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Alllriiight, I contacted Stanford and Harvard (my dream school) and both of them said they're totally cool with CC credits 👍
but no word from yale yet.. :/
Good to hear.
Alllriiight, I contacted Stanford and Harvard (my dream school) and both of them said they're totally cool with CC credits 👍
but no word from yale yet.. :/
EDIT; I plan to take a year off for the MCAT. So yes, I think there is no way to do the pre-reqs at the four year and take the MCAT your junior year. But really, what is one more year to have a strong app and a good score!
Whoa. A year? I wouldn't recommend this. Even a really good score isn't going to mean much if it takes you a year to prepare for the test, especially since the test is entirely made up of basic science review that you should already know.
You are going to have to deal with a lot denser material in a lot shorter time in med school. Never forget that the whole point of all these numbers, classes, and volunteer hours is to prove that you can handle the med school environment. Taking a year off for study might ensure you REALLY know your basic science, but a lot of it won't come up again in med school, and taking that much time says little for your ability to survive a medical school e vironment, regardless of your score.
Take a summer off, maybe a semester at most. But keep in mind that a lot of your competition studies over winter or an academically easier school year, so and still manage to do alright. It's not about memorizing equations, it's about implying concepts. If you have diffiulty doing that after a full summer of science review, an extra nine months is just going to be wasted time you could be using to strengthen other areas of your application.
Obviously I would be doing other things; working, volunteering, etc. A lot of people take a year off and I don't see anything wrong with it. Take one semester off? If you take one off you are going to be taking the whole year... I don't see the problem, nor do I see strengthening my app as showing weakness of my abilities as a student.
Taking one semester off is not taking off the whole year unless you're at a fairly small college. Every school I looked at offered the basic science courses year 'round, without alternating semesters.
And a lot of people take a year off of school after they've either applied and been accepted, which means they don't need the school, and take a year to just relax, or after they've been rejected, to go do an internship or something that schooling students generally can't do.
I'm not accusing you have having weakness as a student. What I am saying is that if I saw a year-long break where you were not taking any classes, and then an MCAT, then it would indicate you weren't confident in your ability to do well without that year long break. At least don't mention it in the interview.
At the end of the day, as I said, the pre-med courses aren't required because you're going to be using special relativity or doing Diels-Alder reactions every day in medical school. It's designed to test how well you learn difficult, complex material in a relatively short amount of time. Likewise, the MCAT is not designed to test your ability to regurgitate material. If you've ever looked at the questions, many times, the equations are actually GIVEN to you. It's designed to test how well you apply all the things you were supposed to have learned to a "real life" situation. There aren't many questions on the test that just ask you for the pH given a bunch of numbers. It asks you to look at a situation, and use the knowledge you have to make sense of it, just as you would have to as a doctor. Sometimes, this means even working with things that you should NOT have covered, just to ensure that you can't rely on memorized information.
A year of study doesn't make you better at applying science than three hours a day for three months would. The goal is to remember the basic concepts, and then just keep doing practice problems until you understand the format of the test. If you're taking a year to study for the MCAT, that just screams "memorization", which will be almost useless for the MCAT.
And, as I said, you're going to be expected to be able to absorb a TON of information and be tested over it within a short time period in medical school. While that doesn't necessarily mean you should take on the MCAT cold-turkey, it does mean that your study habits might be questionable to an admissions committee if you take a whole year to study for a test that the vast majority of pre-meds take less than a semester to prepare for.
You can listen to me or you can choose not to. It doesn't really make any difference to me. I'm just saying that if I were you, and I had a whole year to play with in strengthening my application, I would, if I were not a science major, take some upper-division science classes, especially in subject areas I may have struggled with initially (for me, it was physics). Otherwise, I would go do something that requires a lot of free time, such as an in-depth research paper, internship, or even joining the Peace Corps. Just SOMETHING that gets you to stand out, because I highly, highly doubt that your MCAT score is going to be THAT much better after a year of studying than it would be after a few months of studying, and you might as well take that luxurious free time you have and do something really special with it.
I'm really not trying to be offensive or anything. But like I said, it's your application. If you want to study for a year, feel free. If you're right, you'll rock the MCAT, and hopefully that will be enough. If I'm right, less competition for the rest of the pre-meds.
But I really hope you don't take a year off to study, and suck on the MCAT. That would be, like, a whole year of your pre-med career wasted. That would definitely suck.
Dude. Ok let me try this again. First off, maybe I chose my words poorly by saying a year off for the MCAT. As I said in my above post, I will obviously be doing other things.
As I also said in my above post, I am only doing g-chem and physics at my cc. That means I have o-chem and bio to do at the four year. That also means that I most likely won't be done with my pre-med courses until sometime in my senior year. I don't think it would be a good idea for me to take the MCAT without having all my basic sciences done, do you? Now I will probably end up taking the MCAT long before it is time for me to apply, but since med-school only starts once a year I don't really have too much of a choice in the matter now do I? It would be nice if I could jump in halfway through the next year, but it just ain't going to happen. The fact is that I have talked with multiple people on here who have taken a year break with no consequences whatsoever. Thanks for the advice, but I think I'll take my chances with a hopefully good MCAT score, more volunteering, more research, and more money. Maybe you should consider taking a year off...Cheers.
