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Just wondering for those of you filling out the Wake Forest secondary - are you putting in your SAT score?? Why the hell do they need it?? Man, this school is wack!
I think that Med schools should REQUIRE HS standardized tests for their primaries too. I can't speak for the ACT, but the SAT is much more of a "raw intelligence" test then the MCAT. I don't remember EVER hearing about a single person in my HS talk about preparing for the SAT in any way whatsoever.
Originally posted by indyzx
i dont buy the "raw intelligence" argument fully, because otherwise SAT scores would not be heavily correlated to family income, as they are.
also, i think a majority of college-bound high schoolers do take the SAT seriously, more now than ever before. they may not all take courses and have tutors, but im pretty sure most dont walk into the test blind.
Originally posted by dmitrinyr
What would you assume about a student who got a 1050 on SAT and B average in High school and 3.9 GPA in college and 39 on mcat. This are not my stats (though I wish they were).
dmitri
Originally posted by mattorama
I think that Med schools should REQUIRE HS standardized tests for their primaries too. I can't speak for the ACT, but the SAT is much more of a "raw intelligence" test then the MCAT. I don't remember EVER hearing about a single person in my HS talk about preparing for the SAT in any way whatsoever. Everybody just showed up and took the test. On the other hand, people seem to spend countless hours and big $$ getting ready for the MCAT, which, despite what some claim, is more a test of info regurgitation then anything else (minus the verbal section...). Some claim the science sections are only about being able to comprehend the passages...BS. If that was true then nobody would bother studying for the exam (except the exceptionally neurotic). It seems like pure intelligence/reading comprehension could probably put someone in the high 20s without studying, but anything 30+ in general requires a lot of memorizing of trivial facts/ many practice exams.
So by including SAT scores med schools would be able to have a better idea of actual ability. I could be completely wrong here, but take this for example. Pretend student A had a 29 (didn't study until the week before the test) on his MCAT and student B (took a class, spent hundreds of hours taking practice tests and studying) had a 32. It seems to me that A's 29 is much more impressive then B's 32. But how could the med schools see this? If person A had a 1500 SAT while B had an 1100, I think the med schools would be justified in assuming that person A probably didn't study 1/10 as much for the MCAT as B (A's SAT score indicates more raw intelligence...if they had both studied just as much for the MCAT, A's score would more then likely be higher then Bs) A would then be the MUCH, MUCH better applicant (in my opinion). I don't want to hear any BS about B has a better work ethic and his dedication to studying is better then lazy As...
I know this is a crappy example, but some schools probably realize that the MCAT is a test of PREPARATION more then anything else. I personally would rather have a really, really smart doc then one of mediocre intelligence who studies all the time (okay, if I really had the choice I would take the really, really smart doc who studies all the time, but let's be real...the smartest people I know tend to be relatively lazy, while people who study non-stop tend to be less sharp). I think the really smart doc would be able to think for himself and problem solve better then the dedicated one. So while the dedicated doc is running to his books to look up an answer, the smart doc has already saved my life. Until the MCAT becomes more like the LSAT, it seems like schools really should ask for SAT/ACT scores. That's just my opinion though...for whatever that is worth.
Originally posted by mattorama
I still say that the MCAT is more closely correlated to effort put in then intelligence. The point of a standardized test is to be able to easily compare lots of different people's cognitive abilities.
In GENERAL, people with the most wealth tend to be of above average intelligence/talented because they have the top jobs (I don't care if you know someone who flunked out of HS and is making 800k/year...overall distribution is important, not outliers). So, if intelligence is largely heritable, of course the offspring of smart, wealthy people would TEND to be of above average intelligence and hence do well on the SAT. I doubt wealth plays much of a direct role at all.