I know you don't have a 4.0, and have a chip on your shoulder about it. I bet half of SDN know by this point. You've made a ton of comments about how a WUSTL GPA should be +.6 relative to normal schools too. In the end you're not going to change the system before you apply, and that's something you'll come to accept.
I think we fundamentally disagree on a lot of things, but I think you'll be surprised at how little undergrad rep matters relative to GPA/MCAT/life story/clinical/research.
You made a thread about this very topic: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/thr...ious-undergrad-gpa-bump-really-exist.1102400/ which had pretty much everyone (adcoms, attending physicians, people that went to top 5 undergrads etc.) tell you that the bump, if there even is one (talking about top 5, not top 25) is minimal.
If you want to believe that schools care, great...but a more likely situation is that those that manage to get into harvard undergrad, also manage to get into top medical schools because they're good applicants.
For what it's worth I do agree with you. Some compensation should be present, but all evidence suggests at best that the compensation is far from adequate to make up for the discrepancy with rigor. You can deny it, you can complain, or you can accept this fact.
I think we fundamentally disagree on a lot of things, but I think you'll be surprised at how little undergrad rep matters relative to GPA/MCAT/life story/clinical/research.
You made a thread about this very topic: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/thr...ious-undergrad-gpa-bump-really-exist.1102400/ which had pretty much everyone (adcoms, attending physicians, people that went to top 5 undergrads etc.) tell you that the bump, if there even is one (talking about top 5, not top 25) is minimal.
If you want to believe that schools care, great...but a more likely situation is that those that manage to get into harvard undergrad, also manage to get into top medical schools because they're good applicants.
For what it's worth I do agree with you. Some compensation should be present, but all evidence suggests at best that the compensation is far from adequate to make up for the discrepancy with rigor. You can deny it, you can complain, or you can accept this fact.