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Sorry, but undergraduate GPA and MCAT scores have been HIGHLY correlated in the literature with passage of USMLE Step 1.
... I thought that was what he was referring to? All caps and all
Sorry, but undergraduate GPA and MCAT scores have been HIGHLY correlated in the literature with passage of USMLE Step 1.
Wrong. Look at the numbers. At any breakpoint of MCAT/GPA, the URM is given more a break based on his her skin color, period.
Check your race and ethnicity just as you would on the US census. List your languages just as you would if you applying for a job. Each medical school decides, based on the demographics of the population it serves with patient care, who is URM. If a school wants to count you, then it will.
The proportion of black applicants who get admitted is about equall or slightly less than the proportion of white applicants who get admitted. Ditto Hispanic and Asian applicants. For a given combination of GPA and MCAT, the more rare applicants (black & hispanic) have a better chance of being chosen than Asian or white applicants with the same numbers. The thing is, don't look at the percentages, look at the numbers. The number of URM applicants at a given GPA/MCAT are sometimes very, very small and they are highly valued in a med school class because of the diversity they lend to the student body.
/thread.
Wrong. Look at the numbers. At any breakpoint of MCAT/GPA, the URM is given more a break based on his her skin color, period.
Yes there is a strong correlation between MCAT scores and Step scores in the medical literature. No one said it is clairvoyant.Lol perhaps not to you. However, people do like to point out that there is a strong correlation between MCAT scores and step scores all the time here. I was just sharing something I found interesting.
Uh, right here: https://www.aamc.org/data/facts/app...mcat-gpa-grid-by-selected-race-ethnicity.htmlWhat numbers? Where are the valid data that would allow you to come to such a conclusion? It has been pointed out over and over again that the aggregate numbers being released by AAMC includes PR and HBUs. These schools have a clear mission to fulfill. Show me national data without these included and we'll talk.
Ok, this isn't that hard to understand. We're talking about medical school matriculation here OVERALL across the United States. HBCU med schools are already known to recruit from the Low GPA/Low MCAT pool relative to other applicants.I'm starting to think there is a reading comprehension issue going on.
Mr. Interesting mentioned that according to a study which he will try to locate the MCAT scores and step scores at HB medical schools did not show high/strong correlation. I believe his point being that they aren't as predictable for minorities or at least those at HBCs.
Now plumazul just requested stats that accounted for the fact that HBCs and PR schools are for the training of medical professions that are minorities so being that the minority applicant pool is so small to begin with, they will likely have matriculants on the lower end of the spectrum just based on the fact that they are in such small quantities. If you could locate valid and reliable studies and statistics of US medical schools excluding the HBCs and PR schools, they would serve better to prove your point of whether or not minorities get "more of a break" in different score and/or GPA brackets.
Ok, this isn't that hard to understand. We're talking about medical school matriculation here OVERALL across the United States. HBCU med schools are already known to recruit from the Low GPA/Low MCAT pool relative to other applicants.
If you look at the AAMC data, at any set GPA/MCAT threshold, the URM applicant WILL ALWAYS have a much higher % chance of getting an acceptance into an LCME accredited medical school vs. if he/she had NOT been a URM.
And again, that trend does not seem to remain as consistent at historically black medical schools surprisingly. Though not clairvoyant, the MCAT has been regarded as “the best predictor of Step 1 scores” again and again.Yes there is a strong correlation between MCAT scores and Step scores in the medical literature. No one said it is clairvoyant.
You're right. I don't find it interesting for several reasons.And again, that trend does not seem to remain as consistent at historically black medical schools surprisingly. Though not clairvoyant, the MCAT has been regarded as “the best predictor of Step 1 scores” again and again.
Here's another interesting study. Though you may not find it interesting perhaps others might.
Predicting academic performance at a predominantly black medical school.
Johnson DG, Lloyd SM Jr, Jones RF, Anderson J.
