Rafa said:
The system is set up so those who spend the least time studying for things unrelated to doing well on the MCAT generally perform the best on the MCAT.
I know this probably isn't what you want to hear, but there's a reason med schools put so much emphasis on gpa and MCAT scores: they are
by far the most reliable predictors of performance in medical school and USMLE pass rates.
Medical schools invest an enormous amount of time and money in their students. They know that students who didn't smoke their relatively easy, slow-paced undergrad courses are going to struggle during the preclinical years.
Rafa said:
If you want people to learn for the sake of learning, tell AMCAS to stop making med school admissions as dependent on high GPAs and standardized test scores as they currently are. Until then, the people who zone out on non GPA-boosting/MCAT-raising material in class and study their butts off for everything else will continue to be the primary students who get to pursue medicine.
If you think spending a lot of time learning stuff irrelevant to your chosen career path will end when you get to medical school, heh, stand by for a shock.
🙂 It's usually about the 2nd year of residency training after med school that most people finally get to start learning their chosen field full time.
Most universities give students the option to take classes on a pass/fail basis, specifically to permit the kind of risk-free exploration and "learning for the sake of learning" you're talking about. Medical schools don't look down on opting to take a class here and there pass/fail, so long as there aren't a lot of them.
TheProwler said:
Actually, I think it's part of a professor's job to write LORs.
Of course it is - it's part of their job to write
honest LORs. And a letter that says words to the effect of ...
Generic Impersonal Worthless LOR said:
This slightly above average student earned a B in my introductory, lower-division science class. I've never spoken to him for more than 45 seconds at a time. I don't see any reason why he wouldn't make a good doctor. He didn't have any tattoos that would scare pediatric patients.
... isn't going to impress any adcom.
Just because a professor declines to write a LOR for you doesn't mean he's being lazy, or a jerk. It often just means he doesn't want to hurt your application and waste his time writing a weak letter.