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Have you guys seen a pattern on this thread with gpas and mcat scores? Do you see more people get in with high gpas and low mcat or is it the other way around ?
Have you guys seen a pattern on this thread with gpas and mcat scores? Do you see more people get in with high gpas and low mcat or is it the other way around ?
i'd say high MCAT low gpa is a winner (look at freakin MedPR)
apply to more than 20 schools....
i'd say high MCAT low gpa is a winner (look at freakin MedPR)
the 4 was a typo, the poster has 6
I would have to agree. High mcat trumps high gpa any day. Mcat is what puts everyone on a level playing field. Measuring degree programs against one another along with difficulty and grade inflation from different schools is impossible. I went to a large state school and graduating with over a 3.5 is virtually impossible. That being said, I had friends that went to smaller private schools where almost everyone graduated with a 3.5 or above. Don't you think it is a little alarming that some people have 4.0 gpas but cant score higher than a 21 on an mcat? Just my two cents.
I would have to agree. High mcat trumps high gpa any day. Mcat is what puts everyone on a level playing field. Measuring degree programs against one another along with difficulty and grade inflation from different schools is impossible. I went to a large state school and graduating with over a 3.5 is virtually impossible. That being said, I had friends that went to smaller private schools where almost everyone graduated with a 3.5 or above. Don't you think it is a little alarming that some people have 4.0 gpas but cant score higher than a 21 on an mcat? Just my two cents.
Isn't that a bit excessive? 15 schools should be the max IMO...
It depends on what you can handle and what you think your stats will get you.
I applied to 22 DO schools.
How many secondaries you got? Did you fill out all of them?
I'm planning on applying to about 10-11 schools. It gets so expensive with all the secondaries and the cost of flying to interviews and staying in hotels. Obviously it's a necessary investment and would pay off in the long run. However, you really have to ask yourself if you would truly go to every one of the schools on your list. Seems like a silly question but last year I applied to a few schools just for the sake of trying to get an acceptance but when I got the secondaries I discovered I had no interest in moving 2,000 miles away.
This...
Also a high MCAT isn't just a good test taker (which makes it sound like some random skill)
It requires:
-high level of reading comprehension
-fast processing of information
-synthesis of new information with old
-comparative analysis of unfamiliar info to familiar
-logical inferences
-systematic process of elimination
-process large amounts of new and unfamiliar info
-large working knowledge base of chem/ochem/physics/bio
It measures a ton of important skill-sets in an imperfect but measurable way.
I still think it's overweighted. What if something happens on that one day that disrupts your test taking abilities. I met someone in school where his mother past away with breast cancer 2 weeks before taking the exam. Obviously this tragedy is going to have an effect on his test. And as I said before, just like the ACT, standardized tests are very poor indications of success
The MCAT sucks, plain and simple. I think GPA is the best indicator, since consistent hard work is the key to success in medical school. There have been plenty of great doctors that scored less than 20 even.
The MCAT sucks, plain and simple. I think GPA is the best indicator, since consistent hard work is the key to success in medical school. There have been plenty of great doctors that scored less than 20 even.
I think gpa can be a good indicator of a lot of things. But generally I think we should go from standardized testing to more behavioral analysis and interviews.
Either way, the whole thing is a gigantic crapshoot.
I don't really think any of those assumptions of the mcat are really scientifically proven. I think the test is a poor measure and continues to worsen in predictability.
Super basic view of how I see med admissions:
GPA = "hard" work, diligence
MCAT = intellectual potential
ECs = altruism, understanding of profession, commitment, personality
INTERVIEW = social acumen, personality, fit
This should certainly be a component.
However, gpa can easily be gamed (easy class/school/major etc.) and the mcat can't making it level comparison between applicants. The trouble is when the average applicant is a good student (B+/A-) in typically a science major and they are all competing against each other. Many will be average to slightly below average (22-25) and overall this is still a good student, but by med admissions it is practically a death sentence. To give the greatest chance of success one has to be well above average.
Super basic view of how I see med admissions:
GPA = "hard" work, diligence
MCAT = intellectual potential
ECs = altruism, understanding of profession, commitment, personality
INTERVIEW = social acumen, personality, fit
23 or below is a death sentence IMO
Not necessarily. It depends on many factors (GPA, Post-Bacc, URM, etc...). In fact, a very close friend is starting this coming fall at a "top tier" DO program with 21 on the MCAT.
What else did this applicant have going on for him/her?
To protect his privacy, I can't go into too much details, but i can tell you he didn't cure cancer. His GPA was above average. He has average EC's.
That was one of the things going for him....I regret not taking my GPA seriously at the beginning... I would rely that much on my mcat score to have a shot....
Yeah he has nothing below B on his transcript, plus his URM status may have helped a little.
I, too, kick myself in the rear everyday for not putting the effort early on in my college career. I transferred out of community college with 3.01 (mostly, ESL and introductory science courses) and was able to bring that GPA up to 3.36 with 5 semesters of hard work at my university. Had my performance been the same throughout my college career, my GPA would be at least 3.65. For that, now I need to worry about scoring above average MCAT to be competitive for schools like CCOM, DMU, and Western.
You want these top notch DO. None of them will be on my list even if I score above average (28+) in the MCAT. I wan get into ANY school, but It would be dream come true if I got into NOVA
Nobody cares.How good does it look if you doubled majored?
Nobody cares.
I see a trend where a lot of the people accepted to these schools are double majors
I see a trend where a lot of the people accepted to these schools are double majors
A death sentence ? For a 22 to 25 ? Really now?
Do they need to be? It is kind of experiential common sense that fast info processing, synthesis, analysis, and good reading comprehension are needed to succeed on the MCAT. Other than the small minority who truly "luck out" getting a high score requires these skills.
So do you think it will hurt my application if I only shadowed a month before applying?
So do you think it will hurt my application if I only shadowed a month before applying?
Yes, you do, all testing needs to prove validity to really say it does what it does ( ex. Psychological tests or even Biochemical tests).
Also common sense is just a set of prejudices we gain before age 18 ( Albert Einstein). Simply put just because something makes sense or is common sense rarely means that it is right. That why science is a peer reviewed field, things are rarely great and always can be improved upon.
So yes, I'm doubtful that the mcat is an indicator of intellectual potential. It was never designed for such and does not ask questions that really probe for the ability to learn quickly and synthesis information except for the verbal section, which may test lightly for intelligence.
So Tl;DR
This is science and verbal may be able to probe slightly for intelligence, but the other two sections likely are insensitive.
I'm in the same boat. I started shadowing a D.O. this month, and debating whether or not to even ask her for a letter.
Only one of the schools I'm applying to requires a D.O. letter, and I believe they'll interview me without one.