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DrugDealer said:The main difference is that Worcester is a 3 year accelerated program and Boston is a traditional 6 year program designed for students fresh out of high school. That being said, Worcester has a higher acceptance rate for students who have already completed at least a few years of college and have met the program's prereqs for admission. Boston only has a handful of spots for students transferring into the 3rd year of their 6 year program--the number of spots are dependent on how many students have dropped out in the first 2 years. Worcester class is 150-160 students, plus about 40 at their satellite campus in Manchester, NH. I don't know the size of the Boston classes, but I've heard they're "big" (don't know how to quantitate that) and, as explained above, would mostly be kids right out of high school.
pharmy said:do you have to take the PCAT for Worcester?
Boston is a 6 year program meant for kids straight out of high school. As a transfer student, it would be a 4 year program.boston is 4 year
worcestor is 3 year
manchester is different program, not pharm D. '
The school website said that the number of students enrolled in Worcester is 500 and Manchester is 200. Does it mean that there's more chance of getting accepted if applying to Worcester because it takes more students? But the website also says that the acceptance rate (for Pharm D program) at Worcester is 27% whereas it's 34% for Manchester. Just kind of confusing here. Anyone knows about this??
Got an interview invite for November 8th (Boston Campus) 🙂
Does anyone know how long the interview is and what to expect? Thanks
Do you remember how long between getting the email that they were reviewing your application to your interview invite? Thx!
Got an interview invite for November 8th (Boston Campus) 🙂
Does anyone know how long the interview is and what to expect? Thanks
"You get what you put into it" is probably the best mentality to have if you come here b/c you have no other options or you really like Boston.
Pros:
- Relatively inexpensive for a private school (compare to USC for example)
- Theoretically you can work as an intern at BIDMC, Brigham, Children's Hospital, etc., within walking distance from the "campus"
- Good lecturers for the "important" courses, like pharmacology
Cons:
- Terrible lecturers for the non-important courses
- Each Pharm.D. class is 300+, so no one here really can talk **** about diploma mills
- Many students here still have that high-school mentality, even those actually in the Pharm.D. program (this being a 0-6 program after all...) for more than two years. Examples: chirp a lot in lecture, chirp a lot while blocking points of egress, hog all the computers to watch K-dramas, play stupid Facebook games, etc., etc.
"You get what you put into it" is probably the best mentality to have if you come here b/c you have no other options or you really like Boston.
Pros:
- Relatively inexpensive for a private school (compare to USC for example)
- Theoretically you can work as an intern at BIDMC, Brigham, Children's Hospital, etc., within walking distance from the "campus"
- Good lecturers for the "important" courses, like pharmacology
Cons:
- Terrible lecturers for the non-important courses
- Each Pharm.D. class is 300+, so no one here really can talk **** about diploma mills
- Many students here still have that high-school mentality, even those actually in the Pharm.D. program (this being a 0-6 program after all...) for more than two years. Examples: chirp a lot in lecture, chirp a lot while blocking points of egress, hog all the computers to watch K-dramas, play stupid Facebook games, etc., etc.
I thought the watching k drama part was funny. I got accepted to mcphs and plan on going there. Does anyone know when they send the scheldue? Or list of books you need to buy?