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I hope this doesn't offend you but you will get looked at in different light because you are hispanic and thus in the under-represented/diversity category...there are schools that are REQUIRED to take x amount of under-represented minorities into their programs...that doesnt mean they wont grade you on everything but they will allow lower stats than people who aren't in that category...if you look on the AAMC website they have grids that break down MD acceptances based on MCAT/GPA and there is a pretty big difference (IMO) between those under-represented and those who arentThis is not for a medical school program. Instead, it's for a program that I got into at Cal. After writing essays and doing the typical long application, this is how they summarized me:
"Hispanic (6.5)
Poor (2.5)
First in family (2)
A lot of Social Sciences, but a "B" in Chemistry and Bio. (5.5)"
I got an A in bio, but whatever. I also don't know what the scoring meant, but I guess I made the cutoff.
How do I know? Because I asked them for a copy of my personal statement and instead they gave me the application with their notes. Those were their only notes.
I'm sorry, but I'm pissed to be graded by my social conditions rather than my academics, volunteer work, or essays.
I hope med school isn't this stupidly cold with admissions.
I've never understood this concept of under-represented minorities. While african americans and hispanics may not be as common to find in healthcare as whites and asians, it kind of bothers me that what they consider "URM"s get an additional advantage by simply being a particular race; something they had nothing to do with. So what if there aren't as many african americans in healthcare? Diversity is important, but ultimately the people who deserve the spots should be based on what the individual DOES... overcoming financial struggles is realistically not as common among the asian or white community, but adcoms should look at each applicant's story individually and not generalize to give the entire community an advantage, when many "URM"s are floating on a sea of their parents' money.
Pointless post I know. I just had to vent it out, lol. Hope nobody takes offense to this post; I didn't mean for it to come across as racist in any way. I just have an mild issue with the policy. 🙄
I've never understood this concept of under-represented minorities. While african americans and hispanics may not be as common to find in healthcare as whites and asians, it kind of bothers me that what they consider "URM"s get an additional advantage by simply being a particular race; something they had nothing to do with. So what if there aren't as many african americans in healthcare? Diversity is important, but ultimately the people who deserve the spots should be based on what the individual DOES... overcoming financial struggles is realistically not as common among the asian or white community, but adcoms should look at each applicant's story individually and not generalize to give the entire community an advantage, when many "URM"s are floating on a sea of their parents' money.
Pointless post I know. I just had to vent it out, lol. Hope nobody takes offense to this post; I didn't mean for it to come across as racist in any way. I just have an mild issue with the policy. 🙄
I totally agree with this. I'm all for diversity but for med school? We are talking about medicine here where smarts does matter not my race. Urm's are fine with me if they have grades just as good as the next guy. but why does the aamc put up stats that show that it's actually a DISadvantage that someone is Asian? Makes no sense when I see that their chances increase 80% if they are black! Come on...I know people who have gotten 3.1 and 25mcat and got into md programs at public med schools and 3.7 gpa 30+ mcat get rejected. obv this doesn't deal with the op's comment really but I wanted to vent like turtle. Maybe there is a reason why there aren't many URM in medicine. Thy need to fix this in the future. This solves two problems..1) qualified doctors will be chosen based on intelligence...after all I want a smart doctor saving my life not cuz of their race and 2) URMs will gain the respect they deserve later on in life. I shadowed a black anesthesiologist... Brilliant man. He graduated at the top in everything. He said he did anesthisia because he knew people would judge him if he had to see patients. See what I mean? Smart URMs are prejudged later on in life because people thought they got a handout which is sad.
Of course that's your perspective. You've experienced little to no discrimination, have no idea about social history in a lot of states across the united states, and somehow thing that the higher your GPA/MCAT combo the better physician you will make. It funny, if you look at matching statistics even for some comeptitive specialties, some of the 230-240 Step 1 applicants matched higher than the 250-260.... Whhhhatt?
It appears that after an adcom knows that you can be proficient and competent, they will start to seek out other characteristics.
There are 4.0/40s in med school that are cool and that are tools. Med schools will take a rounded, well liked, diverse student body full of competent physicians over just going straight down the GPA/MCAT line.
