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On their Facebook page they said they'll add a notification soon. As of right now we have no idea 😕
Anyone else having second thoughts about applying to certain schools because of the increased debt they'd incur? I'm considering taking one or two schools out. I'm trying to stay logical/practical in my choices while still giving my dream a chance. Ugh. So hard.
I could use some help narrowing down my list guys.....
So, here are the schools on my list...some I realize are probably out of my grasp, but I'm waiting until I take the GRE to knock them off my list:
OhioSU (my ISS) UGA, Auburn, Washington State, VMRCVM, UC Davis, Purdue, OregonSU
My stats are: 3.38 cGPA (yes, I know, its on the lower end)
5 years in a medical research laboratory working 20-30 hours a week.
Showing dogs in Agility, conformation, and agility since since I was 10 (so, 12 years)
Running my own business where I would train, condition, and present dogs in conformation.
Fostering puppy mill rescues
3yrs horse back riding lessons
at the time of my app ~300 SA shadowing hours
~100 equine shadowing hours
~100 research animal shadowing hours
and yes, I've posted in the "what are my chances?" thread and gotten positive feedback, but I finding it hard to narrow down what schools I have a real chance at based on my stats......any opinions from my short list would be appreciated 🙂 I suppose others are okay too, but I do not want to go to the "true" midwest (I don't count OH and IN as the "real" midwest, I count that as KS/MO, etc) and I don't want to go out of country.....
I have a question, may be silly but..... I took a few graduate courses in my gap year. Do these count in your last 45 hours? Or do they just take your last 45 hours that I had when obtaining my undergrad degree? 😕
I believe grad school courses count as part of your last 45.
Another member, Orion12, shared this in another thread and it really made me feel a bit better about taking on the debt:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Iq9bxJU_qc
Isn't she awesome? It's all about attitude and being smart about your money. We should be excited about paying back out loans instead of fearing them. They are what allowed us to become a doctors and loans are just a small and necessary part of the journey. "The main internal obstacle to weath is fear"- suze
It's just money anyway 😛 the most important part is being a good doctor and the money will follow.
Live below your means
Only buy things you NEED
Save your money- put it in a Roth
Three simple rules along with patience and you will be financially fine.
Another member, Orion12, shared this in another thread and it really made me feel a bit better about taking on the debt:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Iq9bxJU_qc
I know vet schools do file reviews after you get a rejection but has anyone heard of anyone speaking with someone before applying and reviewing their application? I have been thinking about contacting the dean's office at my vet school and seeing if I can speak with anyone this summer about my application and my chances of gaining an interview. Thoughts? Couldn't hurt to call, right?
I know vet schools do file reviews after you get a rejection but has anyone heard of anyone speaking with someone before applying and reviewing their application? I have been thinking about contacting the dean's office at my vet school and seeing if I can speak with anyone this summer about my application and my chances of gaining an interview. Thoughts? Couldn't hurt to call, right?
I know vet schools do file reviews after you get a rejection but has anyone heard of anyone speaking with someone before applying and reviewing their application? I have been thinking about contacting the dean's office at my vet school and seeing if I can speak with anyone this summer about my application and my chances of gaining an interview. Thoughts? Couldn't hurt to call, right?
Davis specifically says on their website (or did when I looked at it last year) that they do not have time to do those, so please don't call asking for one. I'd recommend looking at the school's website before asking - Davis made it pretty clear, so I imagine any school that doesn't want you to call would also make it clear.
That's really strange. When I got waitlisted during during the 2012-2013 cycle I was able to call the admissions office and set up an appointment with the director of admissions (I forgot her name- she's the one who spoke to us the day of the MMI's). When I actually spoke with her, though, it wasn't much help. All she told me was that they chose the final applicants based on the MMI score alone and that the pool of MMI interviewees was selected based on everything else (GPA, experience, LORs, etc).
Honestly, I have not heard of any school that does a review of your application before you apply, but I never really looked into it either. I just figured that they have 1,000+ people sending in applications, calling, and emailing with questions that they really would not have the time or resources to also respond to questions about reviewing an application before applying. Perhaps some schools will, but definitely check out the website before you call to ask. 🙂
Yeah. This is a post-application file review. They were talking about a review of your application before applying.
Oh my bad. That's what I get for reading too quickly.
I'm considering applying to Penn and Purdue but would need to take calculus this winter. The last time I took a math class was pre-calculus in fall of 2009 and got a C. I was going to retake pre-calculus this fall, but I'm still worried if I'll be able to get at least a B- in calculus.
Has anyone else had success taking a math class after 4+ years even though the last one they took they didn't do so hot in?
I'm considering applying to Penn and Purdue but would need to take calculus this winter. The last time I took a math class was pre-calculus in fall of 2009 and got a C. I was going to retake pre-calculus this fall, but I'm still worried if I'll be able to get at least a B- in calculus.
Has anyone else had success taking a math class after 4+ years even though the last one they took they didn't do so hot in?
I'm considering applying to Penn and Purdue but would need to take calculus this winter. The last time I took a math class was pre-calculus in fall of 2009 and got a C. I was going to retake pre-calculus this fall, but I'm still worried if I'll be able to get at least a B- in calculus.
Has anyone else had success taking a math class after 4+ years even though the last one they took they didn't do so hot in?
I'm considering applying to Penn and Purdue but would need to take calculus this winter. The last time I took a math class was pre-calculus in fall of 2009 and got a C. I was going to retake pre-calculus this fall, but I'm still worried if I'll be able to get at least a B- in calculus.
Has anyone else had success taking a math class after 4+ years even though the last one they took they didn't do so hot in?
I have already taken Biochem way back in 2005, I did not do all that great in it but I passed...
Biochem is the only class that UTK has a time limit on (I asked and they will not allow me to petition it). I was going to retake it in the Fall, but I am beginning to question if I really want to do this. I am already taking a full Graduate class load (on top of Biochem, I had to get special permission to go over the umber of hours) and have committed to working in the fall. I just don't know what to do...
If I drop UTK from my list will take it down to 4 or 5 schools, which is not bad.
Any advice or thoughts? I have until mid-August to drop it...
I <3 Biochem ^.^ My undergrad biochem class was autotutorial (learn at your own pace with quizzes every week). I liked it so much that I was a TA for that same class the next semester.
Blech, weirdos 😉
I really hated biochem. Maybe it was just the format of the class and the way it was presented, I'm not sure. I didn't have a disliking for the material specifically, but the way the class and the exams were...I feel like I learned nothing useful that I can recall; just memorized a bunch of random structures, pathways, and facts and regurgitated them with little understanding of the overarching concepts. Having night exams from 7:30-9:30pm was also not appreciated. Two semesters of suck.
I loved biochem as well! Probably one of the most challenging courses I took because my professor was extremely tough, but it was also my favorite class in undergrad. I second what someone said about "talking yourself into it"... Make yourself love it! The more I tried fighting the course in the beginning, the harder it was. Once I really committed to it, I earned an A at the end of the semester. My prof also ended up writing my letter of rec!
Blech, weirdos 😉
I really hated biochem. Maybe it was just the format of the class and the way it was presented, I'm not sure. I didn't have a disliking for the material specifically, but the way the class and the exams were...I feel like I learned nothing useful that I can recall; just memorized a bunch of random structures, pathways, and facts and regurgitated them with little understanding of the overarching concepts. Having night exams from 7:30-9:30pm was also not appreciated. Two semesters of suck.
Is it just me or has anyone else had to go in outside of class to take tests and quizzes? This happened a lot in the sciences classes I took.