Acceptance calculation? Does it apply to you?

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skiz knot

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I have heard a GENERAL rule that if you add your MCAT score and 10 X BCPM GPA > 65 has about a 90% acceptance rate and < 65 has a 90% likelyhood of no acceptances.


e.g. mcat =34
sci gpa = 3.2 x 10=32

34 + 32 = 66 > 65 = 90% likelyhood of being accepted somewhere

Anyone else ever hear of something like this?

Anyone want to share their calculations? Accepted yes/no?
 
skiz knot said:
I have heard a GENERAL rule that if you add your MCAT score and 10 X BCPM GPA > 65 has about a 90% acceptance rate and < 65 has a 90% likelyhood of no acceptances.


e.g. mcat =34
sci gpa = 3.2 x 10=32

34 + 32 = 66 > 65 = 90% likelyhood of being accepted somewhere

Anyone else ever hear of something like this?

Anyone want to share their calculations? Accepted yes/no?

That makes absolutely no sense. That means that if your formula gives you a score of 66, then you have a 90% chance of being accepted but if you get one less point (by getting one less point on the MCAT for example), you now have a 10% chance of getting in. I'm pretty sure it doesn't work that way.
 
I've heard about that formula but 90% is ridiculous even if you have amazing stats.

Lets take the national average. 3.6 +30

That means a 66 will give you a 50% chance of acceptance since last years acceptance rate was around 50%

If anything a 65 will give you a 40-45% chance.
 
"Lets take the national average. 3.6 +30

That means a 66 will give you a 50% chance of acceptance since last years acceptance rate was around 50%"

Actually you are misinterpreting the data. A GPA of 3.6 and a MCAT of 30 are the average of students who are accepted not the average of students who apply. The average for students who apply (of which about 50% are accepted) is actually lower. In addition, he was talking about BCPM GPA which averages a little less then the 3.6 GPA that AAMC uses. I am not sure if I believe the calculation but your argument that it is not accurate does not make sense.
 
No that doesnt work at all.

The process is a random roll of the dice, you get a chance to weigh the dice in your favor with your application and interview, but ultimately med schools roll the dice for ya.
 
The formula doesn't work in number of schools applied to, which schools were applied to, or any ECs. I mean to compare someone with minimum numbers straight out of school with a nurse, say, with ten years of hospital work but the same numbers...

Too many factors to reduce to a formula. If it weren't, that would be a nice formula, though. 🙂
 
hakksar said:
"Lets take the national average. 3.6 +30

That means a 66 will give you a 50% chance of acceptance since last years acceptance rate was around 50%"

Actually you are misinterpreting the data. A GPA of 3.6 and a MCAT of 30 are the average of students who are accepted not the average of students who apply. The average for students who apply (of which about 50% are accepted) is actually lower. In addition, he was talking about BCPM GPA which averages a little less then the 3.6 GPA that AAMC uses. I am not sure if I believe the calculation but your argument that it is not accurate does not make sense.

you're right, i shouldve taken the average of applicants. 3.6/27 which is a 63.

I agree, there is no forumula except for the whim of the adcomm.
 
national average MCAT is a 24
 
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