highly involved in my education. I had access to MCAT tutors if I wanted them (I didn't take them). My former coworker fit just about every stereotype for an African American in education. She was raised by her mother and grandmother. She went to awful city public schools. She worked throughout high school and college and didn't have anything left to pay for prep classes, tutors, etc. As I recall, the application lets you pick "disadvantaged" regardless of race. In all likelihood, more people of minority races will pick this status. Do you legitimately believe that because I had everything in life and did 4 points better on the MCAT that I will be a better physician than my coworker who had none of the benefits I was born with? She refused to check "disadvantaged" -- some people feel they'll be pitied or looked down on for this. No, not every minority is disadvantaged. But I would guess that the majority of people who get disadvantaged status are from minority populations. I guarantee there are dozens if not hundreds of white males on this site who were rejected and who can identify with my coworker's life story. Picking spots based on race is questionable of course. There are legitimate arguments for making decisions on race alone, but most of them don't hold water. But you can't really look at these stats and say that minorities got into school w/ lower stats based on race alone. OK, flame away!
__________________
The grass is always greener |
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#37 | |
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5K+ Member
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__________________
I learned a long time ago that minor surgery is when they do the operation on someone else, not you. ~Bill Walton |
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#38 | |
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Senior Member
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But when I hear AA discussed by administrators & faculty at my medical school, their message is much more along the lines of "diversity for the sake of diversity." It's about destroying the perception that all doctors are white and asian, and on a larger level, creating Physician role models in the black and hispanic communities at large. The role models don't have to be PCPs in underserved urban areas, they can be neurosurgeons or researchers, too. |
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#39 |
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Senior Member
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#40 | |
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Senior Member
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#41 |
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Senior Member
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The admissions should be based on qualifications. Not race or economic background. Putting out incompetent doctors because they were previously poor in not an answer. It's not fair, but neither is life. Oh well though. I don't lose sleep on this.
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#42 |
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Senior Member
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Never been.
For those interested, here's a short podcast (~10 min) on the origins of segregation in Detroit: http://detroit.blogs.time.com/2010/1...so-segregated/ |
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#43 |
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Member
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AA is about to revisited by the supreme court this year, so there might be some changes. In general I think it hurts all parties involved (whites, asians, URM's, patients).
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#44 | |
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Senior Member
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Eventually the Supreme Court will wake up and stop this nonsense. |
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#45 | |
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Senior Member
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After all, wouldnt that serve a "greater good?" A black doctor is more needed than you are; so you should be shown the door so we can achieve a greater common good. |
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#46 | |
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Senior Member
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Where racial discrimination exists, it should be eliminated by any means OTHER than more racial discrimination. |
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#47 | |
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Senior Member
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__________________
Cogito Ergo Sum Last edited by PHD To MD; 02-25-2012 at 11:59 AM. |
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#48 | |
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Enjoying the Dark Side
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Medical school levels the playing field. Everyone has access to the same professors, most sources are free or really cheap, and extra prep classes are not needed to do well. Someone who couldn't afford MCAT classes or even up to date books is at a significant disadvantage. It doesn't mean they're any less intelligent. |
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#49 | |
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lover not a fighter
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Umm... if your job can be taken away that easily and given to someone else, regardless of race, you're probably doing a really crappy job. Chances are, your'e upset because you feel discriminated against. Well guess what, people who don't have 30's on the MCAT and a 3.7 GPA are discriminated against when applying to med school. Those who barely passed the boards are discriminated against when applying to do ortho. GET OVER IT! The "race thing" doesn't have even have an inch on this numbers game we've been playing (and will continue to play) for years. So stop your whining and make yourself more competitive if you want something good for yourself --- geez.
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~*~ ~*~ ~*~ ~*~north carolina stand up!!!
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#50 | |
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Senior Member
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), but using the colloquial definition, "racism" is very rare. Our respective opinions likely can't be changed on this, so I'll stop here.
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