None of the Scottish schools currently offer a shortened graduate entry course (4 year) although graduates may apply for their 5/6 year undergraduate courses. Edinburgh and Glasgow have the highest number of applications. St Andrews is a pre-clinical school only- you have to transfer to do your clinical studies elsewhere (nearly all go on to Manchester in England).scooter31 said:Yeah I wont be considered an EU student, and I know that some of the schools only accept intl students from nations without their own med schools, so I know the odds are already stacked against me. I was just curious to see if anyone had gone through the application process and has even matriculated at any of the unis out there. I am looking more at the graduate entry places, though may consider the 6 year programs (if eligible for them that is). Thanks guys for the input thus far
kenniemd said:I have a friend who goes to med school at University of Dundee. If you have a Bachelor's from here, I think you'd be very competitive. Most of their applicants are high school grads (with A levels). To practice here after that, you'd have to go thru the motions of a foreign grad
scooter31 said:Anyone have any insight on these schools? I am originally from there, and am looking more and more to possibly getting my medical education back in Bonnie. Searching SDN and the respective school web pages doesnt come up with a whole lot :/ 👍
Scottish Chap said:Scooter,
I grew up in Scotland and did my undergraduate work in Edinburgh. I moved to the U.S. five years ago and I'm about to start medical school here. I'm very familiar with both systems and all the Scottish schools. Feel free to PM me if you need info.
SC