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My issue is that I do not really know where I stand. All of the charts show uGPA and MCAT as predictors of success. But, I do not quite fit in to the charts. According to MCAT, I think I'm OK for a wide range of schools. But my ugrad GPA is VERY low. Then again, I have had what I think is a successful scientific career so far (for a new investigator anyway), and I know that I have overcome the issues that caused me to struggle a bit with GPA in college (all personal, not academic). So, I don't even know where to begin. How do I classify myself when trying to estimate what type of schools to apply to? I know that I will apply to:
USUHS
Univ S Carolina Columbia
Univ S Carolina Greenville
MUSC (S. Carolina)
UCentral Florida
I am interested in being in the South for family reasons, but it is not necessary.
Stats (ask if i haven't said something)
91% on new April 2015 MCAT (514 total, 130/97% ChemPhys, 129/93% CARS, 126/67% Bio, 129/93% Psych)
PhD in Chemistry from Top 10 Program
Currently a Postdoc in Chemistry at Top 3 Univ (project is focused on identifying targets to treat glioma and glioblastoma)
10 publications (6 from undergrad)
Succesfully obtained govt grant funding
3.0 cumulative/3.0 science gpa (using amcas formula) ... i know... i know...
3.5ish grad gpa (using amcas formula)
3 semesters TA experience, 1 semester professorial teaching experience
parent of two kids, ages 3 and 7
South Carolina Residency (currently living outside US)
I have shadowed a primary care doc, and am currently participating in theatre with a neurosurgeon (my current research is in oncology and i shadow the surgeries and then take the samples and process them for all of my chemistry based experiments)
i have lots of volunteer hours (which i guess i still need to quantify) in women-in-STEM oriented programs, be it tutoring, guest lecturing, mentoring, etc.
i participate in charity athletic events for the funding agency that funds my basic science research (cancer research UK)
I should have more shadowing and volunteer stuff, but honestly with single-parenting and phd and then postdocing, time and $$ have been quite tight.
neither of my parents graduated from college (mom didnt grad from HS), and we grew up under the poverty line, so i believe that i can tick that box on AMCAS.
I am applying for HPSP.
You are applying a LizzyM score as an absolute and is more predictive for a more traditional undergrad. Here we have a nontrad with a low UG but completed a PhD at a top program, which will count for much more than usual. While for most medical schools, graduate degrees, usually masters, have little value, other than an SMP, here is
1) A hard science PhD
2) Fully committed and completed a lengthy program
3) has multiple publication which in this case show a fully engaged committed professional
4) Currently is a post-doc
What this overall will say to a medical school is top-tier reinvention, fully motivated, committed, and has shown superior academic achievement. The issue wont be academic questions but motivation to leave a successful research track to clinical, which is what PS and secondaries is for.
While I wouldnt advise shooting for the stars, this OP should look well above his/her uGPA for medical schools
One question that I have more out of curiosity, though adcoms may ask a similar one - if you are so invested in all this research and just got a grant approved, what is your exit strategy there? Doesn't sound like you can just bail next August, right?
As director of the Society for Nontraditional Premedical and Medical Students, (better known as OldPreMeds) my advising portfolio is majority nontrads. In addition to the more known students simply trying to repair a poor undergraduate record with SMP and such, about 40% are successful in a field, including 10%-15% academics with advanced degrees. Though it happens every year, it still surprises me every year where I get 1 or 2 highly successful, well-known in their field academics, both natural and social sciences, who want advising for medical school.
Your problem is that the state schools in the South are very OOS unfriendly.
I suggest all DO schools, your state MD school(s), USUHS ( you're aware of the service commitment??), Oakland-B, WVU, Tulane, Western MI, and Wake Forest.
There are now DO schools (and some >1) in every state of the old Confederacy except LA and AR. But I can't recommend LUCOM.
I'm in the same boat as you, crunchywhit. Well, I'm finishing up my Ph.D instead of a post-doc and have a somewhat different set of numbers. I decided to apply broadly.
Interesting discrepancy between our adcom subject matter experts here on this applicant. Goro is reserved, while gonnif is advocating hard for them, to say the least.
Ahh, I see. Thank you Goro - that is extremely valuable information.See my profile.
