Note: Longish post, summary of questions at the bottom.
Since my searches are pulling up way too many results, I thought I would start a thread (Note: I have done a fair amount of reading about post-bacc options, etc. and I did search before posting this).
I am looking at my options for making the career change to medicine. Currently I am a lawyer and for a million reasons it isn't for me and for another million reasons I want to be a doctor. Making this shift is going to be hard (stressful financially, on my family, etc.) but I think we are up for the task. Having read about my different paths I can take I think a formal post bacc. is what would work best for my personality and situation.
That being said I have been looking at some of the more prominent post bacc programs (Goucher, Bryn Mawr, et al) for information/inspiration and have come away with one nagging question.
Many of the formal programs make a note that you can't apply/won't be considered as a candidate if you have had previous science courses. As an undergrad (10-11 years ago) I took Chem II (AP'd out of Chem I) and Bio I & II. I sent emails to the various post bacc programs asking if I could still apply even though I had taken these science classes. They said to email my undergraduate institution about it, my undergraduate institution won't talk to me unless I attend a "pre-med advising" meeting with ~300 other premed students (I now like 2500 miles away from my undergrad institution), so I can't get a straight answer about whether my 10 year old science credits will prevent admission to the formal programs.
Also, I took some unrelated science classes (Ecology) as a Law Student - would those classes prevent me from applying? (These were more recent, 5 years ago or so)
Thanks for any advice.
/mf
Summary:
Can I still apply to/be accepted to one of the formal post bacc programs if I have taken some of the required science classes (Chem II, Bio I & II) 10 years ago as an undergrad?
Will unrelated graduate science courses (Ecology) prevent me from applying (taken more recently, ~5 years ago)?
Since my searches are pulling up way too many results, I thought I would start a thread (Note: I have done a fair amount of reading about post-bacc options, etc. and I did search before posting this).
I am looking at my options for making the career change to medicine. Currently I am a lawyer and for a million reasons it isn't for me and for another million reasons I want to be a doctor. Making this shift is going to be hard (stressful financially, on my family, etc.) but I think we are up for the task. Having read about my different paths I can take I think a formal post bacc. is what would work best for my personality and situation.
That being said I have been looking at some of the more prominent post bacc programs (Goucher, Bryn Mawr, et al) for information/inspiration and have come away with one nagging question.
Many of the formal programs make a note that you can't apply/won't be considered as a candidate if you have had previous science courses. As an undergrad (10-11 years ago) I took Chem II (AP'd out of Chem I) and Bio I & II. I sent emails to the various post bacc programs asking if I could still apply even though I had taken these science classes. They said to email my undergraduate institution about it, my undergraduate institution won't talk to me unless I attend a "pre-med advising" meeting with ~300 other premed students (I now like 2500 miles away from my undergrad institution), so I can't get a straight answer about whether my 10 year old science credits will prevent admission to the formal programs.
Also, I took some unrelated science classes (Ecology) as a Law Student - would those classes prevent me from applying? (These were more recent, 5 years ago or so)
Thanks for any advice.
/mf
Summary:
Can I still apply to/be accepted to one of the formal post bacc programs if I have taken some of the required science classes (Chem II, Bio I & II) 10 years ago as an undergrad?
Will unrelated graduate science courses (Ecology) prevent me from applying (taken more recently, ~5 years ago)?