I don't want to say anything that's going to de-motivate or marginalize anybody who has been, is now, or will be going to a community college. I did a semester at a stellar CC across the street from an intimidatingly prestigious, Nobel-dripping research university, and I benefited greatly and am quite proud of my time there. There are quite certainly many instances of community colleges that offer better preparation for medical school than many instances of 4yr universities. But if you do your prereqs at a CC, and you don't also do upper div science (micro, biochem, genetics, immunology, neuro, etc.) at a 4yr school, then you should expect to compensate by doing biomed research, or doing graduate work, or otherwise demonstrating that you're not going to drop out as an MS1 when you have thick&chewy biomed coming at you through a 2 foot wide firehose with enough force to blow a hole through six feet of steel-reinforced concrete.
I also don't want to offend anybody who is getting their bachelors degree at a satellite or branch campus of a 4yr university that grants degrees on behalf of its main campus. There are some great branch campuses, like in Massachusetts and Florida. I'm NOT talking about the CSU system (either one). But for what it's worth, if your campus doesn't offer a chem, bio or physics degree (which UW Tacoma doesn't), or (since we're talking about Washington state) if your campus doesn't offer letter grades (as with Evergreen), and you ALSO don't plan on doing a stellar mettle-proving years-long extra-curricular like publishing biomed research or joining the Peace Corps or getting a PhD, in addition to your arguably questionable undergrad work, and you want to go to medical school, WHY DID YOU PICK THAT SCHOOL?!?!? WHY ARE YOU STAYING AT THAT SCHOOL?!?!? People who get into medical school from Evergreen or from a "night-degree" school are anecdotes. Right? Premeds don't pick those schools unless they are gluttons for punishment. I don't want to get into med school DESPITE my transcript - I want to get in BECAUSE of it.
Lastly, I'm not interested in arguing about whether the medical school admissions process should be changed. If you want to take that on, you really don't have time to go to medical school, and results (if any) might occur in time for your grandkids to benefit.
But seriously, if you want to compete with the other 42,000 applicants per year, knowing that 24,000 aren't getting in, and that 32,000 are reapplicants, and that your app will be evaluated by exhausted volunteers with more of an eye for efficiency than for fair and comprehensive appreciation of individual worth and merit, and this is not that different for DO anymore, how much of an uphill climb do you want to take on? You take the freaking high road or you take your chances.
Take with a bucket of salt. Love and kisses,
Dr. M.