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No words!!! Only emoticons!!! Crap, I broke my own rule.Its equally hard for asians and caucasians to get in
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Th breakdown of our current U.S. Population from Wikipedia:
Whites: 74.7%
Blacks: 12.1%
Asian: 4.3%
Native American: 0.8%
Pacific Islander: 0.1%
Hispanic: 14.5%
Other: 6%
Two or More Races: 1.9%
And to add some more data to this thread...
In 2006, there were 7,532 Asian applicants and 3,242 matriculants indicating an acceptance rate of 43% which is only slightly lower than the Caucasian rate of 46% especially when you consider that Whites make up the majority of the U.S. population. In addition, the acceptance rates for African Americans is 40% so if anything, Asians have it easier than Caucasians, African Americans, and Latinos. 🙄
Matriculants and Applicants
The racial make-up of doctors should reflect the racial make-up of the U.S. Asians are over-represented in medicine. Deal with it.![]()
And to add some more data to this thread...
In 2006, there were 7,532 Asian applicants and 3,242 matriculants indicating an acceptance rate of 43% which is only slightly lower than the Caucasian rate of 46% especially when you consider that Whites make up the majority of the U.S. population. In addition, the acceptance rates for African Americans is 40% so if anything, Asians have it easier than Caucasians, African Americans, and Latinos. 🙄
Matriculants and Applicants
The racial make-up of doctors should reflect the racial make-up of the U.S. Asians are over-represented in medicine. Deal with it.![]()
The acceptance rate means nothing when no data is given on MCAT and GPA scores to compare each group to. Certain Manhattan preschools have acceptance rates in the single digits, and certain medical schools have acceptance rate in the double digits. That does not mean it is easier to get into medical school than preschool.
This is the breakdown of matriculants for 2006 that may give us a better idea of competitiveness by racial breakdown:
White:
PS: 10.2
BS: 10.6
VR: 10.1
Total MCAT: 30.9
sGPA:3.62
GPA: 3.67
Asian:
PS: 10.8
BS: 10.9
VR: 9.8
Total MCAT: 31.5
sGPA:3.60
GPA: 3.66
They breakdown URM into various groups.
Blacks:
PS: 8.1
BS: 8.9
VR: 8.3
Total MCAT: 25.3
sGPA:3.25
GPA: 3.39
Multiple Hispanic:
PS: 9.1
BS: 9.7
VR: 9.1
Total MCAT: 27.9
sGPA:3.42
GPA: 3.52
Other Hispanic:
PS: 9.4
BS: 10.1
VR: 9.3
Total MCAT: 28.8
sGPA:3.43
GPA: 3.54
There were a few other hispanic groups which is not on here.
This is the link to the site: www.aamc.org/data/facts/2006/mcatgparaceeth.htm
It seems like being asian means your GPA and MCAT is about the same as Caucasians (MCAT a point higher, GPA a bit lower). Being URM definitely helps in the GPA/MCAT catagory when it comes to med school. The real question is, does this help the medical field or hurt it?
Most people are not complaining about it being easier to "get in". Most people are really complaining about it being easier to get in at a more "competitive" school.
I'd say, quit your whining. Life is full of **** you'll just have to deal with.
What that data doesn't show are the schools that cater mostly to people of color. Howard, Morehouse, Meharry, Drew, Ponce etc. Those schools, except for Drew, typically have "stats" that are remarkably lower than the national average. Don't be confused and think that URMs with 26 and 3.3 are competitive for Stanford.The acceptance rate means nothing when no data is given on MCAT and GPA scores to compare each group to. Certain Manhattan preschools have acceptance rates in the single digits, and certain medical schools have acceptance rate in the double digits. That does not mean it is easier to get into medical school than preschool.
This is the breakdown of matriculants for 2006 that may give us a better idea of competitiveness by racial breakdown:
White:
PS: 10.2
BS: 10.6
VR: 10.1
Total MCAT: 30.9
sGPA:3.62
GPA: 3.67
Asian:
PS: 10.8
BS: 10.9
VR: 9.8
Total MCAT: 31.5
sGPA:3.60
GPA: 3.66
They breakdown URM into various groups.
