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Hi All,
Quick backstory: I'm currently in my 1st year of a 2-year Master's at a well-established DO school. I'm going to apply to medical schools (mostly DO, a few MD) as soon as the applications come out this coming spring. I took the MCAT once to get into Master's programs, knowing I'd likely retake, and got a 505 (124/127/125/129).
I know I could score much higher on the MCAT in chem/physics/bio/biochem after taking this year of natural science courses, however, I'd also really want time after my courses are over to prepare for the exam. And I need to put 100% of my focus during the school year into my coursework because I'm trying to make up for a (very) low undergrad science GPA.
My question is, what would be the latest possible take that I could retake the test? My program ends the very beginning of June. Ideally I'd study over the summer and take the MCAT in August, but I'm hearing April is really the latest date to be safe. Would July be acceptable, or is that still too late?
Thanks, guys!
Thank you for your helpful responses! I want to retake because yes, my uGPA is ungodly low. 2.9 overall, ~2.1 sGPA, ~3.7 non-science GPA. I think the only sort of excusable part is that it was from an Ivy that didn't grade inflate (i.e. STEM classes sometimes curved to 2.7, D's were passing and school encouraged not to retake, etc). I also graduated a semester early, but not on purpose. I just crammed too many classes in too soon. Was basically done Junior year.
I'm doing well in my graduate program so far, but no matter how well I do I won't bring it up to an acceptable range; hence the kinda-making-up-for-it-with-the-MCAT plan. If it matters, I have extensive research experience including one or two potential publications, plenty of volunteer work, (hopefully) excellent recommendations, etc. GPA is the main issue, here.
@austintr It looks like there are only late July exams available-- 7/21, 7/22, 7/27, and 7/28. If I took it on the 21st, do you think that would be acceptable? Thanks again.
Your MCAT is solid. Your GPA is the problem. What makes you think that retaking the MCAT is the best route to take here?Thank you for your helpful responses! I want to retake because yes, my uGPA is ungodly low. 2.9 overall, ~2.1 sGPA, ~3.7 non-science GPA. I think the only sort of excusable part is that it was from an Ivy that didn't grade inflate (i.e. STEM classes sometimes curved to 2.7, D's were passing and school encouraged not to retake, etc). I also graduated a semester early, but not on purpose. I just crammed too many classes in too soon. Was basically done Junior year.
I'm doing well in my graduate program so far, but no matter how well I do I won't bring it up to an acceptable range; hence the kinda-making-up-for-it-with-the-MCAT plan. If it matters, I have extensive research experience including one or two potential publications, plenty of volunteer work, (hopefully) excellent recommendations, etc. GPA is the main issue, here.
@austintr It looks like there are only late July exams available-- 7/21, 7/22, 7/27, and 7/28. If I took it on the 21st, do you think that would be acceptable? Thanks again.
I do. This is why I'm bringing up my sGPA at a competitive osteopathic institution.
what are the usual auto screens and filters for cutoffs of cGPA and sGPA for most DO schools?I think you may be missing the point that this will not in anyway effect your uGPA. gGPA is not factored into your undergraduate grades and therefore you would still be susceptible to auto screens and filters. Thus the advice to retake undergrad science courses to take advantage of grade replacement policy by DO institutions.
With that being said I think performing exceptionally well in this graduate program is absolutely essential. If you don't, then I think your chances may move to nonexistent.
Good luck in your path!
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oh boy my sGPA is around 3.19, just under some cutoffs (cGPA 3.49). By the way, what is that website called to look up the cutoffs? I google CIB but a lot of random links came up. Thank you for the help.It is advisable that both should be >3.0 however I do believe there are some schools with a 3.25 cutoff. Therefore most will say that to really increase your chances both gpa's should ideally be >3.3. I recommend looking at the CIB online so you can see what they are for each school specifically and then target your application to the ones where you meet the cutoffs.
oh boy my sGPA is around 3.19, just under some cutoffs (cGPA 3.49). By the way, what is that website called to look up the cutoffs? I google CIB but a lot of random links came up. Thank you for the help.
gotcha, its good to know that the cutoff isn't absolute ("hard") and they will still look at you application. Thank you for the link!http://www.aacom.org/news-and-events/publications/cib
There's the link to the CIB...it has lots of info in it, essentially a compilation of what is available on schools' individual sites. I wouldn't worry much about that sGPA being below cutoffs, because most schools that have a cutoff of 3.25 don't follow a "hard" rule if aspects of your application make up for it. For example, a cGPA of 3.5 may make up for a sGPA of 3.2, or a 510 MCAT may make up for a lower GPA. KCU for instance screens for 3.25/3.25/500, but people have been accepted (recently) with lower stats in one area.
gotcha, its good to know that the cutoff isn't absolute ("hard") and they will still look at you application. Thank you for the link!
gotcha, currently sitting at 3.19 sgpa and 3.49 cgpa. taking the mcat in april. thank you for the info, I will try to bring these numbers up before I apply.But you better have two other things that make up for the bad one. You can't just have a 3.1/3.1/ 510 you will need something like a 3.6/3.2/510. The one that's lower can't be that much below the cutoff.
The CUSOM 3.2 GPA (both) cutoff though is hard, no exceptions. (The 3.25 cutoff is for KCU)