Here are my stats:
High school:
National Merit Scholar
1500 SAT
Summer at Stanford: 3.7 GPA
College:
First two years - Honors college at top 25 state university
1.9 GPA, a few Ws
I was expecting a lot from college and found it hugely disappointing in terms of teaching quality and learning environment. Had significant family and friend deaths. No ambition whatsoever. Fairly active on campus.
Final two years- second-tier liberal arts school
B.A., journalism with a 3.7 for the last two years, two Ws
Active on campus and elsewhere but no medical experience.
I don't know what my cumulative GPA will be. I took a lot more units in the last two years so hopefully that will help.
Since graduation-
I've been working at two startup magazines and teaching English in Beirut. I had a teaching stint at a children's cancer hospital and came to the realization that I wanted to be a doctor. I'll be studying Arabic in Yemen and working at a magazine in Cairo (and volunteering at a hospital) before returning home early in 2005. So I have a fairly interesting post-college story and speak basic Arabic, which might look interesting to an admissions committee. I've also had some articles published in respected U.S. papers and magazines.
I used to teach for the Princeton Review and am confident I'll do well on the MCAT.
Any advice on how to improve my chances is welcome. I'm returning to Texas in early 2005 with the intention getting EMT-certified, starting my prereqs and gaining medical experience.
I've been considering joining the Peace Corps and trying to get spot in a health-related field. The two premed advisors I've spoken to have acted like this would greatly improve my shot. However, I'm 24, which means 27 starting med school and 31 starting a residency. The Peace Corps would add another two years to my timeline - I eventually want to have kids.
Thanks for any reply.