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What about a 132/118/125/125?Agree to disagree. I will stick to my argument and note that someone w/ ~50% percentile (500) MCAT score has practically no basic scientific knowledge. Sorry.
What about a 132/118/125/125?Agree to disagree. I will stick to my argument and note that someone w/ ~50% percentile (500) MCAT score has practically no basic scientific knowledge. Sorry.
Agree to disagree. I will stick to my argument and note that someone w/ ~50% percentile (500) MCAT score has practically no basic scientific knowledge. Sorry.
What about a 132/118/125/125?
I'm going to chalk it up to a basic misunderstanding of statistics. I think they think that since the mean is 500, that 500 is the "baseline" or "0" since that's what a standard normal distribution's mean is.or what about a 118/132/132/118? apparently this person is really good at critical reading and understanding biology research, but is horrible at physics/chemistry (anxiety attack) and psychology/sociology (burnt out)
I'm going to chalk it up to a basic misunderstanding of statistics.
I think they think that since the mean is 500, that 500 is the "baseline" or "0" since that's what a standard normal distribution's mean is.
Is there a real correlation between MMI performance and clinical performance?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4475262/pdf/JCHIMP-5-27808.pdf
What exactly is this OSCE business?
Numbers are the only way to quantitatively and fairly assess applicants. I find that such "holistic review" approaches tend to run under the assumption that numbers (such as a great MCAT score) come from innate ability as opposed to sweat and hard work. And it would be damn annoying if adcoms fail to appreciate the difference between a person who gets a 500 (aka: person with literally no basic scientific knowledge or critical thinking abilities) and one with 517+ (one that worked hard to build scientific knowledge and has the brains to apply them).
Is it possible that you're presenting an outlier case as a way to defend your argument? Are you sure I am the one with the basic misunderstanding of statistics?
What I think is the following: 50% of other applicants had a better score than you, which means that relevant to other applicants, you got an 'F.'
Talking about single applicant scores (36 vs. 33), is not really useful. Yes, an individual's scores can vary a lot, but we are talking about populations here. If you have 200 people whose MCAT average is a 36, I'm comfortable saying they are generally better test takers than the same amount of people who average a 33... The difference is more like 10 questions, not 3.
Define "smarter". Is every kind of intelligence needed to be a good physician measured in the MCAT? Is there really a difference between a 510 and a 514 on the MCAT in terms of who is "smarter"? Is there a "smart enough" to succeed after which we can look at other markers of intelligence?
Define "better". If the goal is to have enough primary care providers in big cities and rural areas, should be target the smartest people in the applicant pool regardless of their interest in serving underserved communities as primary care providers? Should we choose the smartest people regardless of their ability to communicate well, demonstrate compassion for those who suffer, and work with integrity as part of a team?
People always try to say there are exceptions and there are. But someone who gets 10 more questions right is in all likelihood always going to score better than the other person no matter the test. And frankly, being a doctor is always the test. Once every month or two I come across something that I am not 100% sure what it is. I have a suspicion it might be a disease that I barely remember. I google the findings, they match up, and bam, guy has a diagnosis. Someone who scored 10 points less than me might remember the disease, but is less likely.
People always try to say there are exceptions and there are. But someone who gets 10 more questions right is in all likelihood always going to score better than the other person no matter the test. And frankly, being a doctor is always the test. Once every month or two I come across something that I am not 100% sure what it is. I have a suspicion it might be a disease that I barely remember. I google the findings, they match up, and bam, guy has a diagnosis. Someone who scored 10 points less than me might remember the disease, but is less likely.
By that logic all those docs who got into med school 10 years ago with 28's (the Harvard average was a 33...) are stupid docs compared to the medical students entering now. Comparing a 35 to a 25? Yeah the 35 is probably smarter, but a 33 vs. a 36? Absolutely not, the difference between those scores often is like 3 questions. Maybe the 36 was a physiology major and got an extra passage on hormones. Luck plays a small role at those scores.
Is there actually a correlation between mcat/step scores and misdiagnosing patients?
High MCAT scores do not make good doctors. Low MCAT scores do not make nice people. "Great" life experiences are not "great" predictors.
