- Joined
- Jun 28, 2012
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Hi All,
I'm going into my senior year of college and have been working in a lab for more than a year now. Over this past year I've been going back and forth between the two career options and would really appreciate a third party perspective.
I started out as pre-med, transferred from CC to 4 year school with ~3.5 GPA. After my first year, I haven't gotten a single A in a class other than my 199 research course (basically automatic) and probably fell to ~3.4 GPA. Over the past year I've been slowly drifting away from being pre-med for numerous reasons: want to enjoy college, want to do the things I want to do, not the things I have to do because it looks good on my CV, etc.
Most importantly though, I really like research. I love reading papers and learning about new and cool things, I love thinking of new experiments, and I love the idea of creating new knowledge.
The Caveat: I'm not very good at the execution aspect of science. Troubleshooting is so incredibly difficult and can be pretty frustrating at times. Research is something that I've always felt wasn't my strong suit, but despite the incredible struggle, I enjoy every aspect of it. Honestly when it comes to science, I feel like that kid in little league who loves the game of baseball, but just doesn't have the talent to take it to the next level.
On the other hand, while I was still pre-med I did a fair amount of shadowing and even went on an int'l medical mission trip (I know if any medical students, residents, fellows or attendings are reading this, they are probably thinking "so you mean you have no idea what it's like to be a physician). In those brief and possibly irrelevant moments, I felt so comfortable, confident, and "in my element" if you will. Patient interaction is truly unique.
Second Caveat: I hated studying just to get A's. I feel like I learn nothing and it's pretty depressing which is why I stopped after I transferred. That and I have no sense of time management, discipline, or organization skills; meaning I would get crushed in medical school.
Conclusion: I love science, research, problem-solving, but am not very confident I will be able to be a competent scientist (ala little league metaphor).
I also love medicine I love the patient aspect, I'm usually a very confident person and I feel that clinical medicine is much easier for me to grasp and take lead of than biomedical research, however, the lack of discipline and desire to do whatever it takes to get A's in school is a serious red flag for anyone considering medicine.
Any perspectives, relatable stories, etc? Is it glaringly obvious which route I should take and I simply am just not aware?
I'm going into my senior year of college and have been working in a lab for more than a year now. Over this past year I've been going back and forth between the two career options and would really appreciate a third party perspective.
I started out as pre-med, transferred from CC to 4 year school with ~3.5 GPA. After my first year, I haven't gotten a single A in a class other than my 199 research course (basically automatic) and probably fell to ~3.4 GPA. Over the past year I've been slowly drifting away from being pre-med for numerous reasons: want to enjoy college, want to do the things I want to do, not the things I have to do because it looks good on my CV, etc.
Most importantly though, I really like research. I love reading papers and learning about new and cool things, I love thinking of new experiments, and I love the idea of creating new knowledge.
The Caveat: I'm not very good at the execution aspect of science. Troubleshooting is so incredibly difficult and can be pretty frustrating at times. Research is something that I've always felt wasn't my strong suit, but despite the incredible struggle, I enjoy every aspect of it. Honestly when it comes to science, I feel like that kid in little league who loves the game of baseball, but just doesn't have the talent to take it to the next level.
On the other hand, while I was still pre-med I did a fair amount of shadowing and even went on an int'l medical mission trip (I know if any medical students, residents, fellows or attendings are reading this, they are probably thinking "so you mean you have no idea what it's like to be a physician). In those brief and possibly irrelevant moments, I felt so comfortable, confident, and "in my element" if you will. Patient interaction is truly unique.
Second Caveat: I hated studying just to get A's. I feel like I learn nothing and it's pretty depressing which is why I stopped after I transferred. That and I have no sense of time management, discipline, or organization skills; meaning I would get crushed in medical school.
Conclusion: I love science, research, problem-solving, but am not very confident I will be able to be a competent scientist (ala little league metaphor).
I also love medicine I love the patient aspect, I'm usually a very confident person and I feel that clinical medicine is much easier for me to grasp and take lead of than biomedical research, however, the lack of discipline and desire to do whatever it takes to get A's in school is a serious red flag for anyone considering medicine.
Any perspectives, relatable stories, etc? Is it glaringly obvious which route I should take and I simply am just not aware?