- Joined
- Jul 8, 2008
- Messages
- 1,483
- Reaction score
- 7
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- 4,551
- Medical Student
Hello, fellow nontrads. I'm one of the oldest people here (I'm 45), and one of the most diehard believers that we nontrads can make it past our obstacles and conquer the world. But, like Nanon a while back, I'm really starting to wonder whether this is ever going to work for me.
I know I was crazy to do this in the first place, leaving an established career to do this even though my old undergrad GPA is horrific due to serious family problems 25 years ago. But I went ahead anyway, because I want to be a doctor so badly. I just finished a 2-year postbacc program at school known for tough academics, and I managed a 3.6 GPA--a little lower than I was hoping for, but still respectable. (This brought my uGPA to just over 3.0.) I racked up a large amount (>500 hours) of high-quality clinical experience, and collected 5 LORs that I believe are very strong, including one from the MD who was my clinical research program director. My postbacc adviser strongly hinted that I would get a very positive committee letter from my program, and was encouraging about my chances at the schools I applied to.
The last piece of the puzzle was the MCAT. I put in a serious amount of time studying for it (2 months straight, 7 days a week), and did really well on 16 practice exams (8 AAMCs, 8 Kaplans), averaging 35: 10 PS 13 VR 11 BS. But when the real thing rolled around in July, I got an absolutely sadistic PS section and went into panic mode. I ran out of time before finishing all the questions (9 left blank), and got a 7. (Total score was 30S: 7 PS 12 VR 11 PS.) I knew walking out of there that it hadn't gone well, so I immediately started studying for a retake and took it again in August. I thought it went better the second time, but no: I got a 31S (7 PS 13 VR 11 BS). I had run out of time on PS again, but this time I was only 4 questions short; I thought that would still be enough to improve my score, but it wasn't. I can't believe I did so well on timed practice exams and so rotten on the real thing.
So after all the blood, sweat and tears I've put in over 2 1/2 years, it looks like I'm totally out of luck. Not only did I get a lousy PS score, but I got the same one twice, and I think it will be the kiss of death for my applications. I'm just in despair that everything else I can bring to the medical profession is more than likely going to be ignored because of only a couple of questions on the MCAT. (I obviously don't know exactly how I did, but if I was at the top of the score range for a 7, getting those four blank questions right could have brought my score to a 9.)
I got this bad news 3 weeks ago, and I've forced myself to complete my remaining secondaries, but it was an ordeal because I know in my gut how hopeless this probably is. I'm already starting to think about reapplying, because I know I'm most likely toast this year. But at my age, I don't have a lot of time left.
I wish I could just wake up from this nightmare into a world where med school admissions actually had something to do with people and not just their goddamn numbers.
I know I was crazy to do this in the first place, leaving an established career to do this even though my old undergrad GPA is horrific due to serious family problems 25 years ago. But I went ahead anyway, because I want to be a doctor so badly. I just finished a 2-year postbacc program at school known for tough academics, and I managed a 3.6 GPA--a little lower than I was hoping for, but still respectable. (This brought my uGPA to just over 3.0.) I racked up a large amount (>500 hours) of high-quality clinical experience, and collected 5 LORs that I believe are very strong, including one from the MD who was my clinical research program director. My postbacc adviser strongly hinted that I would get a very positive committee letter from my program, and was encouraging about my chances at the schools I applied to.
The last piece of the puzzle was the MCAT. I put in a serious amount of time studying for it (2 months straight, 7 days a week), and did really well on 16 practice exams (8 AAMCs, 8 Kaplans), averaging 35: 10 PS 13 VR 11 BS. But when the real thing rolled around in July, I got an absolutely sadistic PS section and went into panic mode. I ran out of time before finishing all the questions (9 left blank), and got a 7. (Total score was 30S: 7 PS 12 VR 11 PS.) I knew walking out of there that it hadn't gone well, so I immediately started studying for a retake and took it again in August. I thought it went better the second time, but no: I got a 31S (7 PS 13 VR 11 BS). I had run out of time on PS again, but this time I was only 4 questions short; I thought that would still be enough to improve my score, but it wasn't. I can't believe I did so well on timed practice exams and so rotten on the real thing.
So after all the blood, sweat and tears I've put in over 2 1/2 years, it looks like I'm totally out of luck. Not only did I get a lousy PS score, but I got the same one twice, and I think it will be the kiss of death for my applications. I'm just in despair that everything else I can bring to the medical profession is more than likely going to be ignored because of only a couple of questions on the MCAT. (I obviously don't know exactly how I did, but if I was at the top of the score range for a 7, getting those four blank questions right could have brought my score to a 9.)
I got this bad news 3 weeks ago, and I've forced myself to complete my remaining secondaries, but it was an ordeal because I know in my gut how hopeless this probably is. I'm already starting to think about reapplying, because I know I'm most likely toast this year. But at my age, I don't have a lot of time left.
I wish I could just wake up from this nightmare into a world where med school admissions actually had something to do with people and not just their goddamn numbers.
).
Hopefully at the same school!