but isn't it worth more in grade values
EX
3.0=B in regular
3.45=B in honors (equivalent to a B+/A- in regular)
USP won't give you more than 9,000 a year which is less than 1/3 of tuition; however, athletes get up to 1/2 tuition scholarships.i dunno about scholarships, but all the 0-6 schools i looked at were insanely expensive. i didn't do the math, but i think i will be cheaper for me to go to 8 years of regular school than 6 years of 0-6.
so hopefully they have scholarships, but i doubt full ride ones. or if so, they must be very hard to get.
But do the rankings matter, seeing as they all give the same value degree?
Anyways...as of about 2 days ago, I've had a change of heart too. No more pharmacy! The D.M.D.-I think that's the dentist's degree-is where the money is ($500 a day doesn't sound bad to me!). And it's in the health field where I can still help people and live a nice life.😎
Has she not applied to EMSOP, not sure if it is a good school or not but would definetaly like your opinion.URI is not the easiest 0-6 to get into - I believe last years average was 4.1 GPA and a 1330 SAT! Of the east coast schools, I would say that MCPHS is probably the easiest 0-6 to get into (not necessarily the easiest to stay in though!). Also, ACP is now a 2+4 school although they have a conditional guarantee for students who maintain a 3.0 prepharm, interview, and take the PCAT.
My D applied to 8 schools this year, all with 0-6 or conditional guarantees. So far she's been accepted to Butler, MCPHS, USP, and Duquesne. She waitlisted for Wilkes in PA (only 80 spots for prepharm), was not accepted to PharmD at St John's, and is waiting to hear from UB and ACP. Her stats were 4.0, top 10%, 1150/1780 SAT. She had 55 hours of pharmacy shadowing experience.
My advice is to keep your grades high, study and practice for your SAT/ACT (she didn't!), and apply early to the 0-6 programs, particularly those with rolling admissions! Good luck!