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I guess I just don't understand these forums. I get that I don't have research. But say I had applied last year, there would have only been 600 out of tens of thousands of other people with the same or better MCAT score and GPA as myself. Yet I should be applying to schools ranked in the 80's and 90's?? I just follow that math there. Say I was the last person out of all 600 of those other people to get accepted, they'd only be filling about the 5 best schools...
Follow what I said and you'll be fine.I'm not trying to be combative. But I just did the math and there would have been 3,150 people with the same or better score if you're actually considering it a 36. Even though the percentage's released on AAMC would have put me at a 38? Some online sources even convert it to a 39.
I purposely didn't apply to any school that didn't show a heavy emphasis in volunteer service or healthcare in underprivileged areas as those are things I am mostly interested in. I have no interest in applying to the top research schools.
I just didn't realize not having a semester of research would automatically make my GPA and MCAT null and my best shot to apply to schools with averages of 30 MCAT and 3.5 GPA.
The highest school I applied to was ranked #6 and the lowest was #76. More than half of the schools are ranked above the 30's. So I was just surprised when everyone said I was aiming too high. I didn't realize it was a stretch for even a mid-tier school.
I'm looking for mid-tier suggestions as I do want to apply to a range and want to be safe. So if you have any of those? Or if you can tell me what numbers I should be looking for? That would really be great. Thanks
One, you must understand that medical school admissions, while exceptionally numbers-driven, is not all about numbers. Numbers are a necessary but not sufficient condition. Now, you have wonderful numbers. Better than my own when I applied! But you also must understand that many of these top ranked schools in the research category of USNWR are ranked that way because they value research! That doesn't mean that research is a requirement for these schools (it's not), but they really do appreciate applicants who have experience using, understanding, and applying the scientific process at a high level (i.e. doing biomedical research via the scientific method and being able to explain the rational behind and conclusions/ramifications of said research).
A 519 MCAT is approximately a 36.5 (let's round to a 36 for argument's sake). There were nearly 4,000 people last year (NOT 600) who had a 36+ MCAT and applied to medical school. If we assume average size of 150 (which is generous), that's nearly 27 schools filled - not 5! You have a solid application, but unfortunately you don't have the research that many schools who so heavily value it like to see.
However, that does not mean you're not competitive there.
If you want to go to California, add all of the California schools except for UC Davis, UC Riverside, and Loma Linda. @Banco has some great suggestions for you.
Honestly, you should apply to any of the top 20 that you want, but just be warned that there are many people who have your stats or better and also have the research experience to back it up.
Add schools like USC-Keck, Rochester, Emory, Einstein, Case Western, Hofstra, and UVA. They'll like your stats and will be willing to overlook your lack of research.
I think that @Goro was very conservative when he gave you his expert opinion. By all means, look into the schools that he suggested, but do not feel the need to limit yourself to them.
Apply broadly and hope for the best. With good stats but a lack of research, you're competitive everywhere, but not a shoe-in. You might get lucky, you might not. Not too much you can do at this point but craft your list to the best of your abilities. You've been given solid advice here, so don't squander it.
Best of luck.