Study Advice?

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Estragon

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Good evening. Sorry about just popping up out of nowhere, but I'm looking for some advice. I'm 31, have a middling GPA from college (3.5-3.6), and am, of course, considering medical school. Now, my question is pretty specific. I'm going to start volunteering at a local hospital soon so I'll have some real experience with which to gauge my interest. Also, if I like it, I'll plan to start working on the prerequisites (almost none of which I took the first time through) in the fall, possibly this summer. Until then, though, I'm wondering what I should do. I can study well on my own, can grasp complex topics, and enjoy teaching myself things, so I figured that before I begin taking actual courses I could just start studying on my own, which 1) gives me a heads up when it comes time to get grades and 2), more importantly, will ease me into the habit of sustained, nightly study. Does this seem like a good idea? If so, should I just invest in some bio, chem, and physics books and get started? If not, what do you recommend? Thanks so much.
 
Welcome! I was in your situation last June. I think your idea is great. I took anatomy and physiology to see if I would like it. Biology might be close, to see if you'd like it. I was fortunate in that my course was taught by an MD/phd. That being said, go on, give it a try and see how you like it. You also might want to try shadowing to see what doctors do. Good luck!
 
Good evening. Sorry about just popping up out of nowhere, but I'm looking for some advice. I'm 31, have a middling GPA from college (3.5-3.6), and am, of course, considering medical school. Now, my question is pretty specific. I'm going to start volunteering at a local hospital soon so I'll have some real experience with which to gauge my interest. Also, if I like it, I'll plan to start working on the prerequisites (almost none of which I took the first time through) in the fall, possibly this summer. Until then, though, I'm wondering what I should do. I can study well on my own, can grasp complex topics, and enjoy teaching myself things, so I figured that before I begin taking actual courses I could just start studying on my own, which 1) gives me a heads up when it comes time to get grades and 2), more importantly, will ease me into the habit of sustained, nightly study. Does this seem like a good idea? If so, should I just invest in some bio, chem, and physics books and get started? If not, what do you recommend? Thanks so much.

Here are some things I would do if I had time to kill. I think these things would either have helped my application or would help in medical school (or both).

-learn Spanish (French isn't bad either, though with about 40% of Americans being native Spanish speakers, it seems the more practical option)
-shadow physicians short term in various fields
-do more non clinical volunteering
-learn to teach other people things (this could be more volunteering as well). Much of your job as a doctor will be teaching (patients, med students, residents, less experienced attendings) and the more familiar you are with the ways that people learn, the better.
 
My advice: stop waiting for Godot. 😉 (Sorry, couldn't resist. Carry on.)
 
Welcome! I was in your situation last June. I think your idea is great. I took anatomy and physiology to see if I would like it. Biology might be close, to see if you'd like it. I was fortunate in that my course was taught by an MD/phd. That being said, go on, give it a try and see how you like it. You also might want to try shadowing to see what doctors do. Good luck!

How awesome is physiology? I can't think of any other discipline you can take in undergrad that parallels the foundations of medicine so closely. There is a reason why it's called the nobel prize in physiology OR medicine lol
 
My advice: stop waiting for Godot. 😉 (Sorry, couldn't resist. Carry on.)

That's the plan Mauberly 🙂.

Thanks for the responses! I'lll look into Physiology. I've got a Chemistry textbook I sort of inherited, so I should probably start working through that too, right? Add to those a Biology text book, and as much volunteering as I can and I should be pretty busy until I register for classes. The language idea is great too. I have a decent background in French and a less-decent background in Latin, but I've always wanted to pick up Spanish.

Vale
 
That's the plan Mauberly 🙂.

Thanks for the responses! I'lll look into Physiology. I've got a Chemistry textbook I sort of inherited, so I should probably start working through that too, right? Add to those a Biology text book, and as much volunteering as I can and I should be pretty busy until I register for classes. The language idea is great too. I have a decent background in French and a less-decent background in Latin, but I've always wanted to pick up Spanish.

Vale
Don't just volunteer, but shadow a few different specialists as well, including a primary care physician. Volunteering often does not give you nearly the same view of what doctors are actually doing as job shadowing does. :luck:
 
My major is Physiology, and I love it. I'm not taught by physicians - I'm taught by people that teach physicians. Almost everything has a clinical focus.

The only thing I don't like about it is I wouldn't feel confident getting a job with that degree if medicine doesn't work out. This doesn't matter too much to me because I already have a stable career as a software developer. But if I didn't, I'd probably choose a degree that would make it easy to land a job in demand (probably engineering).
 
My major is Physiology, and I love it. I'm not taught by physicians - I'm taught by people that teach physicians. Almost everything has a clinical focus.

The only thing I don't like about it is I wouldn't feel confident getting a job with that degree if medicine doesn't work out. This doesn't matter too much to me because I already have a stable career as a software developer. But if I didn't, I'd probably choose a degree that would make it easy to land a job in demand (probably engineering).

In demand now, but for how long?
 
-Volunteer 1x a week
-Shadow a doc every now and then... (1x 2 weeks?)
-Don't waste your time on studying anything other than the main science classes you plan on taking (chem, bio, physics, orgo)
-get review books for those. i'd start with chemistry
 
-Volunteer 1x a week
-Shadow a doc every now and then... (1x 2 weeks?)
-Don't waste your time on studying anything other than the main science classes you plan on taking (chem, bio, physics, orgo)
-get review books for those. i'd start with chemistry
Thanks. Great advice.
 
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