If we look at Weill, Pritzker, and Pitt in the MSAR, they have a 10th percentile GPA at around 3.6. Doesn't that imply that these non-trads with very different numbers will not be particularly successful at these institutions?
This is commonly used as a heuristic, but I am uncertain how applicable it is to this type of applicant.
My issue is that I do not really know where I stand. All of the charts show uGPA and MCAT as predictors of success. But, I do not quite fit in to the charts. According to MCAT, I think I'm OK for a wide range of schools. But my ugrad GPA is VERY low. Then again, I have had what I think is a successful scientific career so far (for a new investigator anyway), and I know that I have overcome the issues that caused me to struggle a bit with GPA in college (all personal, not academic). So, I don't even know where to begin. How do I classify myself when trying to estimate what type of schools to apply to? I know that I will apply to:
USUHS
Univ S Carolina Columbia
Univ S Carolina Greenville
MUSC (S. Carolina)
UCentral Florida
I am interested in being in the South for family reasons, but it is not necessary.
Stats (ask if i haven't said something)
91% on new April 2015 MCAT (514 total, 130/97% ChemPhys, 129/93% CARS, 126/67% Bio, 129/93% Psych)
PhD in Chemistry from Top 10 Program
Currently a Postdoc in Chemistry at Top 3 Univ (project is focused on identifying targets to treat glioma and glioblastoma)
10 publications (6 from undergrad)
Succesfully obtained govt grant funding
3.0 cumulative/3.0 science gpa (using amcas formula) ... i know... i know...
3.5ish grad gpa (using amcas formula)
3 semesters TA experience, 1 semester professorial teaching experience
parent of two kids, ages 3 and 7
South Carolina Residency (currently living outside US)
I have shadowed a primary care doc, and am currently participating in theatre with a neurosurgeon (my current research is in oncology and i shadow the surgeries and then take the samples and process them for all of my chemistry based experiments)
i have lots of volunteer hours (which i guess i still need to quantify) in women-in-STEM oriented programs, be it tutoring, guest lecturing, mentoring, etc.
i participate in charity athletic events for the funding agency that funds my basic science research (cancer research UK)
I should have more shadowing and volunteer stuff, but honestly with single-parenting and phd and then postdocing, time and $$ have been quite tight.
neither of my parents graduated from college (mom didnt grad from HS), and we grew up under the poverty line, so i believe that i can tick that box on AMCAS.
I am applying for HPSP.
I agree that the discussion re abstract/presentations was really useful. I'm happy to stick around. I'm mostly a lurker... I don't post unless I feel that I am contributing useful and factual info to the conversation. Feel free to tag me and I'll be sure to comment (especially in WAMC and some of the threads which I don't frequent as regularly).Congrats on your success @crunchywhit ! Very happy to see you getting into US MD despite some setbacks and best wishes on your future endeavors! And goes to show that LizzyM scores shouldn't be used as an absolute truth.
If you don't mind, it would be helpful if you could be active on SDN for a few months and provide some insight for the other nontrads, especially in the research side of things. Our discussion in a recent thread about abstracts/presentations has been really meaningful so it would be great to have similar discussions in the future.
I agree that the discussion re abstract/presentations was really useful. I'm happy to stick around. I'm mostly a lurker... I don't post unless I feel that I am contributing useful and factual info to the conversation. Feel free to tag me and I'll be sure to comment (especially in WAMC and some of the threads which I don't frequent as regularly).
Thanks @Lawper for sharing your expertise. Also thanks @Goro (your school list was spot on) @gonnif @ChrisMack390 @OchemOficionado @Doug Underhill and any contributors I might have missed.
Best of luck to those still waiting, reapplying, etc. I'll be around!
PMing you. Any one else can PM me for details if interested. I want to be as helpful as possible but also wanted to be careful about confidentiality because I've provided so many unique identifying details. 🙂Would you mind sharing where you got interviews and acceptances? I have a somewhat similar app (numbers are a little nicer than yours but research not nearly as impressive).
Feel free to PM if you prefer, though sharing here could be nice for future underdogs.
PMing you. Any one else can PM me for details if interested. I want to be as helpful as possible but also wanted to be careful about confidentiality because I've provided so many unique identifying details. 🙂