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is a high BCPM associated with a higher score on the mcat? or are they both indepedent of each other?
byeh2004 said:is a high BCPM associated with a higher score on the mcat? or are they both indepedent of each other?
dajimmers said:Uh, published in 1983, but this AAMC study found a:
"positive and linear relationship between the MCAT science average and the science GPA"
dajimmers said:Uh, published in 1983, but this AAMC study found a:
"positive and linear relationship between the MCAT science average and the science GPA"
Kitra101 said:Little bitter here about the study...I had three B's throughout undergrad, yet scored a 28 on the MCAT. I cannot explain it...but here is what I can say:
First, I know plenty of people that I was in class with that scored much less than I did on exams, yet killed me in the MCAT.
Second, I went to UGA. I took the SAT and scored a 1220. UGA claims, as do most schools, that the SAT is a good indicator of how a student will perform during college and therefore is used as a method to evaluate applicants. I can say that with a 1220, I got in then, but would not get in now. However, I believe that I am a hard working, dedicated person. Despite what the standardized tests indicate about me, I think I am of above average intelligence and more than capable of handling a science major/premedical course load.
Maybe I get nervous and just dont standardize test well. I wish I could say something like those who score better on the MCAT are all better students than me and study at more rigorous universities, but the fact is - I totally outperformed many people in classes (taking the same ones as me at the same school) and they totally outperformed me on the MCAT.
Then, when it comes time for applications, I find that most schools seem to hold the MCAT in much higher regard than GPA and ECs and it leaves poor standardized testers SOL.
Again, I am just bitter, so take what I say with a grain of salt, but I do feel a better balancing act is needed.
dajimmers said:Uh, published in 1983, but this AAMC study found a:
"positive and linear relationship between the MCAT science average and the science GPA"
medhacker said:That may have been true back in 83...
Zuras said:Do you have a study claiming otherwise that is more recent?
Welcome to science.
I think that their reasoning is that people who do well on the MCAT will do well on the Step 1 (there is a correlation that indicates this), and med students who do well on Step 1 make the med school look good. So med schools want people with high MCAT scores, typically.Kitra101 said:Then, when it comes time for applications, I find that most schools seem to hold the MCAT in much higher regard than GPA and ECs and it leaves poor standardized testers SOL.
TheProwler said:I think that their reasoning is that people who do well on the MCAT will do well on the Step 1 (there is a correlation that indicates this), and med students who do well on Step 1 make the med school look good. So med schools want people with high MCAT scores, typically.
o rly?newguy357 said:Still, it's much easier to teach a physicist to do biology than it is to teach a biologist to do physics.
Kitra101 said:Little bitter here about the study...I had three B's throughout undergrad, yet scored a 28 on the MCAT. I cannot explain it...but here is what I can say:
First, I know plenty of people that I was in class with that scored much less than I did on exams, yet killed me in the MCAT.
Second, I went to UGA. I took the SAT and scored a 1220. UGA claims, as do most schools, that the SAT is a good indicator of how a student will perform during college and therefore is used as a method to evaluate applicants. I can say that with a 1220, I got in then, but would not get in now. However, I believe that I am a hard working, dedicated person. Despite what the standardized tests indicate about me, I think I am of above average intelligence and more than capable of handling a science major/premedical course load.
Maybe I get nervous and just dont standardize test well. I wish I could say something like those who score better on the MCAT are all better students than me and study at more rigorous universities, but the fact is - I totally outperformed many people in classes (taking the same ones as me at the same school) and they totally outperformed me on the MCAT.
Then, when it comes time for applications, I find that most schools seem to hold the MCAT in much higher regard than GPA and ECs and it leaves poor standardized testers SOL.
Again, I am just bitter, so take what I say with a grain of salt, but I do feel a better balancing act is needed.
Kitra101 said:Then, when it comes time for applications, I find that most schools seem to hold the MCAT in much higher regard than GPA and ECs and it leaves poor standardized testers SOL.
JohnnyNU82 said:I am definitely with you ...i got a 27 on the MCAT (stupid verbal) but I have a 3.4 BCPM and a 3.64 overall from Northwestern. I don't understand why GPA isn't weighted more heavily.
If U.S. News can rank colleges, then why can't med schools use some sort of ranking system and then weight your GPA accordingly. (And don't tell me ranking systems are bogus. You know just as well as I do that some colleges and universities are academically more rigorous than others, and it doesn't take a genius to differentiate between the two)
Sorry for being bitchy, but I just find it hard to believe that one score on one section of the MCAT is probably going to keep me out of medical school. (I also just got off a 12 hour shift in the ER and I'm exhausted...I'll shut up and go to bed now 😛 )