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- Dec 4, 2006
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It seems pretty clear, anecdotally at least, that a low (<3.5) UG gpa will make it very difficult to get into any MD school. I used to think this referred to getting into med school right after college graduation. But it seems more and more that this is an immutable reality. Even after spending 1-3 years doing any of the myriad things people do to improve their chances (i.e. post-bacc/SMP/grad school/ research/ clinical experience, etc), they are still weighed down by subpar UG performance.
I see stories here on SDN about people who have been out of college for 5 years and when they post their stats, it is always the low UG gpa that is singled out as the cause of their rejection. It seems incredibly narrow-minded of the whole admissions process for SO much weight to be given to this one factor. Is it accurate that with a <3.5 GPA, there is absolutely no shot whatsoever at the top-tier, and even with the lowest-tier schools, it is a very minute chance?
Are there still kids who get 4.0s in tough SMPs and still get rejected b/c of "low" UG gpa?
People who got in with "low" GPAs, how did you do it? And what advice do you have for those of us in this position? What is the BEST thing one can do to improve their odds?
I see stories here on SDN about people who have been out of college for 5 years and when they post their stats, it is always the low UG gpa that is singled out as the cause of their rejection. It seems incredibly narrow-minded of the whole admissions process for SO much weight to be given to this one factor. Is it accurate that with a <3.5 GPA, there is absolutely no shot whatsoever at the top-tier, and even with the lowest-tier schools, it is a very minute chance?
Are there still kids who get 4.0s in tough SMPs and still get rejected b/c of "low" UG gpa?
People who got in with "low" GPAs, how did you do it? And what advice do you have for those of us in this position? What is the BEST thing one can do to improve their odds?