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I'm currently studying for my last PCAT and am totally exasperated. Don't get me wrong, it's nice to know such trivial information but wasn't I tested on these things when I originally took these classes? No offense, but doesn't the PCAT lack creativity in the sense that it wants test takers to fit one mold?
I know some pundits may say that an "A" at ABC College is not the same "A" at MIT for a certain class, therefore the PCAT places everyone on a level playing field, but if both schools are accredited, isn't it true that both are required to teach you the fundamentals? If I went to MIT, I wouldn't have as great of a GPA, but maintaining a conceivably higher GPA at a lesser school doesn't make me dumb.
Also, the PCAT is based on a curve, a curve that no one can explain (call Harcourt and see how much they cannot tell you about how the test is scored). Since answering one more question correctly could raise your score by more percentile points if you are in the upper bracket means that the difference between a 95 percentile and a 50 percentile could be the difference between only a few questions.
I've read so many posts of people with a 3.0 GPA with a 90+ PCAT get in to their schools. However, I'm in a different position. I have a 3.7 something GPA accumulated over 160+ hours, but only a 60 PCAT composite.
I am applying to non-PCAT schools in addition to lesser competitive PCAT schools, but I don't know what I should expect. I feel like I can hang with any pharmacy student once I'm accepted.
Are there other students like me out there?
I know some pundits may say that an "A" at ABC College is not the same "A" at MIT for a certain class, therefore the PCAT places everyone on a level playing field, but if both schools are accredited, isn't it true that both are required to teach you the fundamentals? If I went to MIT, I wouldn't have as great of a GPA, but maintaining a conceivably higher GPA at a lesser school doesn't make me dumb.
Also, the PCAT is based on a curve, a curve that no one can explain (call Harcourt and see how much they cannot tell you about how the test is scored). Since answering one more question correctly could raise your score by more percentile points if you are in the upper bracket means that the difference between a 95 percentile and a 50 percentile could be the difference between only a few questions.
I've read so many posts of people with a 3.0 GPA with a 90+ PCAT get in to their schools. However, I'm in a different position. I have a 3.7 something GPA accumulated over 160+ hours, but only a 60 PCAT composite.
I am applying to non-PCAT schools in addition to lesser competitive PCAT schools, but I don't know what I should expect. I feel like I can hang with any pharmacy student once I'm accepted.
Are there other students like me out there?