Abstract
A study was conducted by the authors that examined the validity of the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT), undergraduate grade-point average (GPA), and "competitiveness" of undergraduate college in predicting the performance of students at a predominantly black college of medicine. The performance measures used in the analysis consisted of course grades in all four years of medical school and scores on both Part I and Part II of the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) examinations. The predictive validities of the MCAT scores and undergraduate GPAs were found to be similar to those revealed in earlier studies conducted at predominantly white schools. Two exceptions to these similarities were found. First, the MCAT scores at the black school had a somewhat lower validity in predicting NBME examination scores than was the case at the other schools. Second, of the six MCAT subtest scores, Skills Analysis: Reading had the highest correlation with first-year grades, in contrast to results at the other schools. No differences between men and women were found in the validity of MCAT scores and the GPA. The competitiveness of the undergraduate college attended was found to contribute significantly to the prediction of all measures of medical school performance.
Sorry but if you look at the data: https://www.aamc.org/download/165418/data/aibvol9_no11.pdf.pdfNot really.
https://www.aamc.org/students/download/267622/data/mcatstudentselectionguide.pdf
Its a binary. You are either competent or not. The student with a 27 MCAT and 3.0 GPA has a 1.9% chance of failure.
There is only one level of baseline competency.
Yes, whites may be getting in at a higher rate. The average white person also has higher average GPA/MCAT scores compared to the average URM.My favorite part is when @DermViser ignores when I show the same data he keeps throwing around to prove that White applicants are still getting in at a higher rate overall. Or when he ignores the fact that White applicants with low stats are still being accepted to medical school.
YES, at any GPA/MCAT combo the chance of getting in as a URM is higher than for White applicants, but this is a function of quantity of applicants.
Medical school admissions are not a meritocracy - they are meant to provide physicians to the WHOLE country and, specifically at this point in time, to address healthcare disparities by training physicians that will work in underserved areas.
The data has been thrown around on here a lot, but there was an AAMC publication that showed that Black medical school graduates were 2-3X as likely to work in underserved areas than White medical school graduates.
Adcoms are simply doing their jobs. When the total amount of URM applicants is 1/2 the size of White applicants instead of 1/4 then you will see more consistent acceptance rates across the board - but we don't live in that world yet.
Yes, whites may be getting in at a higher rate. The average white person also has higher average GPA/MCAT scores compared to the average URM.
Thank you for agreeing what I have been saying all along --- at any GPA/MCAT combo, your chances of getting in are HIGHER if you're classifed as a URM, than if you were a White/Asian person.
The AAMC is also a big supporter of affirmative action as a policy so it's not really surprising that they would make that claim.
Ok, this isn't that hard to understand. We're talking about medical school matriculation here OVERALL across the United States. HBCU med schools are already known to recruit from the Low GPA/Low MCAT pool relative to other applicants.
If you look at the AAMC data, at any set GPA/MCAT threshold, the URM applicant WILL ALWAYS have a much higher % chance of getting an acceptance into an LCME accredited medical school vs. if he/she had NOT been a URM.
Yes, whites may be getting in at a higher rate. The average white person also has higher average GPA/MCAT scores compared to the average URM.
Thank you for agreeing what I have been saying all along --- at any GPA/MCAT combo, your chances of getting in are HIGHER if you're classifed as a URM, than if you were a White/Asian person.
The AAMC is also a big supporter of affirmative action as a policy so it's not really surprising that they would make that claim.
So your theory is: it's all a conspiracy.
Publications and organizations are all in this together to support this affirmative action agenda to take spots away from good, hard working White people.
It couldn't possibly be the fact that this country is in desperate need of more Black, Latino, Native American, GLBT, Veteran, or Rural doctors. Because the last 60 years of medical school admissions have obviously shown that the status quo of straight white male physicians are going to jump at the chance to work with these populations.
Come out of your idealistic, libertarian, meritocratic hole and look at the big picture. This is about fixing the health of this whole country.
My favorite part is when @DermViser ignores when I show the same data he keeps throwing around to prove that White applicants are still getting in at a higher rate overall. Or when he ignores the fact that White applicants with low stats are still being accepted to medical school.
.
I never said it's a conspiracy. Quit putting words in my mouth.So your theory is: it's all a conspiracy.
Publications and organizations are all in this together to support this affirmative action agenda to take spots away from good, hard working White people.
