Do very high GPAs with target MCATs get yield protected?

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How can you even have a GPA "way above" the 90th percentile?? Doesn't pretty much every school in the country have a 10th-90th that spans up to 3.9+ ?
 
How can you even have a GPA "way above" the 90th percentile?? Doesn't pretty much every school in the country have a 10th-90th that spans up to 3.9+ ?
You could have a 4.0 applying to Wayne State. That would pry qualify.
 
Wayne 90th is a 3.96

0.4 LizzyM over, whoa there !!! No way they'd ever consider coming here !
Wow, is it really? Is Wayne state a good school? My parents lived around there in the 70s and they hate it.
 
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Wow, is it really? Is Wayne state a good school? My parents lived around there in the 70s and they hate it.
Well the medians are only at 3.76/508, it's just that high GPAs are dime a dozen so the top 10% of pretty much everywhere is near perfect. According to my handy dandy sheet, 136/139 (98%) of schools have a 90th percentile accepted cGPA of 3.90 or higher. The three that fall below are all 3.85-3.89

So there you have it OP: the original question doesn't make sense because it isn't possible to have a GPA "way above the 90th percentile", you can only be about 1 LizzyM point beyond it at the most. Yield protection is all about high MCATs.
 
Well the medians are only at 3.76/508, it's just that high GPAs are dime a dozen so the top 10% of pretty much everywhere is near perfect. According to my handy dandy sheet, 136/139 (98%) of schools have a 90th percentile accepted cGPA of 3.90 or higher. The three that fall below are all 3.85-3.89

So there you have it OP: the original question doesn't make sense because it isn't possible to have a GPA "way above the 90th percentile", you can only be about 1 LizzyM point beyond it at the most. Yield protection is all about high MCATs.

So what happens if you have a great GPA and happen to score ridiculously high on the MCAT but don't have the ECs for top tier (as in good enough ECs for mid tier but not top)?
 
So what happens if you have a great GPA and happen to score ridiculously high on the MCAT but don't have the ECs for top tier (as in good enough ECs to get into a mid tier but not top)?
Imho, there are some schools that are mid-tier by reputation/competitiveness but that very heavily emphasize stats, who will be interested in someone with very high numbers and willing to forgive cookie cutter stuff elsewhere. See this post/thread for some idea of schools known for chasing numbers.

Edit: To give some more specific examples too, Ohio State and Boston University are places that most would consider mid-tier. Yet their accepted MCAT ranges go all the way up to the 100th percentile. It would be pretty darn hard to get yourself yield-protected out of these kinds of places.
 
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