You are way too hung up on prestige. First, if you get accepted to medical school "even at places like OSU and Cinci", you should consider yourself extremely fortunate. In fact if you go to med school at Toledo, NeoCom or Wright State, about 30,000 people would happily take your place.
Furthermore, medical school admissions committee staff don't have the time, data or inclination to handicap/normalize/adjust the 10,000 or so transcripts they see every year at most schools. Even if you go to Toledo or Cleveland State as an undergraduate, med schools aren't going to tattoo "dimwit" on you forehead.
I presume you are an Ohio resident. You should know that in the last reported medical school class the average MCAT score for Ohio residents was 511.1. If you have a 4.0 and a 510, have competitive ECs and interview with enthusiasm and humility, you will most likely get yourself admitted to 2 or 3 state schools in Ohio. See this.
2020_FACTS_Table_A-20.xlsx (aamc.org)
Good luck.
You know, I heard this a lot when I was deciding where to attend UG, and then, when I jumped into the weeds after getting serious about med school, it's turning out it's not exactly true.
It turns out that there
are around 20 or so UGs med schools do value above all others, and it doesn't take much time at all to figure out which schools those are. The big question is just how big of a boost they confer, and whether the relationship is cause or correlation, but there is no question a relationship is there.
"Too hung up" on prestige is always open for debate, but, denying the value of prestige in a process in which 30,000 people are anxiously awaiting the opportunity to take someone's place is at least a little naive, if not outright misleading. As awesome as it might be for the majority of applicants to have the opportunity to attend Toledo, NeoCom or Wright State, do they really produce the same results as Harvard, Stanford and Hopkins? If not, maybe prestige has at least some value after all.
🙂 How else would you explain a 3.7/510 from Princeton having better luck in this process than someone coming out of Cleveland State with the same stats?
I honestly don't know if I would have done things differently if I knew then what I know now, but, as I nervously enter the process, I don't doubt the increased value of a T20 UG over a T500, all else being equal. There is no shortage of people with excellent stats and impressive experiences applying from T20 schools.
In an environment in which no one has "the time, data or inclination to handicap/normalize/adjust the 10,000 or so transcripts they see every year at most schools," it is hard to deny the benefit of having a transcript from one of 20 or so well known, name brand, prestigious institutions. I really hope you are right, but I fear you are not.