The one trouble with your argument, which I mostly agree with, is that somebody with a 502 score can handle medical school just as well as somebody with a 517 score.
And to be clear, I am not saying there are not other qualities needed to be a great doctor. There are plenty. I am saying that being smart which is tested by the MCAT is an important one.
I've been observing medical students, and had access to their med school applications for about 20 years. Seriously, I have not seen a difference in performance in med school between a 33 and a 36. Now between 28 and 33, yes. (the 28 almost always got in because of some "special circumstance" which was not necessarily URM status). And to be clear, I have also seen URM and "connected" applicants with 36+ MCATs.
If we need more primary care docs in rural America, we are not going to get them by choosing 4.0/40s with 2000 hours of research experience as much as it seems that such an applicant should be a shoo-in at any school to which he applies (taking into account preferences for in-state residents at some schools). But, a 3.6/506 might be a much better fit for a slot in the med school in Green Bay Wisconsin that takes only students who are committed to being primary care docs. A holistic review may find the applicant with the lower scores to be "good enough" when all it taken into consideration.
Think of it as the "Brave New World" of med ed.
Agree with your idea but you are missing the point. If we define "handling medical school" as graduating within 4 or 5 years and getting matched... then the data would suggest that these differences in scores are not as relevant. I agree that (in general) the smarter you are, the better you score, the easier time you'll have in medical school. But whether it is easy or not isn't the point, it's whether you get through and come out the other end. I know it's silly to argue semantics but in this case, I'd agree with Goro.See, I disagree on this point. They will both pass medical school. But the 517 will have a much easier time. Instead of studying as hard they can volunteer, have a life, date women, do research, and still get Sr AOA.
When that 4.0 40's kid says in their app that they want to go into primary care, do you believe them? It seems like a good number of AOA kids end up in peds and family medicine at my school. And some of the better applicants end up doing poorly in med school and go into family medicine as a result. I just think its really tough to predict what students will actually end up going into. Now, if things could get fixed in this country and primary care wasn't such a raw deal, we would have plenty of primary care docs...
When that 4.0 40's kid says in their app that they want to go into primary care, do you believe them? It seems like a good number of AOA kids end up in peds and family medicine at my school. And some of the better applicants end up doing poorly in med school and go into family medicine as a result. I just think its really tough to predict what students will actually end up going into. Now, if things could get fixed in this country and primary care wasn't such a raw deal, we would have plenty of primary care docs...
Talking the talk is easy.
We do get lots of people at interview who say that want to go do rural/underserved medicine, but if you look at their ECs...you guessed it...nothing that shows that they have walked the walk. I have a few interview questions in my bank that ferrets out people who are sincere about their wants. No, I'm not sharing.
We have some limited data that people who are from rural areas tend to want to go back to them. I also saw this when I was on faculty back in the Midwest at an MD school too.
It is interesting how some people are equating high scores with not having social skills or empathy. As in the person with a 33 is intrinsically a better person than the 37.
It is interesting how some people are equating high scores with not having social skills or empathy. As in the person with a 33 is intrinsically a better person than the 37.
Your prior post was suggesting that someone who scored lower on Step 1 will have less clinical knowledge in their field than someone who scored a few points higher. That's just nonsense. Such a score disparity could easily be attributed to luck and/or low yield material that the lower-scoring person may have not bothered to study.Do you need a double blind study to know that people who are smarter score better on tests and people that are smarter also have a better knowledge base than those who are not???? Is that really required???
It's like people say gravity must be false because there is not a study with a good enough P value to definitely prove something that is blatantly obvious.
Because often, people who are that smart tend to be lacking in other areas. Think of it as a way of skills balancing out. I dont think I've met that many super smart people who are sociable. Maybe 3-4 with lacking empathy, etc.
But you're right,correlation does not equal causation.
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Jalby's point is that there may be a correlation between the two. Doing well on a test requires staying calm and thinking on your feet, applying knowledge, thinking fast etc.I don't understand how people can associate good test taking skills to being a good physician? I'll take the guy with the 33 MCAT if he's quick on his feet when he's on the floor or in the midst of a surgery when a complication occurs. What does it matter if you're a great test taker, you crushed MCAT, you crushed Step 1, etc. but if you can't apply that knowledge quickly when *%$^ hits the fan. When i'm your patient on that hospital bed bleeding out because of a complication, you best believe I don't care about your standardized test results.. I care that you can act quickly on your feet, apply your knowledge base clinically / work with your team and SAVE my life.
