I'm thinking of majoring in this on my way into sports medicine so for anyone who has majored in this area how do you like it pros and cons?
I say chose exercise - you enjoy it, you will do well. Even if it may not be as hard in term of classes you will still take the Basic pre - med courses and can take biochemistry whenever you want. Plus, the bonus of the comparitive difficulty is a higher GPA.
I don't get what you mean by a low GPA? Do you mean a low GPA in college? If the major is "soft", won't they be taking soft courses and do just fine in them. Do you mean they will underpreform in pre med courses because their other courses are relatively easy? I guess it may be different for me (I usually just adjust to the class rigor and find out methods to do better as time goes on) Also, for the MCAT I think using the 3 month prep and possibly a prep course should help. 😛 (He could always take recommended courses for the MCAT too like bio chem and physio).Yeah, you may get better grades. But I knew plenty of people who majored in this and other "soft" majors and because the pressure wasn't there to do as well, they typically underperformed both in GPA and MCAT. Also you have to think about what you are going to do in case you don't get into medical school. As far as I know, an exercise science degree is pretty flipping useless in the job market. At least with a biochem degree you can go work in pretty much any pharma company you want.
any other thoughts
what exactly are you looking for people to say?
👍
I'm considering majoring in exercise science so this is a great thread. Very heartening to see people with the major who have gotten into med school. The fact that it's something I love is the main thing, but the fact that it is the perfect marriage between a soft degree you can't do anything with (anthro, humanities, etc) and a useful professional degree that takes up most of the time you could have used studying for the MCAT (i.e. nursing, accounting, etc) is icing on the cake.
I'm sure the people who are hating on exercise science would probably really love the degree, too. I have discovered that a lot of pre-meds are masochists, and I also wonder how they'd do in a major that would be GENUINELY soft for me (again, anthro) because it wasn't technical enough for their brains.
I wouldn't say Exercise Science is a particularly soft major, especially if you're concurrently doing the pre-med curriculum. At least this was the case at my undergrad. You'll take a full year each (2 sem) of anatomy and physiology, exercise physiology, and biomechanics. All these classes have labs and are fairly intense. You'll know all the bones and their landmarks, all muscles and their origins/insertions/actions/innervations. We also learned the various metabolic cycles (glycolysis, krebs, ETC, betaoxidation, etc) I believe a total of four times over- in biology, anatomy and phys, exercise phys, and biochemistry- all from different scientific perspectives. No one knew that stuff better than us.
We also took some neuro related classes, and toward the end there was a lot of emphasis on research, which though it wasn't hard-science research, incubating petri dishes or working under a hood, it did include the unique and significant aspect of involving human subjects, and subjecting those subjects to grueling exercise testswhich, I think, is pretty cool.
The downside is that job prospects are fairly dismal if you can't get into med school AND you are not in love with exercise science. One of my classmates (who is also now in med school) put it this way: "I major in exercise science, which means if I don't get into med school I can work at a gym for $10 an hour." Though other allied health careers are an option too. A lot of my classmates are now nurses or PAs.
I don't know about the benefits regarding sports medicine. It might give you some insight into whether that's what you want, but I don't think you should do it for that reason alone. You should do it if you are genuinely interested in exercise/human performance, and want to take that to a new level. Medicine is just what you do when it's over.
As far as I know, an exercise science degree is pretty flipping useless in the job market.
I can recite the Krebs cycle backward =/
About as useful as a straight bio or chem degree. Plus you may have actually enjoyed your undergrad time as opposed to not.
question how is the class schedule in this major ?
When people say "soft," they aren't talking about the amount of work involved, they're distinguishing between a "soft" or "hard" science. (Which is probably irrelevant anyway.)
If you enjoy it OP, go for it. I agree that it may result in a better GPA.
hey guys,
I know that the DO application counts exercise science/kin classes in the science gpa. For those of you MD applicants/students that did exercise science do they count the exercise science classes in the BCMP? like biomechanics, exercise phys, motor development, etc?
hey guys,
I know that the DO application counts exercise science/kin classes in the science gpa. For those of you MD applicants/students that did exercise science do they count the exercise science classes in the BCMP? like biomechanics, exercise phys, motor development, etc?
Nope.Would nutrition classes count toward BCPM as well?