I understand your perspective, I've had a similar one before. It's really just naievette on how the world works.
Lol.
Pre-med's ideas:
3.6 GPA - good doctor
3.7 - very good doctor
3.8 - excellent doctor
3.9 - phenomenal doctor
4.0 - best doctor on planet
(same with MCAT)
Reality:
3.6-4.0 - can likely succeed in medical school, time to look @ other stuff
31+ MCAT - will likely succeed in medical school
There's a student who was a middle 3.x's GPA with low 30s MCAT who just went AOA and 250+ on step 1... There are people in his class who perfect stats who did much worse. In the end, who you are is more important than your stats. Stats just open the doors and get interview invites. If you don't have something special than 4.0 and a high MCAT, then you won't always be successful.
You STILL don't get the point. There are ALWAYS exceptions. We are talking about URM's getting an advantage before they put their foot in the door. Let me finish my story about the URM student with the 3.1 gpa 25mcat. He had to redo a year. I never said ANYWHERE that people with higher GPAs make better doctors. I'm guessing you're a URM or just someone who has taken offense on a subject matter deeper than GPA and MCAT. No to mention your example is minute because the guy had middle 3.0 GPA and low 30s mcat. Dude that's right near average for MD medical schools, so he's no underdog. Show me a 3.1ish 25mcat like my example who ended up doing a competitive residency and then come back to me.
Dude, the individual you are talking about makes up less than 1% of medical school students.
Get over it. Yes, there will be a few people in medical school who didn't get there because of grades. George Bush also went to Yale, and NOT because he had perfect grades and standardize test scores.
Welcome to the real world. Politics and political issue matter now. If an adcom decides they need Joe Blow for XYZ reasons, they will take him. They don't care what you think.
What you've posted has NOTHING to do with medical school admissions. Folks, please do not feed the trolls.
This is not for a medical school program. Instead, it's for a program that I got into at Cal. After writing essays and doing the typical long application, this is how they summarized me:
"Hispanic (6.5)
Poor (2.5)
First in family (2)
A lot of Social Sciences, but a "B" in Chemistry and Bio. (5.5)"
I got an A in bio, but whatever. I also don't know what the scoring meant, but I guess I made the cutoff.
How do I know? Because I asked them for a copy of my personal statement and instead they gave me the application with their notes. Those were their only notes.
I'm sorry, but I'm pissed to be graded by my social conditions rather than my academics, volunteer work, or essays.
I hope med school isn't this stupidly cold with admissions.
You aren't saying anything that I don't already believe, Jack. Of course there's more to being a physician than having outstanding test scores and grades. And to address a previous judgement you made about me, although I myself am not a URM I have seen more than enough through volunteer experience and programs I've started to understand some people's situations growing up, in the workforce, etc. I'm not closed minded to these truths, so please don't judge me like you know what I've seen and experienced.
Let's do a thought-experiment here... let's say person A (white) grows up in the exact same manner as person B (black). Same education, job opportunities, volunteer experiences, etc. Why is it that person B gets an additional advantage over person A, just because he/she is black?
Now let's say that person B is a slacker, and person A works his tail off. Yet person A doesn't get accepted when person B does... Clearly, the URM status gives person B an extra "edge". How is this fair in any way?
The truth is, all races have gone through some intense discrimination at some point. As a brown dude, I can preach on about how we were abused by the british colonists for hundreds of years, blah blah. But you said it yourself, it's HISTORY. And to be blunt... why should the history of a race have any affect on medical school admissions? Or the fact that there aren't as many blacks/hispanics admitted?
Ughh long post, sorry.
my 2 cents: Most med school applicants would be able to successfully graduate and become competent physicians, despite MCAT scores, grades, etc. There is an over-supply of talent.
If I were an adcom I would definitely choose a good mix of different ideals, race, religions, etc. to fill my class and I would ignore 3.6 vs 3.9 or 28 vs 33. This isn't about you. You put your best foot forward and you may have worked harder and gotten better grades than the other guy, but if I already have 10 people just like you, then I will move on to the next guy. Does it suck for you? Yes. Is it fair? I guess that depends on your assumptions. Is the process supposed to be "fair?" Depends on your definition, but I would argue that nowhere is it implied that it's "fair." Fair means if you meet A + B + Z criteria, you're in. That might be good for the individual who meets that criteria, but it's not good for medicine or society as a whole. The privileged will streamline their efforts to meet those criteria while the underprivileged will not have the resources or support systems to compete.
