- Joined
- Aug 24, 2008
- Messages
- 24
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Pre-Medical


QFT👍Pursue whichever degree you will enjoy more (read: you take classes that you enjoy) and will do well in.
I am majoring in Chemistry and wanted to know what the benefits of each would be. i.e. Which will better prepare me for medical school, and, if I do not get in, which will be better to have a working Chemistry job?
BS is only necessary if you want to continue on to get your MS or PhD. At least at my school, the BA is recommended for all the professional schools (medical, dental, pharm, etc).
BS in Chem because the idea that you can get an arts degree in a science is just weird.
come to think of it, a guy that I work in lab with has a BA in biochem or something.. and I tease him relentlessly.
)Thank you all for the prompt replies, the did help a lot.
So a follow-up question, is it not possible to go back and get a masters from a B.A.? Or is it just more difficult (more classwork). Obviously my main goal in life is to attend medical school, but it never hurts to have a backup plan.
And yes I am aware that my major does not matter for medical school, i was only asking which (B.A. or B.S.) would give me less of a "shock" when I take the MCAT / Attend medical school (yea yea, I know no matter what I take will not prepare me for med school)
I'm getting a BA in molecular and cell biology, while my friends studying nutritional sciences/dietics are getting a BS. I would not say that their courses are more rigorous than mine (in fact, they're easier -- nutrient function+ metabolism <<<< molecular immunology and other classes). The BA/BS deal is just a matter of where the department is located at my school (whether it's in college of natural resources or in the college of letters and science).
It doesn't really matter, and you shouldn't tease people who have a BA in a science. I would smack you if you made fun of me for having a BA, and list the various reasons that I am smarter than you.
BS in Chem because the idea that you can get an arts degree in a science is just weird.
come to think of it, a guy that I work in lab with has a BA in biochem or something.. and I tease him relentlessly.
I'm joking.
At my school (and I think all universities) you can't get a BA degree in a science.
I'm genuinely surprised you can do so in the USA.. it seems contradictory, an arts degree for a science discipline.
But whatevs.
I just don't understand how that works is all.
I'm joking.
At my school (and I think all universities) you can't get a BA degree in a science.
I'm genuinely surprised you can do so in the USA.. it seems contradictory, an arts degree for a science discipline.
But whatevs.
I just don't understand how that works is all.
For MCAT, it does not matter if you have a BA or BS in chemistry
The name of the degree doesn't matter. A lot of universities ONLY offer BAs, for historical reasons if nothing else... What they care about is how rigerous your coursework is compared to your purpose for it. For the schools that offer both chemistry options, the BS is usually for those pursuing chemistry further (to the MS/PhD level), and the BA is for those who are going on to professional schools and sometimes teaching. I know plenty of people who went on to get a masters with a BA though, so even thats not impossible.rofl at BA in science. Science is not an art.
And the MCAT PS section is not at all representative of what the pure sciences are like--go take the chem GRE for that (and that is even on the easy side for inorganic and physical chem imo).
I feel like the B.A. should be better for a future research career.. After all the B.A. will require you to take classes like English and History, giving you better writing and research skills and also broaden your critical thinking in a way that would never be possible in a strict B.S. education. A B.S. would teach you more technical skills and knowledge -- i.e. things that you would learn in graduate school anyway. (Just my personal speculation... I'm a humanities major!)