stwei said:
Just my 2cents... 🙄
There is a way to yank the ball into your ballpark and also to satisfy expectations of your family members by going to law school and getting a health law degree. You'll receive excellent training in social interaction skills, in protecting yourself as a future physician if you get caught in a malpractice suit, in becoming an active advocate for health consumers, and in building a healthy business. The necessary survival skills are not commonly taught and sufficiently emphasised at med schools. This choice also has the potential of making you more financially secure.
As a law school graduate, I disagree vehemently with this advice. If you are trying to get into med school, taking a three year detour to attend law school does very little to enhance your credentials (at best), and in my opinion detracts from your application. First off, you are removing yourself from science classes for three years, which is not going to sit well with adcoms. There is no getting around the fact that med school is heavily science-oriented. Then you are going to explain in interviews why you obtained an unrelated professional degree, when what you really want to do is practice medicine.
Also, very few law schools offer any substantial coursework in health law. Case and Houston seem to be the leaders in the field, but both are pretty mediocre law schools overall. And even the most health-focused curriculum will only allow enough flexibility to take 4 or 5 classes in the area, as you are going to want to have coursework in corporate law, evidence, etc. since it is a bear to pass the bar trying to learn this on your own.
I think your perspective on the law school curriculum is off the mark. Virtually everything is classroom lecture based. You do not learn any great oratory skills through this type of format. I think I had two oral arguments during my first year, and nothing beyond that. Participating in extracurricular activities such as moot coot is about the only way to pick this up, and the number of slots for this are limited. Finally, re: your comment about protecting oneself from malpractice suits... anyone who has not practiced law for several years and would try to defend a complex med mal case on their own is a complete idiot. The plaintiff's attorneys would eat you alive, as this is what they do for a living.
stwei said:
I wouldn't worry so much about the postbacc classes, as long as you've got the basic prerequisites - chem, physics, and biology, which every decent undergrad school considers mandatory. The fact that you got admitted into law school already speaks volumes about your intellectual capacity. So take the initiative to make the best out of it that you can.
Again, I disagree. There are close to 190 ABA accredited law schools in the United States. Over half these are complete crap, and admit almost anyone. And outside of the top 15 or so schools, the standards are still not that stringent. Hell, I got into several top 25 schools with a freakin' 2.5 gpa! I don't think adcoms are going to be remotely impressed unless you attended a school within the top 25 or so. Despite common perception, law school is not particularly rigorous from an academic standpoint. Your entire grade in 90% of your classes is based on a single final exam. After the first semester, everyone figures out that it is pointless to do much work until after the midpoint of the semester. I thought law school was a complete joke compared to the difficulty of my UG engineering courses.
Oh yeah, and I completely left out the mention of debt accrual. Law school is an extremely expensive proposition. Private school tuitions exceed $30k in many cases, just like med school. Good luck with funding 4 years of med school after putting yourself in 6 figure debt before you start.
Sorry to burst the bubble on your plan, but I just wanted to give a realistic perspective on what I feel is very poor advice.