Don't fall into the pitfall: they may accept, however may also look down to them as they favor the credits taken at a 4-year university.Alllriiight, I contacted Stanford and Harvard (my dream school) and both of them said they're totally cool with CC credits 👍
but no word from yale yet.. :/
This is what I had to do for prereqs:
CC
1 year bio
entire physics series
entire gchem series
english comp
(these were all required to transfer to UC)
UC
entire ochem series (some UCs require this before transfer, but I was able to get in without it)
1 writing class
all my upper division bio class, obviously
.
Tin Man;9581467]
Actually it is relevant. When/if adcoms ask about the year off I will have plenty of things to say.Eh, irrelevant to the point I was making, unless you plan to join the Peace Corps. Nobody says they thought you were going to be at home sitting in a chair for 18 hours a day studying and peeing into a bottle. Obviously you'd have to be doing other things. What you'd have to overcome is the justification the adcoms would have in their heads for you taking that much time off of school. But whatever.
Without boring you with the logistics; I am a sophomore now. I did not decide I would be pre-med right away, therefore did not start the pre-reqs right away. My cc runs sciences on a strict sequence, meaning that I can not just jump in on the first class of, lets say bio or chem, whenever I want. It has to be in the fall. Basically the timing did not work out. So I will have g-chem and physics done (you already knew that). Now, could I cram bio and o-chem into my junior year at the university? Sure. Am I going to? No. I thin that would not be smart being at a new school and while taking the upper divisions for my major.No, I guess I'm still confused, because I can't figure out what you're trying to do based on this post.If you take your general chem and physics at the cc, at the same time, it will take you one year.
No, most don't. Most take at least three though, which is exactly what I am doing.Most pre-meds don't spread their science classes out over four years,
And here we come to the heart of your argument. You assume that just because most apply their junior year that it is the "right" way of doing it. You seem to just be going with your gut on this, or what you think an adcom might think. You have not provided any statistics or causational evidence, nor even any correlational or anecdotal evidence for that matter. I think Mr. Lebouski can sum it up better than I can:Most people do that to have their pre-reqs done before their junior year ends, so they can apply at the same time most other people are.
This we agree on. In fact, the average age of medical students has been steadily rising, which means, you guessed it, many people are not apply right away. Go figure.There's nothing wrong with applying later,
Did I mention that I work pretty much full time too. No thanks, I'd rather not kill myself.I guess, but you DO have a choice in it. There's no rule that classes can't be mixed, or that you can't leave the cc early and move to the university as soon as possible to get the pre-reqs done, like I ended up doing. Granted, took a LOT of classes, even over the summer, to get as much as I could out of the cc before moving, but the point is still valid.
By long before I apply I meant fall or winter, then apply in the summer.In the same vein, I couldn't really nail down, based on your post, when you wanted to take the MCAT.
I would assume that because you said you couldn't do it without your basic sciences (a wise statement) that you would have been planning on waiting until the end of your senior year, which is the time you apparently think you'll be done with your science classes. But then you said that you'd likely be taking your MCAT long before it's time to apply, which gives me the impression that you plan on taking the MCAT BEFORE you're done with school, which would mean before your science classes.
What are you talking about? Three years? I said a year off, lets not get carried away.In either situation... taking the MCAT a few months before it's time to apply is no big deal. Taking the MCAT a couple of years before it's time to apply IS a big deal. Your MCAT score is only good for three years, which is why most people take it as soon as they can before they apply. I would imagine taking the MCAT again after three years of rejections and not keeping up with the basic sciences would be a real drag.
Ya know, normally I really wouldn't bother. I would just let you "win." But, unfortunately, many people read this forum (especially newbs), and take much of it as fact. I would just like to encourage them to check things out for themselves.You can try to explain your situation if you care enough,
Any kind of source here would be great.Like I said, it's your medical school career
at stake one way or the other.
Not agreeing with you is not being touchy. Let me say, I value that you took time to write what you believe to be right, but like I said, I simply disagree.I'm just posting my perspective on the issue as I understand it (which I apparently do not). Don't get touchy because my opinion clashes with your plan.
Actually it is relevant. When/if adcoms ask about the year off I will have plenty of things to say.
Without boring you with the logistics; I am a sophomore now. I did not decide I would be pre-med right away, therefore did not start the pre-reqs right away. My cc runs sciences on a strict sequence, meaning that I can not just jump in on the first class of, lets say bio or chem, whenever I want. It has to be in the fall. Basically the timing did not work out. So I will have g-chem and physics done (you already knew that). Now, could I cram bio and o-chem into my junior year at the university? Sure. Am I going to? No. I thin that would not be smart being at a new school and while taking the upper divisions for my major.
And here we come to the heart of your argument. You assume that just because most apply their junior year that it is the "right" way of doing it. You seem to just be going with your gut on this, or what you think an adcom might think. You have not provided any statistics or causational evidence, nor even any correlational or anecdotal evidence for that matter. I think Mr. Lebouski can sum it up better than I can:
Did I mention that I work pretty much full time too. No thanks, I'd rather not kill myself.
What are you talking about? Three years? I said a year off, lets not get carried away.
Ya know, normally I really wouldn't bother. I would just let you "win." But, unfortunately, many people read this forum (especially newbs), and take much of it as fact. I would just like to encourage them to check things out for themselves.