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Deleted member 237747
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special master's programwhat's smp?
I have read many postings on this board saying a poor performance in SMP is the end of medical dream. So anyone failing or getting C's etc has no chance further?? Is this correct. I will imagine not everyone who gets in SMP does good, specially as most good schools curve. In my school(UMD), average of premed class is C+, this where profs think they maintained a good standard. I will think same for these high profile programs like Georgetown etc.
Not everyone does well, but everyone can do well. You aren't curved against your fellow SMP students. You are graded based on a curve of the medical students. The lowest most students get at Georgetown is a B, which is the same as "pass" for the medical students. There are a few percent who get below that, but the thing is that if you are getting a 3.0 in an SMP that isn't going to impress ADCOMS...
And yes, if you blow it in an SMP you are effectively blowing your chances at acceptance to a medical school.
I don't buy that. I'm in the NYMC SMP now. We take every M1 course except for Anatomy and behavioral. To get an A in this program you have to place within the "Honor's" portion of the med school curve for the class. That's top 10%. A 3.5 says you honored half the classes and high passed the rest. (High Pass being the next 10 - 15% down and equivalent to a B). If you just passed, I believe it would be a C. Just because you score somewhat less than this.....meaning you get a 3.4 or 3.3 does not mean you did not do well. You still did better than 70 - 75 percent of an allopathic class.
I don't buy that. I'm in the NYMC SMP now. We take every M1 course except for Anatomy and behavioral. To get an A in this program you have to place within the "Honor's" portion of the med school curve for the class. That's top 10%. A 3.5 says you honored half the classes and high passed the rest. (High Pass being the next 10 - 15% down and equivalent to a B). If you just passed, I believe it would be a C. Just because you score somewhat less than this.....meaning you get a 3.4 or 3.3 does not mean you did not do well. You still did better than 70 - 75 percent of an allopathic class.
If you just passed, I believe it would be a C.
Sorry to parse one line out of your entire post, but isn't a passing grade at the graduate/professional level a B? A C should be a failing grade.
Also, in one of my interviews (at VCU) my interviewer talked a bit about their SMP and told me that they expected their students to get A's. He said that was their only job during that year.
In my experience (and this is really just my two cents) an SMP is there to raise your GPA. If you subject yourself to another year or two of study because you have a sub-par GPA (for MD programs: somwhere around 2.8 - 3.5) and then again end up with a below-mediocre GPA, you either a) didn't improve your application or b) actually lowered your chances.
I have to say that I agree with VCU's logic. At Georgetown, at least, you take one med student class at a time (according to JD). If someone can pull off 5 or 6 As simultaneously in hardcore science classes at the undergrad level as an informal post-bacc, the adcom should be of the opinion that getting an A in a single med student course is do-able for determined students.
Sorry to parse one line out of your entire post, but isn't a passing grade at the graduate/professional level a B? A C should be a failing grade.
I have to say that I agree with VCU's logic. At Georgetown, at least, you take one med student class at a time (according to JD). If someone can pull off 5 or 6 As simultaneously in hardcore science classes at the undergrad level as an informal post-bacc, the adcom should be of the opinion that getting an A in a single med student course is do-able for determined students.
Just to throw it out there, at NYMC we take multiple M1 classes and grad classes at the same time, for example, M1 Physio, M1 Biochem, and Grad Biostats at same time. I'm not sure how the workload compares to a full undergrad schedule, but it's def. challenging.
I don't buy that. I'm in the NYMC SMP now. We take every M1 course except for Anatomy and behavioral. To get an A in this program you have to place within the "Honor's" portion of the med school curve for the class. That's top 10%. A 3.5 says you honored half the classes and high passed the rest. (High Pass being the next 10 - 15% down and equivalent to a B). If you just passed, I believe it would be a C. Just because you score somewhat less than this.....meaning you get a 3.4 or 3.3 does not mean you did not do well. You still did better than 70 - 75 percent of an allopathic class.
you're there to prove you're above average. you aren't in medical school yet. prove that you deserve to be there by being better than everyone else.