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I'm 16 and a junior in Highschool.
Lately I've been thinking about becoming a doctor.
I had a few questions;
How difficult is it to get accepted into med school? I know this is a complex question, and probably gets answered regularly, but please do answer.
My main concern is actually getting accepted into a medical school (none in particular). I don't want to have "wasted" a degree by not being able to get into medical school.
I'm considering volunteering at a local old folks home once I get this semester done with. Mostly because I recently moved and don't have much friends and need something fun besides videogames to fill my time.
Would this be beneficial to my application, or should I try for somewhere else? (I live in a small town in alaska, I'd have to travel 50mi to volunteer at the nearest hospital)
Since I moved to Alaska, I've been in a type of home-education school. I do most of my classes online or with the local community college.
Its a kind of experimental school, we still have supervisors that watch over everything we do, we have an actual school building were classes are held. Its still an accredited public school and state funded.
The point is, will my skills being able to do most of my education by myself help or hinder in college and medical school?
I want to go to college at University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Lincoln also has a Med-School that (I think) is in affiliation with the University. Would my chances be any better at getting accepted there than if I went a different college?
Like I said, my main worry would be going to college and getting an appropriate degree for medschool, but having that degree be "wasted" if I can't get accepted into med school.
I see people saying that they have a 3.8GPA 35MCAT, Volunteered for 4+years, have research experience and 3+recommendation letters. With replies like "You'd have a chance". It scares me.
Specs like that just seem undoable for me, mostly because my family isn't all that rich, my parents make minimum wage and are having a real hard time putting my sister through college.
Let alone having to support me and her. Even getting money for gas is an endeavor and can be hard.
I worry a lot, and for somereason the advice of strangers sometimes helps.
Lately I've been thinking about becoming a doctor.
I had a few questions;
How difficult is it to get accepted into med school? I know this is a complex question, and probably gets answered regularly, but please do answer.
My main concern is actually getting accepted into a medical school (none in particular). I don't want to have "wasted" a degree by not being able to get into medical school.
I'm considering volunteering at a local old folks home once I get this semester done with. Mostly because I recently moved and don't have much friends and need something fun besides videogames to fill my time.
Would this be beneficial to my application, or should I try for somewhere else? (I live in a small town in alaska, I'd have to travel 50mi to volunteer at the nearest hospital)
Since I moved to Alaska, I've been in a type of home-education school. I do most of my classes online or with the local community college.
Its a kind of experimental school, we still have supervisors that watch over everything we do, we have an actual school building were classes are held. Its still an accredited public school and state funded.
The point is, will my skills being able to do most of my education by myself help or hinder in college and medical school?
I want to go to college at University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Lincoln also has a Med-School that (I think) is in affiliation with the University. Would my chances be any better at getting accepted there than if I went a different college?
Like I said, my main worry would be going to college and getting an appropriate degree for medschool, but having that degree be "wasted" if I can't get accepted into med school.
I see people saying that they have a 3.8GPA 35MCAT, Volunteered for 4+years, have research experience and 3+recommendation letters. With replies like "You'd have a chance". It scares me.
Specs like that just seem undoable for me, mostly because my family isn't all that rich, my parents make minimum wage and are having a real hard time putting my sister through college.
Let alone having to support me and her. Even getting money for gas is an endeavor and can be hard.
I worry a lot, and for somereason the advice of strangers sometimes helps.
) It probably depends on the state, so you could email someone from the college and just ask. Wouldn't hurt. 