Although, in hindsight and other than the near misses that could have been accepted had there been more seats, wouldn't adcoms necessarily say that all Rs had no business applying?
I think
@JanetSnakehole's point is a good one insofar as the actual odds of an acceptance for people with a decent application is significantly higher than 40% -- probably closer to 70% or so, because there is still an element of randomness, and perfectly qualified people are going to be unlucky and strike out, even if that number is nowhere near the advertised 60%.
I wouldnt necessarily agree with that. There is a fairly large difference between an ok candidate who just wasnt up to par with the remaining applicant pool and someone who had no place submitting their app and I'd be surprised if the adcoms who responded didnt realize that. Think ~3.5, 505, 50 hrs shadowing 200 volunteering, no research type who applied md only. Not a great app by any means and not likely to produce an A but not abysmal to the point of labeling their attempts a futile waste of time.
It would probably help if I defined my terms. A 3.5/505/MD only/ORM who applies narrowly is perhaps misinformed, but I wouldn’t say that they have “no business applying” so long as they met the minimum requirements. A candidate like this would probably do just fine in medical school, should they manage to somehow get an A.
When I say “no business applying”, I mean something like the following:
- 2.5/495/ORM who applies MD only, no extenuating circumstances
- 3.1/502/ORM who applies only T20 because “you gotta shoot your shot”
- someone with no relevant ECs
- someone with no patient contact
- Sloppy or unprofessional essays
- Missing LORs or LORs from inappropriate sources
- Multiple IAs/criminal history
In my current job, I come into contact with a lot of premed students, many from low SES/first generation backgrounds. Premedical advising is very basic/nonexistent at schools in the area, and you don’t know what you don’t know. I’ve come across a fair amount of MD hopefuls who are cheerfully going full steam ahead with <3.0/500. I know this seems crazy looking at the applicants on SDN, but I’m starting to think there’s a LOT of these candidates out in the wild.
I, too, wonder how much of that “60% get rejected every year” stat is comprised of people who simply have no idea how the medical school application game is played and have no real understanding of what is required to gain admission. They see minimum MCAT and GPA cutoffs on a school’s website and think “Awesome, I’m golden.”