Mine definitely did not. I am having to learn chemistry and physics to a much deeper level than we covered it in class and all the topics that we skipped have to be learned as well. This is not good.
Mine most definitely did. Many courses understood the volume of pre-med students enrolled and prepared us well. Often these premeds are bio or biochem majors who almost always taking cell biology, biochem I and II, genetics, and animal development among others. Taking these courses as undergrads will definitely help later on in medical school.
Mine definitely did not. I am having to learn chemistry and physics to a much deeper level than we covered it in class and all the topics that we skipped have to be learned as well. This is not good.
I think so. ~90% of the high-yield or relevant topics, we did cover them in our classes. Just need to re-memorize and re-call some minor facts, that is all.
I do not go to a particularly prestigious undergraduate institution, and it prepared me superbly for the MCAT, with the obvious caveat that it did not prepare me for the verbal section; I am a science major, so that's to be expected.
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