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I tried searching and I found conflicting advice but I also believe this situation is fairly unique.
Lets compare two situations and which would fare better for admission into a US Allopathic school.
Situation 1:
An A ability student goes to a 4 year state school and fails in a particularly hilarious fashion, leaving college in the middle of a semester ending up with a cGPA of 1.0-2.0. This student takes a couple of years off to mature and then finishes a bachelors degree with a 3.8-4.0 GPA, but unfortunately due to the poor earlier GPA their cumulative is 2.9-3.3.
Despite completing a BS with a very good GPA, their application may not even get looked at.
Situation 2:
An A ability student goes to a 4 year state school and fails in a particularly hilarious fashion, leaving college in the middle of a semester ending up with a cGPA of 1.0-2.0 (same situation). In this case the student takes a couple of years off, but in the meantime pads their GPA with community college credits, raising their cGPA. The classes may or may not have relevance and it may be obvious the classes are not difficult.
This student then completes a bachelors degree with a 3.8-4.0 GPA but ends up with a 3.3-3.6 cGPA.
Assuming all other aspects of the application are equal in this hypothetical situation (MCAT, ECs, research, shadowing, volunteering, etc.), which one would be more favorable toward admission into a US Allopathic school?
Most of the gpa padding threads are about people that took easy classes after theyve already earned upper division credit, or are looking for classes that look good but are easy. This is a situation where the buffer classes would occur before the student appeared to enter a pre-med track. The student would still be taking the same rigorous bachelors degree at a university, but the numbers would end up much better in the latter case.
Lets compare two situations and which would fare better for admission into a US Allopathic school.
Situation 1:
An A ability student goes to a 4 year state school and fails in a particularly hilarious fashion, leaving college in the middle of a semester ending up with a cGPA of 1.0-2.0. This student takes a couple of years off to mature and then finishes a bachelors degree with a 3.8-4.0 GPA, but unfortunately due to the poor earlier GPA their cumulative is 2.9-3.3.
Despite completing a BS with a very good GPA, their application may not even get looked at.
Situation 2:
An A ability student goes to a 4 year state school and fails in a particularly hilarious fashion, leaving college in the middle of a semester ending up with a cGPA of 1.0-2.0 (same situation). In this case the student takes a couple of years off, but in the meantime pads their GPA with community college credits, raising their cGPA. The classes may or may not have relevance and it may be obvious the classes are not difficult.
This student then completes a bachelors degree with a 3.8-4.0 GPA but ends up with a 3.3-3.6 cGPA.
Assuming all other aspects of the application are equal in this hypothetical situation (MCAT, ECs, research, shadowing, volunteering, etc.), which one would be more favorable toward admission into a US Allopathic school?
Most of the gpa padding threads are about people that took easy classes after theyve already earned upper division credit, or are looking for classes that look good but are easy. This is a situation where the buffer classes would occur before the student appeared to enter a pre-med track. The student would still be taking the same rigorous bachelors degree at a university, but the numbers would end up much better in the latter case.