load of science classes in undergrad

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jmukid

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I was wondering is there a huge advantage of taking a lot of science classes in undergrads. For example do you think someone who only took 12 science classes in undergrads and had a gpa of 3.5 has a lot better chance of getting into a dental school then someone who took 20+ science classes but had a gpa of say 3.1?
 
Anyone got any opinion? any feedback would be preciated
 
I was wondering is there a huge advantage of taking a lot of science classes in undergrads. For example do you think someone who only took 12 science classes in undergrads and had a gpa of 3.5 has a lot better chance of getting into a dental school then someone who took 20+ science classes but had a gpa of say 3.1?

ADCOM doesn't care really, you can do some easy major and just do the minimum pre-requisite. I made that mistake, I did my undergrad in Biochemistry and had 3.5 GPA just with my pre-requisite. Then my upper level chemistry courses dropped my GPA to 3.1. In addition to my pre-requisite, I have done four courses of Biochem, A-chem with lab, P-chem with lab, toxicology, and pharmacology. If I were to do something different, I probably shouldn't have done Biochemistry major and did some easy Psych or Sociology major along with pre-requisites.
 
I was wondering is there a huge advantage of taking a lot of science classes in undergrads. For example do you think someone who only took 12 science classes in undergrads and had a gpa of 3.5 has a lot better chance of getting into a dental school then someone who took 20+ science classes but had a gpa of say 3.1?

In this case, the 3.5 is better. You must understand that at the end of the day, schools want to have higher stats for their school. BUT, a 3.4 with 20 science classes will prob look better than a 3.5 12 science classes. I think it might give you .1-.2(max) of "inflation" if you took a more difficult route. The moral of the story: try to get as high of a gpa as possible, while taking a reasonable class load.
 
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