Jalby's point is that there may be a correlation between the two. Doing well on a test requires staying calm and thinking on your feet, applying knowledge, thinking fast etc.
Taking a test requires you to remain calm, apply knowledge, think fast.. when you are in a nice quiet room, with nobody bothering you. No distractions.. so no, I don't think you can compare the two at all.Jalby's point is that there may be a correlation between the two. Doing well on a test requires staying calm and thinking on your feet, applying knowledge, thinking fast etc.
Because often, people who are that smart tend to be lacking in other areas. Think of it as a way of skills balancing out. I dont think I've met that many super smart people who are sociable. Maybe 3-4 with lacking empathy, etc.
But you're right,correlation does not equal causation.
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It's the every so sexy Dr.Adams, from House MD. Thirteen is actually my favorite, but she's overused. Adam is underappreciated.i was about to respond to this but your avatar knocked me out cold![]()
Well if you can't take a test, then how can you remain calm, apply knowledge, and think fast when you're not in a nice, quiet room.Taking a test requires you to remain calm, apply knowledge, think fast.. when you are in a nice quiet room, with nobody bothering you. No distractions.. so no, I don't think you can compare the two at all.
It's the every so sexy Dr.Adams, from House MD. Thirteen is actually my favorite, but she's overused. Adam is underappreciated.
Unfortunately, I do *not* look like this.
You won't , if your PS is good.I feel like you may be hanging around the wrong people because out of all of the very intelligent and accomplished people I know, only one is someone I would consider lacking empathy. Even then, he's sociable and has friends, and he has become significantly less arrogant as he's matured through college (although no, I don't think I would want him as my doctor).
Threads like this upset me because I agree that many people in these threads seem to simplify the discussion to lower MCAT score = interesting life, good person and higher MCAT score = robot, arrogant, unsympathetic. People are not one-dimensional and it does everyone a disservice to only consider these limit cases. Is it really that surprising that someone who is capable of working hard to succeed in academics is also capable of working hard to succeed in other areas of their life, whether that's leadership, sports, artistic ability, etc.? My MCAT is in the 99th percentile and during college, I have probably spent more time doing work for various volunteering organizations and working as a resident assistant than school work and research. It drives me crazy that I might have a hard time convincing adcoms that I don't have some kind of personality disorder just because I also worked hard to succeed academically.
Edit: Sorry for the rant, had a bad day.
i was about to respond to this but your avatar knocked me out cold![]()
Bro I agree. Which is why I make sure to ask my colleagues what their SAT scores were, too. Cant risk having weak links.People always try to say there are exceptions and there are. But someone who gets 10 more questions right is in all likelihood always going to score better than the other person no matter the test. And frankly, being a doctor is always the test. Once every month or two I come across something that I am not 100% sure what it is. I have a suspicion it might be a disease that I barely remember. I google the findings, they match up, and bam, guy has a diagnosis. Someone who scored 10 points less than me might remember the disease, but is less likely.
You won't , if your PS is good.
Sorry to piss you off.
And good for you! Best of luck when you apply.![]()
Did you recognize the angry man? ( hint: avatar the last Airbender).He's only my favorite character.still scarier than your previous angry man avatar. you should go back to kittens in a bowl![]()
Bro I agree. Which is why I make sure to ask my colleagues what their SAT scores were, too. Cant risk having weak links.
Because often, people who are that smart tend to be lacking in other areas. Think of it as a way of skills balancing out. I dont think I've met that many super smart people who are sociable. Maybe 3-4 with lacking empathy, etc.
Not at all but if I have a choice of 10 applicants with a 37 or the option of swapping out one of the 37s for a 33 who brings an otherwise unrepresented experience (race/ethnicity, sexual minority, first generation college student, military veteran) to the class, I've got no problem taking someone with a 33 under the circumstances.
Taking a test requires you to remain calm, apply knowledge, think fast.. when you are in a nice quiet room, with nobody bothering you. No distractions.. so no, I don't think you can compare the two at all.