

What up Steve? I am applying here as well.

The selling point for me is their Institute for Regenerative Medicine (aside from being an overall solid school).
Wake is my #1 coming into the cycle (though it's probably a long shot for me). Someone has to bring up the rear anyway, to keep those class profile stats honest 😀. The selling point for me is their Institute for Regenerative Medicine (aside from being an overall solid school).
I would really like to go to Wake Forest, but I did the math off the stats from US NEWS weekly, and the interview rates for in-state vs. oos is like (~24% vs. ~5%) (don't quote me on that one, but it there was a big difference). Does Wake Forest give strong preference to in-state residents?
And anyone from there/visited? I have never been to the area.
1st post! Love Wake, first clinical exposure at this hospital....my picture hangs in the hospital they have to let me in
I would really like to go to Wake Forest, but I did the math off the stats from US NEWS weekly, and the interview rates for in-state vs. oos is like (~24% vs. ~5%) (don't quote me on that one, but it there was a big difference). Does Wake Forest give strong preference to in-state residents?
And anyone from there/visited? I have never been to the area.
Anyone know if there are any MCAT cut-off scores for Wake?
Love Wake! Ill be applying here. I'm about eight hours away in TN. Good Luck to all!
Most researchers in other departments frown on this program because of how much funding they "steal"...basically they view it as a program that requires lots and lots of money but has very little progress
This. There is lots of grumblings about this and I've heard of it from professors outside the medical school as well (undergraduate, graduate program, etc).

I personally don't buy into the program, at first it seemed "cool" and maybe there will be some great progress in the future but the reality is that it is still in the embryonic stage of development.
Most researchers in other departments frown on this program because of how much funding they "steal"...basically they view it as a program that requires lots and lots of money but has very little progress
Have you guys even looked at the stuff they accomplished? Literally everything they've been doing is a first with it comes to regenerative medicine.
1) Successfully growing and implanting bladders entirely in the lab.
2) Engineering functional petri dish livers.
3) Engineering and successfully implanting urethras.
4) Engineering penile erectile tissue (no implantation yet)
Besides, If you've done any research you know that nothing materializes overnight in any feild. The fact that they've made any breakthroughs at all is outstanding, let alone the extraordinary breadth of their work.
From their website: "Our scientists were the first in the world to successfully implant a laboratory-grown organ into humans and today are working to grow more than 30 different organs and tissues in the laboratory."
http://www.wakehealth.edu/Research/WFIRM/A-Record-of-Firsts.htm
I would really like to go to Wake Forest, but I did the math off the stats from US NEWS weekly, and the interview rates for in-state vs. oos is like (~24% vs. ~5%) (don't quote me on that one, but it there was a big difference). Does Wake Forest give strong preference to in-state residents?
And anyone from there/visited? I have never been to the area.
I've been totally in love with Wake for quite some time - one of the first three schools I've applied to. I'm still working on the rest of my list. The programs, opportunities, location, and camaraderie at Wake sound great. Should I be sending in "love letters" as soon as possible? lol How do we show them we're really interested, or is that what the secondary is for?
Most researchers in other departments frown on this program because of how much funding they "steal"...basically they view it as a program that requires lots and lots of money but has very little progress
Thanks for the insight. It's a shame though, promising premise anyway. I'd still love to go to Wake nonetheless.
I think the chances of getting an interview after secondary is pretty good if you are a strong applicant, and the rate of getting in after the interview is really very good. Being from north carolina and going to wake undergrad probably helps.can any Wake Forest students comment on chances of getting a interview if you are screened in for the secondary?
can any Wake Forest students comment on chances of getting a interview if you are screened in for the secondary?
I think the chances of getting an interview after secondary is pretty good if you are a strong applicant, and the rate of getting in after the interview is really very good. Being from north carolina and going to wake undergrad probably helps.
Have you guys even looked at the stuff they accomplished? Literally everything they've been doing is a first with it comes to regenerative medicine.
1) Successfully growing and implanting bladders entirely in the lab.
2) Engineering functional petri dish livers.
3) Engineering and successfully implanting urethras.
4) Engineering penile erectile tissue (no implantation yet)
I think the chances of getting an interview after secondary is pretty good if you are a strong applicant, and the rate of getting in after the interview is really very good. Being from north carolina and going to wake undergrad probably helps.
can any Wake Forest students comment on chances of getting a interview if you are screened in for the secondary?
I vaguely remember something like ~50% of all completed applications get a secondary. To be clear, it is not screened based on GPA/MCAT cutoffs but instead 'holistically.' As for the rest...
Profile of Entering Class 2010 (Graduating 2014)
Applicants 7389
North Carolina 765
Interviewed 544
Accepted 226
North Carolina 85
Out-of-State 141
New Entrants 120
North Carolina 49
Out-of-State 71
Males 65
Females 55
Under-represented in Medicine Minorities 16
Wake Forest 23
UNC-CH 13
Duke 4
NC State 5
Davidson 5
Average MCAT 10.5
Median GPA 3.58
Average Age 23.5
Colleges 58
States 27
Foreign 0
Masters Degrees 9
Ph.D. 0
Alumni (WFU & BG) Total 36
WFSM Alumni 24
(Source: http://www.wakehealth.edu/School/Class-Profile.htm)
speaking to an adcom I think there is some sort of cutoff
Most NC applicants would pick UNC over Wake and maybe ECU because of the tuition factor, hence the lower matriculation rate for IS applicants.
Perhaps, but if you look at past years' threads you'll see plenty of 3.8/35 get rejected pre-secondary. It could be likely, then, that there is both a cutoff as well as holistic review for the secondaries.
This is spot on.
might partially just be speculation, i was slightly worried about that at one point last year but eventually i was accepted w/ a 3.8/35, but i was also from the region.
I think this may do with where the applicant went to undergrad, and the fact that the applicant might be using WFUSOM as a backup. In the end it's all speculation, just sharing what I've been told.
I've loved Wake for a while now, and I hope they don't assume I'm using them as a backup. A few state schools are my only backups. I'll be able to write about how much I love Wake in the additional comments section of the secondary, but only if I get it...
wait i don't think they are...i just got an email saying that they are looking at apps now and that the email isn't a secondary..
wait i don't think they are...i just got an email saying that they are looking at apps now and that the email isn't a secondary..