It couldn't possibly be the fact that this country is in desperate need of more Black, Latino, Native American, GLBT, Veteran, or Rural doctors. Because the last 60 years of medical school admissions have obviously shown that the status quo of straight white male physicians are going to jump at the chance to work with these populations.
Come out of your idealistic, libertarian, meritocratic hole and look at the big picture. This is about fixing the health of this whole country.
I never said it's a conspiracy. Quit putting words in my mouth.
The literature is quite clear regarding the correlation of undergraduate GPA and MCAT score with USMLE Step 1, which is the first hurdle one needs to get over in order to become a licensed physician. Whether admissions officers wish to follow that is another issue altogether and there are med schools that are free to disregard the literature altogether.
That being said, med school admissions officials can't talk out of both sides of their mouths of how important MCAT/GPA are in one breath, but the next moment say oh, it's not that important after all, depending on the skin color of the applicant.
Taking more URMs is not going to "fix the health" of this country as the problems run much deeper. Yet, you have the nerve to say I'm the one that's "idealistic".
And yet your rural White applicant will get nowhere NEAR the bump that your URM will get (besides medical schools that have specific rural tracks). Don't try to obfuscate the realities of the AA bump by comparing to the rural white applicant.This goes for White people from rural settings as much as it does for URMs. I have lived in rural White America and they face many of the same issues as Black and Latino communities. The more physicians from rural Kentucky or Arkansas we can get the better the country will be served as well.
This goes for White people from rural settings as much as it does for URMs. I have lived in rural White America and they face many of the same issues as Black and Latino communities. The more physicians from rural Kentucky or Arkansas we can get the better the country will be served as well.
And yet your rural White applicant will get nowhere NEAR the bump that your URM will get (besides medical schools that have specific rural tracks).
This doesn't happen though. I'm from rural Wisconsin (i.e. a town with a population <1000 in the middle of nowhere) and this really affected my upbringing. Even though I'm not very interested in rural medicine, the lack of resources, guidance, and opportunities in an environment like this set me back way behind my peers when I entered college.
Bingo.This doesn't happen though. I'm from rural Wisconsin (i.e. a town with a population <1000 in the middle of nowhere) and this really affected my upbringing. Even though I'm not very interested in rural medicine, the lack of resources, guidance, and opportunities in an environment like this set me back way behind my peers when I entered college.
That's bc they're not your social engineering experiment. URM doctors and Rural white doctors respond to incentives the same way all other doctors do. They also don't want to live in areas in which there aren't good resources both for themselves and their patients. It's why even programs with underserved obligations skedaddle once their time is up and don't stay. It's almost expected, hence why communities have to entice them with ridiculous salary offers, which even that isn't enough.Any reason you don't want to return to your community? We need more URM physicians returning to URM communities as much as we need rural physicians returning to rural communities.
That's bc they're not your social engineering experiment. URM doctors and Rural white doctors respond to incentives the same way all other doctors do. They also don't want to live in areas in which there aren't good resources both for themselves and their patients. It's why even programs with underserved obligations skedaddle once their time is up and don't stay. It's almost expected, hence why communities have to entice them with ridiculous salary offers, which even that isn't enough.
Did you apply disadvantaged or address this specifically within your personal statement?
Any reason you don't want to return to your community? We need more URM physicians returning to URM communities as much as we need rural physicians returning to rural communities.
It isn't a boost for a sake of boost, it's a boost because we need more physicians from those backgrounds. My experience has been that students from rural backgrounds who are really dedicated to serving their communities (not necessarily primary care, but rural communities need specialists too), fair pretty well when applying to medical school.
Yeah 50% of graduates SAY that at graduation. Just look at where they ACTUALLY practice, and it tells a different story. Residency does that to ya.Then why do over 50% of Black medical graduates say they plan on working in underserved areas? Are they going to go in and work for a few years and then run out of town? Some of us are actually invested in our communities and aren't simply looking to move up and out, but rather to bring the entire community up with us.
This goes for White people from rural settings as much as it does for URMs. I have lived in rural White America and they face many of the same issues as Black and Latino communities. The more physicians from rural Kentucky or Arkansas we can get the better the country will be served as well.