Blacks:
PS: 8.1
BS: 8.9
VR: 8.3
Total MCAT: 25.3
sGPA:3.25
GPA: 3.39
Multiple Hispanic:
PS: 9.1
BS: 9.7
VR: 9.1
Total MCAT: 27.9
sGPA:3.42
GPA: 3.52
Other Hispanic:
PS: 9.4
BS: 10.1
VR: 9.3
Total MCAT: 28.8
sGPA:3.43
GPA: 3.54
There were a few other hispanic groups which is not on here.
This is the link to the site: www.aamc.org/data/facts/2006/mcatgparaceeth.htm
It seems like being asian means your GPA and MCAT is about the same as Caucasians (MCAT a point higher, GPA a bit lower). Being URM definitely helps in the GPA/MCAT catagory when it comes to med school. The real question is, does this help the medical field or hurt it?
What that data doesn't show are the schools that cater mostly to people of color. Howard, Morehouse, Meharry, Drew, Ponce etc. Those schools, except for Drew, typically have "stats" that are remarkably lower than the national average. Don't be confused and think that URMs with 26 and 3.3 are competitive for Stanford.
Naah man, I'm just saying that the data that everyone is posting doesn't show the big picture. The entire topic of this is subjective and pretty ridiculous. How can we empirically determine if it is harder for "asians" to get into med school by looking at one dimensional data?I think you're missing the point.
Haha. I'm not trying to get into an AA debate. But I largely disagree with the contention that med school admissions should be based solely on stats. Get real. We all know that numbers are NOT an accurate representation of the abilities of an individual to succeed in the medical profession.Doesn't matter what schools are out there, it is still easier for african americans/blacks have more favorable odds to getting in. That's a problem for some, who think it should be based purely off of stats. Race is an intangible that can be an asset for relating to the patients. Some might argue that this might not always be the case, for example the rich black kid who has never struggled like his poor black patient. They would argue that race is not a great tool used for determining whether the applicant can relate to his patients. And they would be right. But GPA and MCAT scores are also no indicative of the potential success of an applicant either. It's the best measures we have.
Naah man, I'm just saying that the data that everyone is posting doesn't show the big picture. The entire topic of this is subjective and pretty ridiculous. How can we empirically determine if it is harder for "asians" to get into med school by looking at one dimensional data?
I don't know how many dimensions you think are involved, but it's probably possible to determine this. It's just really hard to do so.
Haha. Come on playa. There are so many variables it's ridiculous. First off, the term "asian" is incredibly general and borderline racist. And, its unfair to think that "asians" all share the same experiences. A Cambodian refugee is going to experience a different hardship than a Japanese immigrant. So we must first account for the vast heterogeneity in the difficulties experienced in that broad, ridiculous/racist categorization of "asian."I don't know how many dimensions you think are involved, but it's probably possible to determine this. It's just really hard to do so.
My sentiments exactly.No, impossible sounds more like it. Face it, you're looking at numbers, and numbers do not tell the whole story.
Now, I don't want to offend anyone here, but theres a stereotype involving asian parents pushing their kids towards advanced degrees. If true, this stereotype means that perhaps due to cultural factors there tend to be more asians applying to medical school that are not really following their passion, just doing whats expected. If the adcoms are able to tell, then they might vote down a technically qualified applicant.
This is just an example of a potential lurking variable, one of thousands which makes drawing blanket conclusions from matriculant MCAT scores quite thoroughly impossible.
Haha. I'm not trying to get into an AA debate. But I largely disagree with the contention that med school admissions should be based solely on stats. Get real. We all know that numbers are NOT an accurate representation of the abilities of an individual to succeed in the medical profession.
Let me ask you this, is a 28 really that much different than a 30? Is a 30 really that much different than a 32? Is a 32 really that much different than a 34? I don't think so. And God forbid a school admits an applicant with mediocre stats but outstanding personal qualities, robotic premeds can't handle that.
A med school application has two dimensions, one is stats the other is the more humanistic side (passion, purpose, service, life experiences etc.)
Unfortunately, many premeds continue to think that MCAT+GPA=Acceptance when that isn't always the case. And they continue to put so much energy into those two aspects of their application that the other half falls off, and then they whine and b*tch that they have it harder than group x.
What that data doesn't show are the schools that cater mostly to people of color. Howard, Morehouse, Meharry, Drew, Ponce etc. Those schools, except for Drew, typically have "stats" that are remarkably lower than the national average. Don't be confused and think that URMs with 26 and 3.3 are competitive for Stanford.
OMG! Dawg I hate when people use the writings of Linda Chavez or some Ward Connerly BS to whine about med school admissions.