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I have normal ECs with Do shadowing, research and volunteering.
my gpa had a trend with a 3.9 my freshman year, 2.9 sophomore from family problems and a 4.0 my junior yr..but the overalls are:
Non-Science
3.82
Science
3.42
Cumulative
3.57
I scored a 19 on my first practice test (AAMC #3) so technically its not my mcat but its the only one I can base it off for right now. Let's just say i end up with a 19 or 20 on the real thing on aug 19th will I get into any DO school. I sent my primary to literally every school in the US. I'm from TX so maybe TCOM will? idk..
that's what i'm here for.Thanks man that just inspired me 🙂
that's what i'm here for.
How much have you studied for the MCAT? A 19 would be pretty low....24 is the 50 percentile for the MCAT and the average DO matriculant has a 26.2. (The average MD has a 30.5) Unfortunately there is no DO MSAR to my knowledge but I would have to say that your chances would be below 50%, perhaps lower.
If you have studied for 3 months at 30 hours/week, that should be sufficient.
Its actually even higher than that now according to AACOM...
The average student offered admission to a COM is 27.3
http://www.aacom.org/resources/ome/2010-04/Pages/applicants.aspx
my first pracitce test was a kaplan test after a month of studying and i scored a 19. a few weeks later i took AAMC 3 and got a 26. just keep practicing.
It's very low, and means you have subsections of 6 which will get you screened out of most if not all places. I wouldn't bother taking it if you believe you will get that low. But lucky for you, practice tests have very low predictive value, apart from the AAMC one(s?). See this link for predictive values of different tests. http://www.studentdoc.com/practice-mcat.html
Be warned that the n is small.
I will add that I took a few practice tests ranging from a few months to a month before my MCAT and scored in the 21-25 range. There was no upward trend, and the 21 was in the middle, ugh. My last test was a 24. The only reason I took the MCAT was I was using TPR and the chart predicted I'd do 2 pts better, and a 23-27 isn't terrible if balanced. With one month to go, I had no time to study until a week and a half before my test. I was really sad and disheartened but literally just studied 12 hrs a day for a week straight, read through all of my bio and phys books, and ended up getting a 30.
Yes, you can bring it up, but it's unlikely in only a month. You need to not only commit good time, but you need to efficiently commit time. If you've had all the prereqs and just need a refresher to jog your memory, I'd say you have shot but otherwise, you may be better putting it off until October and applying late in November w/ a 25, rather than with a 19 in September.
Not to be a downer but for every story like this where a score jumped up significantly there are a large number of people who's scores tanked on the real thing. My diagnostic was a 25, my first Kaplan practice was a 30. My last 5 were 37, 38, 37, 39, 38. Real score? 33. There are factors that affect everyone come test day. You could just get screwed on a time dialation problem like I did and drop your physics score to the lowest it has been on any test since your diagnostic or it could be nerves amongst a variety of other things. Don't put much faith in the fact that your score will magicly jump up.
Delay the test and put it off another month if it will give you time to better prepare. You need to go in confident and you need to KNOW that you are going to get in the 23+ range.
srsly?I have a friend that got into LMU-DCOM with a 17/3.2, so I would say maybe try to apply to the newer schools.
srsly?
you ok?seriously, "dawg."
A lot of the newer DO schools have averages of 23-24, rather than the 26-27 average. So besides my friend, I am sure they admit other sub-20 scores too. It seems like most schools have a flux of about 5 points above and below their averages.
Would it be realistic to pull it up to at least a 24 or 25 by august?
Sorry, I always forget if its 26.2 or 27.3.
Not to be a downer but for every story like this where a score jumped up significantly there are a large number of people who's scores tanked on the real thing. My diagnostic was a 25, my first Kaplan practice was a 30. My last 5 were 37, 38, 37, 39, 38. Real score? 33. There are factors that affect everyone come test day. You could just get screwed on a time dialation problem like I did and drop your physics score to the lowest it has been on any test since your diagnostic or it could be nerves amongst a variety of other things. Don't put much faith in the fact that your score will magicly jump up.
Delay the test and put it off another month if it will give you time to better prepare. You need to go in confident and you need to KNOW that you are going to get in the 23+ range.
I agree with this. My real mcat score was my lowest. I took aamc #3 before any studying at all and got a 28. My next practice scores were a 29, 30, and 31 (but I don't remember the order taken). Scores had been balanced with nothing below a 9.
Then on the real thing I ended up with a 7 on PS. Blech.
I'm obsessed with stats so I can clear up the confusion I think.
26.19 is the average for 2009 Entering Class matriculants.
According to that link you clicked, 27.3 is the average for those who received acceptances (well, actually it is the average out of only those accepted applicants who chose to participate in this survey..which was around 1/4th of all these applicants).
The discrepancy between the two exists because some people get accepted and don't decide to go to a DO school. Many of these people apparently applied to both MD and DO schools, and chose to go MD if they were accepted. These people would obviously have pretty high MCAT scores.
Like I said, drastic increases in test scores are not the norm. There are cases going both ways. Take the time to fully prepare for the test. If you aren't prepared and it is getting close to test day delay the test. It is incredibly important and a very low score (ie <21) can completely ruin your chances, regardless of your GPA
While drastic increases in score from test to test may not be the norm, certainly it is realistic to jump 6-8 points from a diagnostic or the first practice test to completion of studying. Of course this is with adequate prep time.
I agree, it is normal to drop in score from practice tests. It is also normal to get the same score. And people even go up from practice tests. Anything can and will happen. I'm not disagreeing with anything you are saying. Just providing clarification.Of course. My diagnostic was 8 points lower than my real score. The OP asked what chance he had if he were to score a 19 on the real test. Other people were stating how their score was significantly above the average of their practice tests. I was merely stating that its normal to drop from the average score on your practice tests as well.
The OP also only gave him/herself only 1 month from the date of the practice test for the real thing. I was just stating to not count on a drastic (ie major) jump from that test to the real thing based only other people's anecdotal evidence.