- Joined
- Oct 15, 2011
- Messages
- 959
- Reaction score
- 54
I would agree with that.Would you include GPA as a significant part of it? I'm biased, but if someone has a 3.3 GPA, and a 36 mcat, I think that makes them at least as qualified for med school as someone who has a 3.9 GPA and a 28 mcat. Yet according to AAMC stats, the 3.9/28 has a 68% chance of admittance, while the 3.3/36 has only a 60% chance. If someone goes to a less academically rigorous college and diligently selects some of the easier professors using RateMyProf, should they be rewarded for it? There's a valid argument to be made that they should, and that the other student should have done the same. Still, considering that the MCAT is the only standardized metric that we have to compare applicants, shouldn't we make the MCAT ~70% of the decision and the GPA ~20% of the decision? This is similar to the ratio most law schools use with LSAT/GPA. Or, at the very least, make BCPM GPA a bigger part of the decision than cGPA?
That being said, it doesn't really address what he said. It should be obvious that - assuming we could somehow rank applicants regardless of how we do so - a selection of the highest ranked applicants taken only from one state will necessarily be inferior to a selection from the entire country unless this state happened to have all the top applicants.
And btw, I used to be a resident of a more rural state, and had I gone to med school there, I probably would've left for residency and never come back (granted I'd never tell them that 😛). So states like Mississippi may be better served by opening up to OOS applicants, but charging some absurdly high OOS tuition, but offering loan forgiveness for working in the state for a certain length of time