I'm proud the system doesn't work that way, though I wish it would sway even further in the right direction. Ps. I'm a privileged white male.
"Hispanic (6.5)
Poor (2.5)
First in family (2)
A lot of Social Sciences, but a "B" in Chemistry and Bio. (5.5)"
I hope med school isn't this stupidly cold with admissions.
I think what's ruining this philosophical conversation is the fact that many are not interpreting what other people are saying properly. This is a good conversation though, nothing is meant to be personal here... at least from me.
Jack, you're not getting what I'm saying. You don't have to tell me that there are things in life that happen that isn't fair, because I understand this completely. But to compare this to a hot girl getting a job over an ugly one isn't a fair comparison... this is medical school where there are thousands of applicants, hundreds of which are average/over-qualified for the position. And to think that some great applicants don't get a spot because the school has to accept a certain percentage of URMs who may not deserve the spot (due to lacking of grades, volunteer experience, etc.) is a huge problem. Yes it's not fair. Yes I know things in life aren't fair. But this is something that can easily be fixed. And for someone to make an excuse and say "this is life, deal with it" are the same ones that are either 1) afraid of positive change, or 2) don't take initiative to make a positive difference in something.
I'm not saying this is you, but please don't give me the whole "life isn't fair, deal with it" speech. While it does apply in some cases, there are many in which it doesn't.
And when talking about how there needs to be diversity in healthcare... well... why? Everyone has different personalities and medical skills. Why does there need to be a certain 3:1:2:1:1 ratio among races in the medical field? Who cares what the doctors race is.
And while I agree that coming from underprivileged backgrounds may be an experience that some may not have, not everyone coming from these backgrounds are automatically better applicants just because they have overcome this adversity.
My MAIN issue with this whole thing is, why generalize giving ALL african american or hispanic applicants this kind of advantage? It should be on an applicant-by-applicant basis. I would much rather have applicants living in poverty, who are barely able to pay for the application process alone, given the advantage (whether they are white, black, hispanic, asian, etc) than an ENTIRE race given an "edge" simply because of their race!! It's absurd.
Medicine cares more about the fact that if we don't have enough URM doctors, people won't get the right treatment or treatment at all. Cultural and social barriers do exist.
Chances of a black or Hispanic applicant coming from poverty are much greater than white or Asian.
Yes, I can indeed call you my friend. I wouldn't get offended.
Watching sports, Hollywood movies, and listening to pop music is very different than going to the doctor for many people. When is the last time that talking about an infection in your urethra felt the same as watching Monday night football? I'd like it if it (race) were a non-issue, but it is an issue. This is also why we need white doctors in rural white places. Chances there are greater that people will see them than an Asian doctor born in China with a slight accent.
Financial background makes sense, which is why we have the disadvantaged status, but we still live in a country where race matters to people; therefore, we have to deal with it the most pragmatical way.
jack, you are probably a urm or just have offense to this because your a non-trad or had something against you to fight this hard. We all have opinions, but if you were indian or chinese, and found out that you actually have a disadvantage because your race statistically outperforms the average, which would require you to go above average to fight for a spot against your own race while someone with lower than average stats can just come in unscathed, you'd be ticked off too. I feel bad for those people. I know some people deserve better and that is what sucks. I'll repeat this again. If a urm gets accepted to medical school because he is on par with medical school stats or above, then he EARNED his spot. Because let's face it, he probably would have gotten into medical school regardless of his urm status. Medical school is all about stats, at least MD programs. That is why I DO has a friendlier method. They don't have this race effect show through as dramatic because they look at the whole application, not just grades. So let's not talk about how great doctors can come from average or subpar scores, it's been proven in DO schools each year over and over. I really wished you all would read what I had to say about the black anesthesiologist I shadowed. He went to UMich and was at the top, but was afraid people thought he had a hand out so he did anesthesiology because he said he wouldn't have to deal with the bias because they wont see the color of his skin until surgery day. This is why the system has to change so the legit urms don't have to deal with people thinking they got it easy in med school. If I wanted to throw fire into this. I'd straight up say, why is Howard and Meharry more or less designated for blacks? How is this fair? I'm being serious, too. Why does this system allow for a medical school to be predominantly black? Why do they get a special school just for them? Why isn't there a medical school for just whites or asians etc? This is the issue we were talking about. Not GPA, not MCAT. Race needs to be eliminated. You pick the people you like and if they so happen to be a URM then fine, but dont pick people just to say you need a particular percentage or the university gets in trouble for discrimination.
