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For all you engineers applying for entrance in 2005, what are your GPA's and MCAT scores?
bioengineering: gpa = 3.87. mcat= 32qMechE said:For all you engineers applying for entrance in 2005, what are your GPA's and MCAT scores?
karmon said:B.S. Chemical Engineering
B.S. Biomedical Engineering
G.P.A 4.0
MCAT - 44T
fear me
karmon said:B.S. Chemical Engineering
B.S. Biomedical Engineering
G.P.A 4.0
MCAT - 44T
fear me
Gerg said:Mwahahahahahahahahahaha!
Biomedical Engineering is Chem E's bastard, dumb little brother.
Seroiusly tho. They started a Biomed Engineering program at my school, it's the same as the Chem E, except different electives. That and you don't have to take Pchem, and can get away with cushy "Stats for Bio Majors" instead of "Hardcore Stats for Scientists and Engineers".
Man, I hate it when they dumb things down. It's having people who've never heard about calculus take physics, and then expect to be able to teach it to them effectivly..
Sympathize? If you think engineering's so awful as to warrant sympathy, maybe it's time to change majors.echinoderm said:how helpful is it to be an engineering major? do they sympathize?
bunnyhop said:uh, what kind of engineering are you talking about? *cough* design projects *cough* teamwork *cough*
Psycho Doctor said:i don't mean i never saw people, but i mean i wanted a career devoted to working to help people
Psycho Doctor said:i don't mean i never saw people, but i mean i wanted a career devoted to working to help people
passthesashimi said:uh, ok. our bioe program is #2 in the nation, and its pretty much biomechanics based. "hardcore stats for scientists and engineers" is pretty much overrated. not easy, but doable. bioengineering programs across the nation are often very different, so you can't really expect to know what other ppl have gone through.
tinkerbelle said:You help people as engineers, just in a different way. One year, my team designed and built a bike for a 7 year old with Brachial Plexus Injury. The poor thing couldn't grip the regular handle bars becuase one hand was shorter than the other. Plus her hands were shaped abnormally. If that isn't helping soemone, I don't know what it.
P.S. I was a BME at Hopkins (#1 in that field)... it defintiely wasn't a dumbed down version of ChemE. Belive me, we all know out Diff Eq and Calc just as well as the Physics/Chem E dudes, if not better.
constructor said:i like how everyone starts to claim that their school is #1 for what they're doing.![]()
hopkins is pimp. they'll be #1 for the next 500 years or so. but they dont have the "father of biomechanics" in their faculty 🙂. hah.tinkerbelle said:Dude, grab a rankings list and check for yourself before you make it sound like I'm making stuff upHopkins has been the number one BME school for years.
constructor said:#2 in the nation? what're you smoking? have you heard of stanford, MIT, ucsf, etc.? apparently not..
passthesashimi said:i go to ucsd, we consistently wobble back and forth from #2 -4 in the nation. mit's program is good too, but stanford and ucsf? come on, what do you seriously know about their programs now? last i heard stanford's is pretty damn young and still trying to get on the right foot. same with the ucsf/berkeley deal. go check the rankings; i'm not smoking anything. although maybe i should for my interview...
well classical bioengineering is supposed to be biomechanics based. i know a lot of ppl will dispute this depending on what school theyre from, eg duke's is very ee based. you're right that us news is mostly a bunch of crock, but i think it shouldn't be completely discounted. our program at ucsd offers a bunch of different focuses, including that in bioinformatics, which has a pretty comprehensive curriculem. the rankings are mainly based on on peer ratings of faculty research, and money. so no matter what the schools offer, the rankings show you where a good place is to work and do good research, and not too much on the curriculum or the teaching, because i can honestly say that that isnt the priority of large research universities. u may also be right that they keep the rankings uniform, i cant argue for or against that i guess.. interesting thought though.constructor said:you're right, you're not smoking anything.. my apologies. i think it's us news that's smoking something. i checked out the info on the websites and stanford gets way more money for research than hopkins or ucsd (when you include donations from private corporations in the silicon valley after those NIH grants). both ucsf and stanford are right in the middle of silicon valley where they make the most impressive medical and surgical devices, and a lot of their faculty are owners of those companies part-time. i'll give it to you that they're young, but that's not any reason to downplay their status and it's probably why us news doesn't have them at 1 and 2. once us news starts out with a list, they try really hard to keep the rankings more or less the same so the formula for the rankings seems robust and legitimate (when it's really crap) - we all know the story with how the medical schools are ranked and i don't know of one person who agrees with the top 10. btw, i'm talking about biomedical informatics and bioengineering... are you talking about biomechanics?
