- Joined
- Mar 23, 2010
- Messages
- 18
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Pre-Medical
Some interesting (and nerdy) summer storytelling...
When I was an undergraduate and a heavy science nerd, I would hear stories of the premeds applying MD/PhD. I remember some snippets of conversations from long ago:
(from my friend who would later go on into WUSTL MSTP)
"Dude, I would not apply MD/PhD. I hear it is ridiculously hard. There was one guy who had a 4.0 and a 40 on his MCAT and he didn't get into one MD/PhD."
(from another who would later go on into Indiana MSTP)
"They're like geniuses or something. How the heck do you do an MD and a PhD at the same time?" (I guess he's finding out now)
Of course, through the years, the sanguine halo surrounding MD/PhDs has also been agitated and torn. I worked in a laboratory this past year, and the snippets had now turned to:
(from a graduate student)
"Is the PhD even a legitimate PhD?" [After I was accepted into an MD/PhD, this graduate student would continue to "assume" I was only going for medical school]
(from another graduate student)
"I hear you just need to get straight B's in med school from now on and you're set." (in a less-than-complimentary tone)
And of course, the winner of them all, the one that immediate shoots out the mouths of my peers' [competitive] mothers when they hear of my impending matriculation into academia:
"You'll be in school for such a long time!" (followed by a very pitying look, which contrasted heavily with my own family members' sanctified 'I-now-have-a-double-doc-in-the-family' look)
Wow. The responses have spanned the spectrum. So guys, I welcome you all to share your experiences/anecdotes from friends/family/peers/professors/MDs/PhDs regarding the MD/PhD Stereotype.
When I was an undergraduate and a heavy science nerd, I would hear stories of the premeds applying MD/PhD. I remember some snippets of conversations from long ago:
(from my friend who would later go on into WUSTL MSTP)
"Dude, I would not apply MD/PhD. I hear it is ridiculously hard. There was one guy who had a 4.0 and a 40 on his MCAT and he didn't get into one MD/PhD."
(from another who would later go on into Indiana MSTP)
"They're like geniuses or something. How the heck do you do an MD and a PhD at the same time?" (I guess he's finding out now)
Of course, through the years, the sanguine halo surrounding MD/PhDs has also been agitated and torn. I worked in a laboratory this past year, and the snippets had now turned to:
(from a graduate student)
"Is the PhD even a legitimate PhD?" [After I was accepted into an MD/PhD, this graduate student would continue to "assume" I was only going for medical school]
(from another graduate student)
"I hear you just need to get straight B's in med school from now on and you're set." (in a less-than-complimentary tone)
And of course, the winner of them all, the one that immediate shoots out the mouths of my peers' [competitive] mothers when they hear of my impending matriculation into academia:
"You'll be in school for such a long time!" (followed by a very pitying look, which contrasted heavily with my own family members' sanctified 'I-now-have-a-double-doc-in-the-family' look)
Wow. The responses have spanned the spectrum. So guys, I welcome you all to share your experiences/anecdotes from friends/family/peers/professors/MDs/PhDs regarding the MD/PhD Stereotype.

