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I tried searching this, but got mostly hits on residency or ones that didn't answer my question.
When applying to undergrad, schools have strong (said or unsaid) regional preferences. To improve diversity, people from underrepresented areas like Wisconsin, Montana, etc. have preference equal to minority status to selective private schools like Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. while people in the northeast/California which are over-represented have a correspondingly tougher time. State schools are pretty much obligated to give in-state preference, though.
For residency, it seems to work that if you live in the region, have family in the region, etc. you are greatly preferred.
For medical school, how does it work? Beyond in-state preference, SUNY prefers new york students, etc., are there regional preferences for private schools one way or the other. Would somewhere like UPenn prefer Pennsylvania students for being in-state or would it be harder because more people apply in state? Also, would they prefer areas like Wisconsin that get fewer number of applicants like in undergrad apps?
Just curious, thanks!
When applying to undergrad, schools have strong (said or unsaid) regional preferences. To improve diversity, people from underrepresented areas like Wisconsin, Montana, etc. have preference equal to minority status to selective private schools like Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. while people in the northeast/California which are over-represented have a correspondingly tougher time. State schools are pretty much obligated to give in-state preference, though.
For residency, it seems to work that if you live in the region, have family in the region, etc. you are greatly preferred.
For medical school, how does it work? Beyond in-state preference, SUNY prefers new york students, etc., are there regional preferences for private schools one way or the other. Would somewhere like UPenn prefer Pennsylvania students for being in-state or would it be harder because more people apply in state? Also, would they prefer areas like Wisconsin that get fewer number of applicants like in undergrad apps?
Just curious, thanks!