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Awesome. My kids will be the ****!
I highly doubt she got pregnant so early just to "feel the joy of being a mommy"...
...or there's the possibility that she didn't mean to get pregnant in the first place.
You have a valid point that OP put herself in this situation (though she may not have but I'm not going into such scenarios). However, I highly doubt anyone goes out and gets pregnant just to put it on their med school app. Is this "advantage" truly that threatening to applicants? She asked a simple question and was ridiculed for it. Even more confusing, it was a valid question and according to the AAMC, she is correct in assuming she would be "disadvantaged".
I am looking at pages 33 and 34 of the AAMC instructions for 2012 and I don't see anything about having a child as being a "disadvantaged" in the Childhood Information section.
I would also point out that having a child after taking the MCAT is different than having a child before finishing HS.
I am looking at pages 33 and 34 of the AAMC instructions for 2012 and I don't see anything about having a child as being a "disadvantaged" in the Childhood Information section.
I would also point out that having a child after taking the MCAT is different than having a child before finishing HS.
I'm not too experienced on the details of disadvantaged, I only looked up what was on the aamc website.
Link, please. I'm trying to educate myself.
See post #8 in this thread, under the category state and federal assistance programs.
Just a note, the link you mentioned is from 2009,
https://services.aamc.org/AMCAS2_2009/WebApp/Help/WebHelp/Disadvantaged_Status.htm
However, I did look up the same page for the 2012 application, and it looked the same,
https://services.aamc.org/AMCAS2_2012/WebApp/Help/WebHelp/Disadvantaged_Status.htm
Just a clarification if anybody wanted to bring this up. It seems the only real difference was the rewording of the "Underserved" section.
The change of the title seems a bit confusing though because the wording of the sections still is the same. Are they asking if any of the three sections applied to you as a child?
Right at the top it says:
All applicants are required to answer questions regarding their childhood.
The top section clearly says "your childhood". If you are over 18 and give birth and that child qualifies for state-subsidized health care, or Medicaid or WIC (food for women, infants and children), how does that relate to your childhood??
I will grant you, if you give birth at 15 and get federal means tested assistance, then you might consider yourself as having a disadvantaged childhood.
Having a child does not, by definition, make one disadvantaged.
Also, interesting side note. Since the disadvantaged question was added in 2002, the proportion of "disadvantaged" who have been admitted has been less than the proportion of non-disadvantaged applicants who have been admitted. So, there is no advantage to checking the box.
https://www.aamc.org/download/122492/data/garrison.pdf
Yes, but does that mean that you are not allowed to be disadvantages now? That despite your childhood, everything should be fine now?
Again, what's your point? Disadvantaged should be for things out of your control, no question asked. If you grow up in a house where learning is severely hampered by means outside of your control, great, I can sympathize with why that person should be given a little slack. But going out, getting pregnant with a baby you can't afford, and then asking to be given slack because of that?
It's actually really sad to see how this country has become. People just want everything handed to them today, and no one wants to work for it anymore. Maybe I was just raised differently.. but the whole premise of the OP's question is just sad.
Could this be because "disadvantaged" generally have lower grades and at times they are so low that it isn't competitive whatsoever. On the other hand, it may give a second look to an applicant that has some competitiveness? Just wondering.Also, interesting side note. Since the disadvantaged question was added in 2002, the proportion of "disadvantaged" who have been admitted has been less than the proportion of non-disadvantaged applicants who have been admitted. So, there is no advantage to checking the box.
Could this be because "disadvantaged" generally have lower grades and at times they are so low that it isn't competitive whatsoever. On the other hand, it may give a second look to an applicant that has some competitiveness? Just wondering.
Also, interesting side note. Since the disadvantaged question was added in 2002, the proportion of "disadvantaged" who have been admitted has been less than the proportion of non-disadvantaged applicants who have been admitted. So, there is no advantage to checking the box.
https://www.aamc.org/download/122492/data/garrison.pdf
Well thats true. I have came across a few situations where I caught myself saying to myself "dam I'm glad I had a boy". Especially the teenage part, with no mom, can get awkward.😕Boys are so much easier to take care of then girls. Especially teenage girls. From my experiences as a teenage boy, I can honestly say I have no intention of having daughters (artificial insemination ftw).
It can certainly raise questions in an interview about how you will handle work/family balance including explicit plans for dealing with a sick offspring who can't go to school/daycare because of contagion.