- Joined
- Feb 23, 2007
- Messages
- 80
- Reaction score
- 0
Should you study courses like histology, iimmunology, or genetics to get ready for med school even though they are not a requirement?
Should you study courses like histology, iimmunology, or genetics to get ready for med school even though they are not a requirement?
Only if you're interested in them prior to medical school. You don't "need" this leg up to do well first year. I've known plenty of English and Business majors who do just fine without this kind of prep.
Agreed. Med school will teach you all you need to know, and then some. I really can't think of a bigger waste of time than trying to get ahead on histo. This is absolutely the kind of class you want to learn once, and even then only for a very brief period of time.
It's natural to want to try to get ahead. But it's usually a waste of time. And once you get to med school, you will see that the trying to get ahead you did in undergrad most frequently was the equivalent of playing Pop Warner Football to try to prepare for Spring Training tryouts for the NFL. It's just not worth the aggravation. Spend your credits taking something you will never get a chance to take again, not something you are going to take again at a whole new level.
Should you study courses like histology, iimmunology, or genetics to get ready for med school even though they are not a requirement?
Focusing on immunology would be a great head start for med school.
I took Anatomy and Physiology 2nd year and don't remember anything...waste of time IMO.
Should you study courses like histology, iimmunology, or genetics to get ready for med school even though they are not a requirement?
I would also think that medical students in general are notorious for talking up how hard medical school actually is. The subtext here is plain.... "look how smart I am, I'm doing this thing that's really hard, soooo much harder than undergrad, nothing can compare to it." While I'm not about to say that medical school isn't going to be challenging, to say there is no overlap between an undergrad vs. a medical school science class screams exaggeration to me. I'd take it with a grain of salt.
Now, I understand that I'm "just a pre-med" and have broken the fourth wall on this one. Let the flames begin....
With that said, in my class, people who had ONE biochem course in undergrad even 4 years ago are having a much easier time than those that had none before. Students who had histo study the night before the quiz and a couple of days before the exam, my studying is much more than that (never had it). IMHO, having immunology, anatomy.... etc will make med school somewhat easier.
I would also think that medical students in general are notorious for talking up how hard medical school actually is. The subtext here is plain.... "look how smart I am, I'm doing this thing that's really hard, soooo much harder than undergrad, nothing can compare to it." While I'm not about to say that medical school isn't going to be challenging, to say there is no overlap between an undergrad vs. a medical school science class screams exaggeration to me. I'd take it with a grain of salt.
Now, I understand that I'm "just a pre-med" and have broken the fourth wall on this one. Let the flames begin....
I would also think that medical students in general are notorious for talking up how hard medical school actually is. The subtext here is plain.... "look how smart I am, I'm doing this thing that's really hard, soooo much harder than undergrad, nothing can compare to it." While I'm not about to say that medical school isn't going to be challenging, to say there is no overlap between an undergrad vs. a medical school science class screams exaggeration to me. I'd take it with a grain of salt.
Now, I understand that I'm "just a pre-med" and have broken the fourth wall on this one. Let the flames begin....
It's an exaggeration to me too. My classmates who had anatomy in undergrad were much more relaxed than I was during anatomy. Same with histo. In biochem, the first 3 units (out of 5 units total) that we covered in med school were even SIMPLER than what my ONE biochem course of undergrad contained. I was not a biochem major either.
Congratulations for saying that you already know what med school is like, without having spent a day in it. I wish I had your keen sense prediction! 🙄 I suggest that you demonstrate your amazing ability to predict your resident's future when you are a lowly MS-1. (If you get into med school, that is.) I'm not as good at predicting the future as YOU are, but I can guarantee that they will LOVE that!!!
(Hey, you asked for it. It may "just be an opinion," but it doesn't mean that you need to share it, particularly if you KNOW that it is not necessarily well-informed or likely to get people riled up. Just a tip for MS-3, when you're on your surgery rotation.)
