Vet School Consideration

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roscar

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  1. Pre-Occupational Therapy
My first two years of college, I had to work full time and I took 15-18 class hours each semester (I worked due to my parents lack of financial support). Now that I'm a junior, I have just now been able to take out a loan (didn't qualify when I started school and my parents refused to fill out the FASFA). I have since done significantly better (3.7 last semester). My GPA suffered tremendously, I have a 2.6 overall. Also, many of my prerequisites weren't complete, so I will have a strong GPA in those classes. I attend LSU and they calculated just a prerequisite GPA and last 45 hour GPA.
Are there any other vet schools that don't consider the entire GPA? And also, would a vet school take into consideration my personal situation and not judge my overall GPA so harshly?

Thanks for you help( sorry I was so long winded) !
 
My first two years of college, I had to work full time and I took 15-18 class hours each semester (I worked due to my parents lack of financial support). Now that I'm a junior, I have just now been able to take out a loan (didn't qualify when I started school and my parents refused to fill out the FASFA). I have since done significantly better (3.7 last semester). My GPA suffered tremendously, I have a 2.6 overall. Also, many of my prerequisites weren't complete, so I will have a strong GPA in those classes. I attend LSU and they calculated just a prerequisite GPA and last 45 hour GPA.
Are there any other vet schools that don't consider the entire GPA? And also, would a vet school take into consideration my personal situation and not judge my overall GPA so harshly?

Thanks for you help( sorry I was so long winded) !


Minnesota, I believe. Not sure about others, can't remember.

And thats what the "explanation" section on VMCAS is for. I'd try to get as close to a 3.0 as you can overall. Some schools won't even look at an application that has less than a certain GPA overall. The cutoff is usually a 2.75, or a 3.0/3.2 for certain state schools (when applying as out of state)
 
You can check out the "Sucessful Applicant Stats" thread and see what schools people got into that had lower GPAs. I know that there were some people who definitely had less than 3.0s and still got in.
 
WSU has an interesting system where if you get an amazing GRE, it'll take over for your GPA-- look it up as they do a better job of explaining it than I can.
 
NCSU requires a 3.4 for OOS, but has alternative eligibility. As long as you can excel in your last two years, you could get in under it. I had the same situaion (worked FT + a PT all 4 years) and I got in with a 3.35 with improvement each year, a ten year gap, then a year of 4.0 science GPA (which raised my overall 0.04.)
 
NCSU requires a 3.4 for OOS, but has alternative eligibility. As long as you can excel in your last two years, you could get in under it. I had the same situaion (worked FT + a PT all 4 years) and I got in with a 3.35 with improvement each year, a ten year gap, then a year of 4.0 science GPA (which raised my overall 0.04.)

You are IS though, aren't you?
 
You are IS though, aren't you?

It was hotly debated during my application. I hadn't lived in the state for more than 1 year at the time of app reviews/acceptances, but did by the time of admissions. Clear as mud! I was told to apply as OOS, and went through the OOS weeding process. After IS/OOS weeding (prereqs, hours, GPA, GRE) I was moved to the IS category. Partly because, if I was accepted, by NCSU's rules, IS is by admissions status (not application.) So, initial reviesw=OOS, selection = IS.
 
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