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Maybe. I just read through that thread and came across this post which kind of supports that - there was as much rise in average LizzyM score between 2007 and 2009 as there was between 2009 and 2017 (about 1 point both times).I think it was 2006 data. Maybe that huge jump happened over just a couple years?
It would not be that difficult to get more data points for the top schools to see the trend, but I can definitely say one thing - the MCAT numbers we're talking about today are not significantly different than what we were talking about on this same forum in 2008-2009. At least not for the top ~25 schools.
I actually have a copy of a spreadsheet that contains all the data from the 2008 MSAR still if you want to look at it. Just the top part (sorted by MCAT score), with school name, overall GPA average, and MCAT average as an example.
Washington U | 3.9 | 38 |
Stanford | 3.8 | 37 |
Northwestern | 3.8 | 37 |
Johns Hopkins | 3.9 | 37 |
Harvard | 3.9 | 37 |
U of Michigan | 3.8 | 37 |
Duke | 3.8 | 37 |
USC | 3.7 | 35 |
UCSD | 3.8 | 35 |
UCSF | 3.8 | 35 |
Yale | 3.8 | 35 |
Emory | 3.8 | 35 |
U of Chicago | 3.8 | 35 |
Dartmouth | 3.8 | 35 |
Columbia | 3.8 | 35 |
Cornell | 3.8 | 35 |
Mt. Sinai | 3.8 | 35 |
NYU | 3.8 | 35 |
Case Western | 3.7 | 35 |
Ohio State | 3.8 | 35 |
U of Pennsylvania | 3.8 | 35 |
U of Pittsburgh | 3.8 | 35 |
Brown | 3.8 | 35 |
Vanderbilt | 3.8 | 35 |
Baylor | 3.9 | 35 |