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Please do yourself the favor of taking your offer!Hello! This going to be a long post because I want to thoroughly explain my reasons for thinking about doing something that I know pretty much always receives a “don’t, you’re being dumb” response 🙂
I’ve received a decision from all the schools that I applied to, and it looks like I’ll be attending my state school which is T50-60 school. When I first started my premed journey, I heard that medical school prestige doesn’t really matter because Step 1 is one of the biggest deciding factors when it comes to residency. As such, I was fine with attending a lower-ranked school which is why I put it on my school list. Now that Step 1 is P/F, I’ve been seeing people say that school prestige will start to matter more. The dilemma that I’m having is whether it would be a waste to continue on with this acceptance even though I’m confident that my application can be improved upon.
Here's some additional context: I’m a URM that graduated from a T10 university. Even though these factors should’ve given me a boost, several things held me back. I have a low GPA (3.3s/3.4c) due to a medical condition that was explained in my primary. My clinical hours were low due to the pandemic; out of the 150ish hours of clinical experience that I had, 50% was from volunteering at an urgent care and the other 50% was from virtual shadowing. My lack of substantiative clinical hours in turn affected my personal statement because, though my “seed” story was unique/strong, I didn’t have any clinical experience to tie everything together. My MCAT score is decent (511) but not good enough to compensate for my GPA. I also studied for it while I was a full-time student that was attending classes, studying for final exams, working a part-time job, leading a club, and doing research.
Now, I have 500+ hours at a dual-role clinical job where I have a mix of direct and indirect patient encounters. I have plenty of clinical stories that I could easily incorporate into my personal statement and activity section essays. I have at least one definitive research publication and presentation. I’ve graduated from school and I have a job that isn’t too demanding, so I’d be able to dedicate more time to studying for the MCAT. I’ve also seen that there’s a moderate correlation between SAT and MCAT scores. I was able to get a 98-percentile score as a high schooler that didn’t have a proper study regime, so I feel like there’s some potential there.
Since the school’s CTE deadline is in June/July, let’s say that I re-took the MCAT before that deadline and got a 520 or so. Would it be reasonable to decline the acceptance and reapply? Or is the value of medical school prestige in relation to residency/fellowships/overall advantage not important enough for me to even consider doing this?
I’d very much appreciate any help that I can get with this! Thank you!!
TL;DR – I got an acceptance to a mid-tier (?) school with a rushed application, but now I’m concerned that in the future I'll regret that I didn't put my best foot forward during the application process. I’ve already improved on some of the aspects that I know held me back but if I also managed to get a ~520 on the MCAT before the school’s CTE deadline, would it be worth it to decline the acceptance so that I can reapply?
Hello! This going to be a long post because I want to thoroughly explain my reasons for thinking about doing something that I know pretty much always receives a “don’t, you’re being dumb” response 🙂
This thread gave me enteritis.TL;DR – I got an acceptance to a mid-tier (?) school with a rushed application, but now I’m concerned that in the future I'll regret that I didn't put my best foot forward during the application process. I’ve already improved on some of the aspects that I know held me back but if I also managed to get a ~520 on the MCAT before the school’s CTE deadline, would it be worth it to decline the acceptance so that I can reapply?