Freckles9
New Member
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2020
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 2
I apologize in advance if I’ve included too much in my post (this is my first one). Here is my backstory to preemptively answer some questions:
I am a pre-med student that recently graduated in May with my B.S in biomedical science. I went to a community college for financial reasons before transferring to a university my junior year, so I planned on taking 1-2 gap years instead of taking the MCAT my junior year. I worked nights throughout school, so my academics are just okay (Community college GPA was a 3.69 and university GPA was a 3.61, but I had a couple retakes that I assume will drop the GPA a little). I have a few thousand clinical hours from working EMS/at the hospital, worked as an ED scribe for job shadowing, have 3 years experience as a non-medical lab tech, and did undergrad psych research (but no publications with my name on them).
I was scheduled to take the MCAT in June, but my test date was cancelled due to COVID. To avoid another cancelled date, I decided to postpone and reschedule my new test date for the next cycle in early March (I admittedly wasn’t feeling confident about the MCAT anyway). Studying recently has been impossible with family at home full time, and I quite literally cannot go somewhere else since businesses shut down again in my state. I also live somewhere that is cold/snowy now, so studying outside/in parks is pretty much out of the question. I have been working part-time as a phlebotomist to make time for studying (which clearly isn’t going well for above reasons). I have also been looking for long term volunteering options (because I have next to none and I know I need them), but have not had much luck with business restrictions.
This week a recruiter reached out to me about a Scientist role with Pfizer pharmaceuticals in my area. I would be making significantly more money than I am right now, but I’d work long hours with a lengthy commute that would make MCAT studying pretty difficult. I am considering accepting the position to pay off my student loans and save up some money for living expenses in medical school. I’m also wondering if working in drug research as a scientist for a company that has made recent headlines for their vaccine would make my application more unique/interesting. I would also have more time to find volunteering opportunities when businesses reopen. However, the dilemma is that this would either force me to delay medical school for another 1-2 years or would require me to chip away at studying over a long period of time. The appeal to the job is evident, but I’m nervous about setting aside my dream to practice medicine.
So, my questions are: Should I accept the Scientist position and temporarily postpone medical school?
Would having this job “set my application apart” from others enough to compensate for my subpar grades? Or would I seem indecisive?
Are there any benefits to entering medical school as a non-traditional student?
I apologize for the lengthy post, but would really appreciate any advice from other individuals who faced tough decisions between working and medical school. Thank you in advance for all of the advice!
I am a pre-med student that recently graduated in May with my B.S in biomedical science. I went to a community college for financial reasons before transferring to a university my junior year, so I planned on taking 1-2 gap years instead of taking the MCAT my junior year. I worked nights throughout school, so my academics are just okay (Community college GPA was a 3.69 and university GPA was a 3.61, but I had a couple retakes that I assume will drop the GPA a little). I have a few thousand clinical hours from working EMS/at the hospital, worked as an ED scribe for job shadowing, have 3 years experience as a non-medical lab tech, and did undergrad psych research (but no publications with my name on them).
I was scheduled to take the MCAT in June, but my test date was cancelled due to COVID. To avoid another cancelled date, I decided to postpone and reschedule my new test date for the next cycle in early March (I admittedly wasn’t feeling confident about the MCAT anyway). Studying recently has been impossible with family at home full time, and I quite literally cannot go somewhere else since businesses shut down again in my state. I also live somewhere that is cold/snowy now, so studying outside/in parks is pretty much out of the question. I have been working part-time as a phlebotomist to make time for studying (which clearly isn’t going well for above reasons). I have also been looking for long term volunteering options (because I have next to none and I know I need them), but have not had much luck with business restrictions.
This week a recruiter reached out to me about a Scientist role with Pfizer pharmaceuticals in my area. I would be making significantly more money than I am right now, but I’d work long hours with a lengthy commute that would make MCAT studying pretty difficult. I am considering accepting the position to pay off my student loans and save up some money for living expenses in medical school. I’m also wondering if working in drug research as a scientist for a company that has made recent headlines for their vaccine would make my application more unique/interesting. I would also have more time to find volunteering opportunities when businesses reopen. However, the dilemma is that this would either force me to delay medical school for another 1-2 years or would require me to chip away at studying over a long period of time. The appeal to the job is evident, but I’m nervous about setting aside my dream to practice medicine.
So, my questions are: Should I accept the Scientist position and temporarily postpone medical school?
Would having this job “set my application apart” from others enough to compensate for my subpar grades? Or would I seem indecisive?
Are there any benefits to entering medical school as a non-traditional student?
I apologize for the lengthy post, but would really appreciate any advice from other individuals who faced tough decisions between working and medical school. Thank you in advance for all of the advice!