topolm said:I have a chemical engineering degree and most of my che scores were B's or B-'s
(2.7-3.00)
However, the rest of my science classes: chem/bio/math/physics I have a solid 3.5+ gpa. On applying to dental/med school, will they factor in that my chemical engineering classes which were much much tougher than the bio, chem, physics and math classes? Also, since I will be 4 years out of college and have 4 years of work experience as a patent examiner with the USPTO, will this dilute the importance of gpa a touch?
Thanks.
tinkerbelle said:If you're smart, you'll count these low-grade chemE classes as ENGINEERING so that it doesn't screw up your BCPM gpa. But to answer your question, I don't think they really look at the difficulty of your courses.
topolm said:thx for response tink,
we have a choice as to how classes are classified?
😀tinkerbelle said:Yup, you can choose. If it's in the engineering dept, then they aren't going to question you for listing it as Engineering. And that way you protect your science gpa.
It's trying to classify engineering classes as BCPM that gets tricky... Although I had no problem with it.
edit: They do have a general listing of how things should be classified. And according to that all our engineering classes are either under engineering or computer science. Hmm. Does my post make any sense? I think I'm babbling![]()
Psycho Doctor said:i would hope they view engineering as a tough curriculum. it seems that most people have a higher GPA than their BCPM GPA, my science GPA is higher because most of my "electives" were engineering courses. do you think that will be perceived negatively?
tinkerbelle said:HI toplm 🙂
Unfortunately, PChem is strictly a chem class... not engineering. Check out the AMCAS instruction booklet. Here's the link, but if it doesn't work, just go to the AAMC website -> AMCAS -> AMCAS Instruction booklet.
http://www.aamc.org/students/amcas/2005instructionbook.pdf
pg 29 -30 lists the courses that fall under each category. So you'll see that PChem is classified as chemistry and therefore included in your BCPM gpa.
You will also see that Chemical Engineering is listed under ENGI and therefore NOT included in the BCPM gpa. Therefore, classes that are listed under the ChemE Dept or any engineering department at your school (ex: Transport) can be classifed as engineering, even though it may be very chemistry or physics based.
Example: my Mechanical Properties of Materials class was heavily math and physics based. However, since it was taught by the Materials Science Dept (uh.. and I didn't do well), I listed it as Engr. On the other hand, I decided my Structures of Materials class was msotly Physics and therefore should be included in my BCPM gpa. As engineers, I think we have a little leeway as to how we classify our classes. So be honest about the course content, but if your class could be either a BCPM or Engr, then do what will help your gpa.
Hmm... it might help if you posted the names of the classes and which department they were listed under (or you could PM me). However, the AMCAS Instructions should answer most of your questions.
Good luck 🙂
tinkerbelle said:The good news is that they don't even ask for your ChemE gpa, b/c yes, that is low. 3.44 science gpa is pretty darn good for an engineer. YES, you have a shot. How did you do in the premed classes like bio, orgo, physics etc? A lot of schools make you list those grades, so as long as they are decent, you should be ok.
My science gpa is like a 3.44 or something. My overall gpa is a little higher than yours... 3.42 i think. But I'm still getting interviews. So don't give up hope 🙂 Also, if you write a kick ass Personal statement and secondary essays, you should still get interviews.
How's your MCAT score? What are your volunteer activities like?
Gerg said:But at my school it was.