Oh, and to put it more generally: the average patient isn't going to give two ****s about your GPA. This is one of those SDN - specifically, pre-med - fallacies. Check the Allo boards and see how often med students ask if their low ugrad GPAs will keep them out of residencies. It's not going to matter if you score a 4.1 GPA and a 46 MCAT if you don't know how to make a patient feel like something other than an idiot when doing your rounds. 99% of the patients you treat aren't going to care where you went to school, how well you did, or how many azzes you kissed to get to where you are. As a functioning doctor, no one will ask how much you studied in med school, whether you went "Ivy" or "state", or whatever the hell your PS was about. The average patient will not know what the MCAT stands for, much less what it has to do with his or her condition. She will not ask for your score, nor a percentile chart to guage your writing sample. He will not respect you more if you were in the top ten percent of your class - if you mention this, you will likely come off as an a$$hole, which you probably will be. If you don't treat your clients with respect, you'll soon run out of clients to treat. And a good way to start alienating yourself from a patient will be by talking about your GPA as a self-absorbed pre-med.