I wouldn't consider myself an average student, I work hard and get straight A's every semester. I have done well on the ACT (32) and GRE and so I think I am pretty decent at standardized tests as well. However, I have had friends who were 3.0 students get 30's on the MCAT and were not (I hate having to say this) someone I would go to for help in school. They were students that tended to say things wrong/do poorly on tests and almost always memorized things for classes like human physiology (which I think is a subject you need to synthesize not memorize). I have three friends now that have been your standard "slacker" and have gotten 30's on the MCAT.
So I guess what I am trying to open to discussion is this, "is your MCAT score truly just effort? Or do you have to possess a rarer intelligence outside of just hours of studying to obtain the 37's 38's 39's etc?"
My observation is that there are thousands of people that have been on this forum and only a couple hundred that have posted their success on the 30+ study habits section. I look at posters like ColeOnTheRoll, who got a 41! Is this poster a genius? or was this person a student who just "went through the motions" every year getting B's and C's in classes and then just studied really hard for the MCAT?
I truly think, in order to give a further representation of what kind of students are on this forum (effort-wise), people should also include their GPA with their 30+ MCAT posts.
I have only read one story on here of a guy saying he was an "average student" and did well but was that just one rare example?
I guess I just want to reassure myself that my 6-7 hours per day of studying is going to pay off..
So I guess what I am trying to open to discussion is this, "is your MCAT score truly just effort? Or do you have to possess a rarer intelligence outside of just hours of studying to obtain the 37's 38's 39's etc?"
My observation is that there are thousands of people that have been on this forum and only a couple hundred that have posted their success on the 30+ study habits section. I look at posters like ColeOnTheRoll, who got a 41! Is this poster a genius? or was this person a student who just "went through the motions" every year getting B's and C's in classes and then just studied really hard for the MCAT?
I truly think, in order to give a further representation of what kind of students are on this forum (effort-wise), people should also include their GPA with their 30+ MCAT posts.
I have only read one story on here of a guy saying he was an "average student" and did well but was that just one rare example?
I guess I just want to reassure myself that my 6-7 hours per day of studying is going to pay off..