

I hope this isn't true. Because here I am in Gen Chem 2...
If you're aiming for "Top Schools," which on SDN means the T-20s that are research-oriented, do you think you could fit in 2+ years of research so as to appeal to those schools? Those schools also like to see leadership roles; their mission statements often state that they aim to train future leaders in medicine. You'd need to get in a substantive experience to cover that expectation as well, besides the usual and customary clinical experience, shadowing, and nonmedical community service. Planning on an extra year might be your best option to fit everything in and have a nicely meaty application.I'm starting sophomore year and I was hoping to apply the year of graduation. My current GPA is 3.9+.
And I'm here in Orgo... 🙁I hope this isn't true. Because here I am in Gen Chem 2...
I just mean I hope medical schools don't look down on summer prerequisite classes, because I'm currently taking Gen Chem 2 and it's Summer. I also plan to finish the rest of the prerequisites ASAP, even if that means another summer session.Could you clarify?
And I'm here in Orgo... 🙁
I just mean I hope medical schools don't look down on summer prerequisite classes, because I'm currently taking Gen Chem 2 and it's Summer. I also plan to finish the rest of the prerequisites ASAP, even if that means another summer session.
Depending on your goals for where you want to attend, I think you should be fine. Honestly, I'd make the argument that Summer sessions are more intense and show the ability to handle increased workloads. But that of course is relative to what institution you're at.
Medical schools only really look down on summer prereqs when they are used to protect GPA and/or used too often.
What about 3-5? How many is too many, if I'm taking all of them at my home institution?
1) It's the Research you've already accomplished at the time of application that will matter, and not what you project forward to the next year. And total time is less an issue as how much creative control you had in the most recent project. Adcomms would like to see a progression of learned skills, more responsibility, problem solving, and then proposing your own ideas and moving forward with them. Some applicants won't get that far with even 4 years in the same lab, where they just follow someone else's protocols. Resulting Posters/Prsentations are a good thing. Publications are icing on the cake and relatively rare for a med school applicant.1) I'll most likely have 2.5 years of research if I graduate in my expected year, but I'm not sure that's enough.
2) I'm in a good variety of clubs and can probably make exec positions for some; I'm not sure what other leadership experience would be expected?
3) I already chose my majors before I decided to go pre-med, and fulfilling those requirements pushes out space for med school courses.
True, I'm taking them at my university/same professors/same curves, but I feel like I'm screwing myself over.If the rest of your application is strong, you both have nothing to worry about.
If your transcript is filled with B's and C's in science prereqs, and the only ones that are A's are coming from your community college summer adventures... Then you actually should have some concern.
Medical schools only really look down on summer prereqs when they are used to protect GPA and/or used too often.
tl;dr One or two summer prereqs won't kill you