Bcpm?

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gocanes1990

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I am taking PSY 204 at my university next year, it is required by all pre-meds, It is a "stats class", and not really a psychology class, therefore does it go into my BCPM GPA?
 
My school does the same thing (statistics run by psych department), and AMCAS let me classify it as bcpm without a problem. If the course title makes it very clear that this is a stats class then you shouldn't have a problem.
 
my school does the same thing (statistics run by psych department), and amcas let me classify it as bcpm without a problem. If the course title makes it very clear that this is a stats class then you shouldn't have a problem.

+1
 
I have a similar question. I took a class listed as EF (engineering fundamentals) my freshman year and the class title is 'Physics for Engineers.' I also took 2 physics classes from the physics department because EF didn't have a lab. Would I be able to include EF into BCPM? I am wanting do do this because it was a sequence of two 4 hour classes that I made A's in both.
 
I have a similar question. I took a class listed as EF (engineering fundamentals) my freshman year and the class title is 'Physics for Engineers.' I also took 2 physics classes from the physics department because EF didn't have a lab. Would I be able to include EF into BCPM? I am wanting do do this because it was a sequence of two 4 hour classes that I made A's in both.

Go ahead and classify the course subject as physics. I would also put the full title of the course including the "Physics for Engineers" in the heading. Be ready to provide documentation such as syllabus if they question it in verification.
 
What about GSC 310, its Micro-organisms in geology, basically "rocks for micro bio majors", is that BCPM? btw it counts toward my MIC major.
 
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