is there any med school you wouldn't go to, even if it was your only acceptance?

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I'll just say what people are thinking but don't want to say.

I wouldn't go to a historically black medical school.
 
No, because I wouldn't have spent the money (or time) to apply if I didn't want to go there.
 
No, because I wouldn't have spent the money (or time) to apply if I didn't want to go there.
yea, that makes sense. i guess it's more of a hypothetical question. plus things change a lot during interview season in terms of how you view a school.
 
I didn't apply to any schools in the rural settings/ middle of nowhere/ flyover states.
 
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Loma Linda and any of the other religious schools. I'm atheist so needless to say those schools wouldn't be a good fit for me.
 
I'll just say what people are thinking but don't want to say.

I wouldn't go to a historically black medical school.
What are the reasons people typically mention? (Assuming there are reasons, and that it's not straight racism). Poor quality? Uncomfortable for non-black people because of dominant political/racial/social ideologies?
They're supposed to be focused on underserved populations, which is important and good.
 
Loma Linda and any of the other religious schools. I'm atheist so needless to say those schools wouldn't be a good fit for me.

Plus they don't let you drink or do drugs
 
A new DO school that admits people with 3.1/24 stats. Basically it has enabled any average college student to become a physician in the US.
a) I don't know how that compares to other DO schools, but I doubt they're taking "any average student".
b) even average college students can finish med school and be good doctors. Just spend some time on the forum.

edit:
Students must have obtained not less than a 3.0 GPA overall and 3.0 GPA in sciences to be considered for admission unless an exception for cause is granted by the LUCOM Dean. Competition dictates that most students will have GPA's > 3.5 and science GPA's > 3.4 respectively, which reflect greater opportunity for success with the curriculum and national board examinations.
Applicants must have a cumulative score of at least 22 on MCAT and have no score less than 6 to be considered for admissions unless a waiver is granted by the LUCOM Dean. Preference for admission consideration is a MCAT > 25.

edit: http://www.liberty.edu/lucom/index.cfm?PID=27880
 
Any school in: Alabama, Mississippi, South Dakota, North Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, or Idaho.

And any school in a rural area.


P.S. And all DOs schools because I want to be a real doctor :meanie:
 
I'm fine anywhere in the US. I'm not sure about DO yet.
 
Plus they don't let you drink or do drugs

Is this really an issue?

If you want to have fun in life

fym-i-smoke-i-drank-i-tryda-stop-but-i-cant.jpg
 
Loma Linda and any of the other religious schools. I'm atheist so needless to say those schools wouldn't be a good fit for me.

I don't mean to call you out, but...

I don't get the whole "fit" thing, school is school, it's not a social club. Just get your degree and get the f*ck out, it's that simple.

As long as its US MD am there.

You gotta learn to appreciate what you have, take nothing for granted.
 
Any school in: Alabama, Mississippi, South Dakota, North Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, or Idaho.

And any school in a rural area.


P.S. And all DOs schools because I want to be a real doctor :meanie:

I spent some time in Idaho and it is absolutely beautiful, would jump at an opportunity to live somewhere like Boise.
 
Any school in: Alabama, Mississippi, South Dakota, North Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, or Idaho.

And any school in a rural area.


P.S. And all DOs schools because I want to be a real doctor :meanie:
I wish I could afford to be as picky as you
 
I don't mean to call you out, but...

I don't get the whole "fit" thing, school is school, it's not a social club. Just get your degree and get the f*ck out, it's that simple.

As long as its US MD am there.

You gotta learn to appreciate what you have, take nothing for granted.

It's 4 years of your life that set you up for the rest of your career. It's not a university of Phoenix diploma mill to "get a degree and get the f out". I actually want to make friends with people there and enjoy going to social events where alcohol, meat, and occasional "bad" words are allowed and I nobody raises eyebrows when I tell people that I don't go to church on Sundays.
 
I don't mean to call you out, but...

I don't get the whole "fit" thing, school is school, it's not a social club. Just get your degree and get the f*ck out, it's that simple.