Funny you acknowledge they do share the same issues, yet in another minority thread, someone replied back with, "You can't relate to URMs because you fail to see being an URM is more than socioeconomic status. While many URMs do lack resources and capital, it's also about the intersectionality of being a minority in a majority white culture and the hurdles that come with that."
My response was, "Uh...I am considered a minority if you're comparing me against this "majority white culture". It seems like you only think the ethnicities that qualify to be URM are the only ones that have to overcome obstacles in today's society because they live in a "white" world. ALL minorities have their obstacles, just because they are the minority."
His/her response: "Sorry, I should clarify. I mean historically underrepresented minorities."
Really?
Specially admitted students show no higher attrition rate in school or failure of USMLE higher than non special admits, although their USMLE scores are lower. Clinical evaluations show that minority interns perform equal to ORM students.I never said it's a conspiracy. Quit putting words in my mouth.
The literature is quite clear regarding the correlation of undergraduate GPA and MCAT score with USMLE Step 1, which is the first hurdle one needs to get over in order to become a licensed physician. Whether admissions officers wish to follow that is another issue altogether and there are med schools that are free to disregard the literature altogether.
That being said, med school admissions officials can't talk out of both sides of their mouths of how important MCAT/GPA are in one breath, but the next moment say oh, it's not that important after all, depending on the skin color of the applicant.
Taking more URMs is not going to "fix the health" of this country as the problems run much deeper. Yet, you have the nerve to say I'm the one that's "idealistic".
The literature also shows that URMs disproportionately serve minorities and poorer populations.Yeah 50% of graduates SAY that at graduation. Just look at where they ACTUALLY practice, and it tells a different story. Residency does that to ya.
Please link to those studies. I am genuinely interested in seeing them.Specially admitted students show no higher attrition rate in school or failure of USMLE higher than non special admits, although their USMLE scores are lower. Clinical evaluations show that minority interns perform equal to ORM students.
Yes, URMs get in with lower stats and perhaps score lower on the USMLE. They make equally competent physicians. Is it any surprise to you that board scores do not correlate with competence? I think most attendings will agree.
This is all from the literature.
I'm just saying what the lit says. You can google it, as that's what I'd have to do to find them. I did a literature review for my "capstone" class and AA in medical school admissions was what I did. I don't have the review off hand but I can get it and post the links to sources later.Please link to those studies. I am genuinely interested in seeing them.
NO ONE has said that board scores alone are a mark of clinical competence. That being said all specialties have different matching board score averages for a reason, as Step 1 board scores are correlated with passage of specialty board exams, which are required to practice.
This goes for White people from rural settings as much as it does for URMs. I have lived in rural White America and they face many of the same issues as Black and Latino communities. The more physicians from rural Kentucky or Arkansas we can get the better the country will be served as well.
If that's then case, shouldn't family income and home address play a bigger role than race? To my knowledge they don't (correct me if I'm wrong)
A Derm resident, so yes. The work-life balance is as good as it is going to get. A lot of ridiculousness to disinfect, although that's expected in the premed forum.@DermViser
Are you really a resident? You are unusually active on these boards...just wondering. 😛 You probably just have a lot of downtime though....
There are way more questions on the AMCAS app about your upbringing (including address and community) than there are about your race/ethnicity. So I'd think they're just as interested in the "disadvantaged" as they are in the URMs, at least that's the impression I get off the app.If that's then case, shouldn't family income and home address play a bigger role than race? To my knowledge they don't (correct me if I'm wrong)
Not if you see the guy wanting to claim disadvantaged status thread. See LizzyM's response.There are way more questions on the AMCAS app about your upbringing (including address and community) than there are about your race/ethnicity. So I'd think they're just as interested in the "disadvantaged" as they are in the URMs, at least that's the impression I get off the app.
Not if you see the guy wanting to claim disadvantaged status thread. See LizzyM's response.
There is not a strong correlation. Stop it.Lol perhaps not to you. However, people do like to point out that there is a strong correlation between MCAT scores and step scores all the time here. I was just sharing something I found interesting.