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From your experience/opinions do you think that doing research or not doing research in undergrad plays a large roll in medical school acceptances? Thanks!!
So do you think that the other 30% would be looked down upon for not doing research?I think it is one of those things that is functionally a requirement because so many matriculants have it. I can't remember the exact number, but I think it was in the neighborhood of about 70%.
So do you think that the other 30% would be looked down upon for not doing research?
From your experience/opinions do you think that doing research or not doing research in undergrad plays a large roll in medical school acceptances? Thanks!!
I have heard it really depends on the school you apply to. For example, my school has SEVERAL research buildings and institutes. Therefore, academic medicine is a priority at my universities medical school. Ive heard of people getting rejected because they simply didnt do enough research.From your experience/opinions do you think that doing research or not doing research in undergrad plays a large roll in medical school acceptances? Thanks!!
I have a question for any adcoms here, is research with no pubs/posters worth putting on your app?
I have a question for any adcoms here, is research with no pubs/posters worth putting on your app?
This. I did organic research a bit (nothing much because I never took organic at that point), but I learned that I would hate it. Nothing fascinated me about it and I would never see myself doing it if I didn't go to medical school. So I switched to a neuroscience lab and loved it. I almost considered taking the GRE and getting a PhD in Neuroscience.I think research provided the research is meaningful to the university, science in general, and, most importantly, you as a student is instrumental into being accepted into a research-focused medical school. It shows that you can do a very important part of your future profession A) Well and B) With gusto.
I definitely don't think it's necessary but I do tell all underclassmen to give it a shot if they are pre-med because, just like shadowing, it shows you a different world you have probably never encountered before and it is a serious part of medicine. If it is not your cup of tea, you know that, and you don't do it then I don't think it'll be the one thing that keeps you from getting into medical school. If you have an otherwise competitive application then you should be just fine. The number of schools where research is an important part of having a competitive application to begin with is small compared to the total number of US MD/DO.
Not an adcom. But the answer is yes, unless you have 15 other amazing activities crowding it out.I have a question for any adcoms here, is research with no pubs/posters worth putting on your app?