As long as its US MD am there.

You gotta learn to appreciate what you have, take nothing for granted.

Noone wants to be miserable for 4 years. Being a loner is not the best way to handle med school at all. "school is school" might be fine for like community college, but not for a professional school that you'll be investing 4 years at. The only way that mentality will work is if you are OK with being isolated from your class.
 
I don't mean to call you out, but...

I don't get the whole "fit" thing, school is school, it's not a social club. Just get your degree and get the f*ck out, it's that simple.

As long as its US MD am there.

You gotta learn to appreciate what you have, take nothing for granted.

I'm not one to be super picky about schools, but there's a limit. That limit being that I can't see myself being comfortable at a school that demands its students adhere to a rather strict, religious lifestyle. As an atheist, I don't want to be forced to attend church services and take theology classes in med school. I don't want to be held to a Puritan-esque conduct code that includes no drinking. And of course there's the little issue that it would be hard to fit in with my classmates when they're extremely passionate about a religion that I want no part of.

Not that it matters because Loma Linda makes Christianity one of their admissions requirements IIRC.
 
It's 4 years of your life that set you up for the rest of your career. It's not a university of Phoenix diploma mill to "get a degree and get the f out". I actually want to make friends with people there and enjoy going to social events where alcohol, meat, and occasional "bad" words are allowed and I nobody raises eyebrows when I tell people that I don't go to church on Sundays.

You sound privileged. People spend 4 years having to go through much worse things then what you have listed.

Again, if this school was my only choice, I would bare with it for 4 years, and then go on to spend the rest of my life practicing medicine.

And I say this being the farthest thing from an ideal Loma Linda student.
 
What are the reasons people typically mention? (Assuming there are reasons, and that it's not straight racism). Poor quality? Uncomfortable for non-black people because of dominant political/racial/social ideologies?
They're supposed to be focused on underserved populations, which is important and good.

Subconsciously, people feel more comfortable in a racial setting that's predominantly the same as your own.
 
Subconsciously, people feel more comfortable in a racial setting that's predominantly the same as your own.

This is not true. People feel more comfortable with people who have gone through similar experiences. It just so happens that we are a heavily segregated society in terms of race, so people of the same color generally come from similar backgrounds.
 
Subconsciously, people feel more comfortable in a racial setting that's predominantly the same as your own.
yeah, that's possible. But it's depressing to think that's how all the non-white students feel at almost every undergrad/med school in the US 🙁
 
A new DO school that admits people with 3.1/24 stats. Basically it has enabled any average college student to become a medical student in the US.

ftfy

You sound privileged. People spend 4 years having to go through much worse things then what you have listed.

Again, if this school was my only choice, I would bare with it for 4 years, and then go on to spend the rest of my life practicing medicine.

And I say this being the farthest thing from an ideal Loma Linda student.

Having the sense to want to go somewhere you feel comfortable doesn't necessarily imply privilege.
 
This is not true. People feel more comfortable with people who have gone through similar experiences. It just so happens that we are a heavily segregated society in terms of race, so people of the same color generally come from similar backgrounds.
...so it is true, but it's not caused by race, it's caused by the third factor of SES?
 
ftfy



Having the sense to want to go somewhere you feel comfortable doesn't necessarily imply privilege.

but making it a requirement does imply the privilege to choose, just as the inability to consider it as a serious requirement does imply lack of that privilege.
 
I'm not one to be super picky about schools, but there's a limit. That limit being that I can't see myself being comfortable at a school that demands its students adhere to a rather strict, religious lifestyle. As an atheist, I don't want to be forced to attend church services and take theology classes in med school. I don't want to be held to a Puritan-esque conduct code that includes no drinking. And of course there's the little issue that it would be hard to fit in with my classmates when they're extremely passionate about a religion that I want no part of.

Not that it matters because Loma Linda makes Christianity one of their admissions requirements IIRC.

I hear you.

However, I wonder how many people at loma Linda faked it to make it. There's gotta be some type of underground community at that school, where the regular folks hang haha.
 
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