This is just for college but the same issue applies in medical school. Read it and tell me it's wrong to shift the requirements in the reverse direction for asian people.
http://www.eyedrd.org/2011/06/disadvantages-of-asian-applicants-to-universities.html
I'm done here.
This is where I was coming from. The financial background status makes much more sense than the "race status".
Good luck to you all, I have Anatomy to do that is much more important. Jack out.
Work hard, focus on things you can control (NOT adcom's preferences on URM) and put together your best application.
Don't waste time on things you can't control. I understand everyone has different opinions and it's funny, I know some people think that I slid into school because of being a URM. So I have to deal with this crap too.
The thing that usually pisses me off are all the, "25 MCAT and 3.1 GPA" stories.
First of all, those are probably at the black schools, second of all, that's like what, 50 medical students out of 17,000. Yet we hear the stories about the 0.1% of the application pool that is somehow ruining it for the other 99.9%... Just wow.
I really don't think your argument about college graduates for comparison is very good. Again, Asian folks are over-represented in college compared to the general public. At my college, Asians were 40%+ of the college population vs. 4.8 in the public. Now think about why that is. Is it because Asian people are genetically smarter or better? No. It's simply the way society views Asians and the way Asian parents raise their kids. On the other hand, black and Hispanics are usually being told, by their own parents, that they are too stupid to succeed or that college is only meant for rich people.
So when you think about "fairness" in college admissions, remember that being an Asian means you're more likely to come from parents that pushed you into going to college and society believed you were innately capable of succeeding, whereas being black/Hispanic is the opposite. So when you "fix" for that variable, you'll realize that stats may be higher and more demanding for Asian people, but you will also find that opportunities and everything else is much more available for Asian people. In layman's terms, your argument is basically centering around saying that a regular person and a paraplegic should be running the same marathon.
The way I see it is that there isn't any other "better" system that is also practical. While I do agree financial disadvantage should be the leading factor, I must stress again that there are universal things among blacks and Hispanic. For example, people walk up to me and talk to me in Spanish. These are complete strangers. Does this happen to an Asian or black person? Nope. And like my previous example, does coming from a good background make it less likely to be called a racial slur by a racist? Nope. There are universal experiences by people of color regardless of their income.
Who cares! Man you call me genatalia pokadotson and list me poor broke and purple. As long as you get in.
I have thick skin, so allot of stuff rolls right off.
The way I see it is that there isn't any other "better" system that is also practical. While I do agree financial disadvantage should be the leading factor, I must stress again that there are universal things among blacks and Hispanic. For example, people walk up to me and talk to me in Spanish. These are complete strangers. Does this happen to an Asian or black person? Nope. And like my previous example, does coming from a good background make it less likely to be called a racial slur by a racist? Nope. There are universal experiences by people of color regardless of their income.
Medical schools want to fill their classes with both financial and racial diversity. The current system is the most practical. As for the data, we'll have to disagree. While there are applicants with 3.9/39 that are Black or Hispanic, these are a small number, and given that they have an over 95% success rate, it's obvious to me that they aren't discriminating the "good" applicants but instead have a small pool of people to get more from. With the table you see, 8% of medical school is Hispanic while the population is double. There's already a huge compromise of 1/2 of the amount of Hispanics being represented.
Not touching the URM thing...but here is something I have an issue with: people getting special accommodations on med school exams. Sucks...but not everyone is cut out to be a doc. What you going to get special accommodations on everything throughout your career? Straight up scary to me.
And by special accommodations I mean...people needing extra time for exams because they have learning disabilities etc....not because of physical issues necessitating extra time.