pw079 said:
Hey guys i need help. I am coming into my junior yr and i will be applying to college soon and i want to pursue a career in medicine DO or MD (DO preferably). I have every intention to do so, but in HS my GPA is 3.54 and my science gpa is atleast 3.8. My problem is that i am so horrible at math that it scares me that i may not succeed. i will be in in alg 2 my jr yr and geom my sr yr. and probably hold a C avg. My question is will i be able to succeed in med school and what undergrad degree should i pursue in. if u ppl dont think i can make it and i bet u would be able to tell, so tell me so i can start a different path...
Thanks you all for the help..
First of all gain some confidence. you are young, you have time to decide. Many people go through a few years of college before they even decide they want to go to medical school. As far as a major, you can be anything you want as long as you fullfill the pre-med requirements. There are tons of people in my class who were history/english/psychology/etc majors.
As far as the math thing goes, don't worry too much about it. There is little math in my courses now, however, occasionally we have to know various equations like for cardiology, but much of that is based on understanding the concept more than doing the math.
You can easily make it if you try, it's a matter of just going after it and not being scared. don't let ppl intimidate you, and have some confidence in yourself. My advisor in college told me sooooooooooo many times to quit pre-med because she thought my grades weren't high enough. Oh how I would love to tell her to shove it right about now.
And also, your high school grades don't count for jack. i know plenty of people who had 4.0's in high school who are now college dropouts. and I also know people who did poor in highschool because they didn't care, and turned out to be great students in college. You can't compare highschool to college, just like you can't compare college to medical school.
In the end, it's all up to you and how hard you work in undergrad. make sure to volunteer, do research, get involved with the community and the medical world. you have plenty of time, as in years, to decide.