Seriously - there's some overlap, but, in many cases, not enough to make it worthwhile. Actually, the material in med school isn't that hard - but when you get 5 hours of it thrown at you, and you know that you'll have another 5 hours thrown at you the next day, that's when it can get challenging.
Clearly, medical students get so much mileage from the "med school is so hard," line that it is becomes hard to swallow at times. "If" I get into medical school, obviously I'll see for myself, but chastising the ignorant pre-meds is probably a past time I'll be giving a pass.
Wait till med school. You will have a very different perspective. Maybe 10% of stuff you do in undergrad will be helpful if you still remember it, while 90% won't. So it's just not worth trying to get ahead. Do the prereqs and you are set.
It is questionable how much "mileage" I could get from that "med school is so hard" line when there are many people (pre-meds and non-pre-meds alike) who are so willing to tell me "Oh, pssh - I'm sure it's not that bad." I get much less sympathy than you would think.
Everyone says that residency is hard, too. Everyone says that the surgery rotation and the OB/gyn rotation are hard as well. I suppose that they're wrong?
I sincerely hope that you find that med school is easy. Many of us here do not.
Sorry if you felt like I was "chastising" you for demonstrating your ignorance so openly. The first two years of med school WERE hard for me, and sorry if I get p!ssed when someone tells me that I "exaggerated" how hard it was. Trust me - you do not want to hear the somatic evidence of how bad med school was for me at times.
I do not doubt that this stuff is difficult and never claimed to believe it would be easy for me. The only "exaggeration" I mentioned might be happening is with the claim of zero relevance of undergrad science classes to med school classes. I'm sure that each stage of the process has its difficulties and challenges.
So I suppose the consensus is that I'm going to get owned because I dared to question the irrelevance of undergrad science courses. Perhaps I won't even get into medical school at all, as I'm clearly too cheeky. Maybe you're right. We'll just have to see.
If nothing else you will be familiar with the nomenclature and general organization of how the course has been traditionally taught.
I'm SO glad I took undergrad biochemistry - it helped me so much in med school! Not that I didn't know people who did fine without biochem, but in my MS-I biochem/moledcular genetics class we covered an entire semester of undergrad biochem in about four weeks. I was glad I had seen it before.I find that a lot of med students say "I wish I had taken......it would've made life so much easier!" but I've never heard anyone say "I'm SO glad I took.....it has helped me so much in med school!"
Take astronomy. Enjoy college.Or do I take Astronomy? Note that I think I would probably enjoy both classes, but astronomy is a 100 level course, and neuro, again, is grad level. Thanks for opinions.
Clearly, ignorance is bliss. 😉 Come back in a few years and see what you thought.Clearly, medical students get so much mileage from the "med school is so hard," line that it is becomes hard to swallow at times.
From a graduating 4th year medical student: Don't do anything in undergraduate specifically to get into, or to get a leg up on medical school. Do things you enjoy. If you do that you will more likely be successful at them, and stay involved with them. Use electives in college to learn about things you may never get the chance to learn about again (philosophy, theology, geophysics, under-water basket weaving, whatever works for you). I do some interviews and I can always tell things people have done just to get into medical school. It's listed on their application but they have no resolve about it. Or it's a class they took and ended up getting a B in it because it was torture. If you are smart enough, work hard enough, you will get into medical school and excel. And if you happen to be fortunate to have somethign else that makes you shine (like being an athlete, musician, etc.) you are going to look even better on an interview. Plus that interesting class you took may be what people want to talk about on an interview. It may shed some light on your depth as an individual. No one wants to talk histology on an interview.
If you look at the beginning of his/her post, it addresses that:I think this is good advice, but what if what we enjoy about school relates directly to medicine and the like?
Don't do anything in undergraduate specifically to get into, or to get a leg up on medical school. Do things you enjoy
So, are some of trying to tell us that even though specific classes won't help us very much, that perhaps taking 5 to 7 hrs of classes per day would be a good idea? You know, just to get us accustomed to the grind?![]()