Originally posted by Tezzie
CJ2Doc this is the 2nd time that i have seen you post crap without knowing what you are talking about. Stellar LORs or an excellent personal statement will never make up for such bad scores. If that was the case then everyone should have slacked off during undergrad and have a great personal essay and get accepted. For the most part nowadays pretty much everyone has great LORs anyway. From what i understand you haven't even been through the process yet. So wait until you get there until you try to give out advice on subjects you are still unaware of. You are also damn right that i am a bookworm. I am a student. That's what i am supposed to do ... study. Sure i have other things in my life also but school right now is about 50% of my life.
I wish you good luck in thinking that you can get away in med school without studying. Now please go back to Everyone and start posting some more racist comments cause i have missed them.
Although a question is raised on my mind. How can someone who gets a C- in a course have a good LOR from that professor? What is the professor going to say " He was hardworking, motivated, great student but i just gave him a C- for fun" ? It's just doesn't make any sense.
Also yes if someone doesn't have the knowledge they will become a bad physician (*IF* they make it through boards). A good physician is usually someone who is willing to listen to their patients, respect them, work with integrity AND have the knowledge. If you don't know wtf you are doing ... then yes you are a bad physician.
Furthermore the pass/fail system that someone mentioned. Usually most students at most med schools are brilliant. They just make it through a couple of courses but i am pretty sure they are doing great on others. These are people though that were EXCELLENT through most undergrad science courses. You just cannot compare basic O-Chem with med school biochem. If you find the basics HARD then how are you going to do the advanced?
The OP managed to somehow get an interview. That's great. But don't attack people who wish to inform him that even *IF* he gets accepted what is he going to find ahead of him.
Oh, tezzie--you couldn't handle me in Everyone, so now you hide in here and flame any newbie who you don't feel fits YOUR medical school mold. Then you call me a rascist--with absolutley no basis, but that's what you do--resort to name-calling when you can't meet someone on an intellectual level. I'd say that's pretty bad form for someone who "turned down Harvard." You're a real class act.
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Anyway, I was choosing to give a new poster some positive reinforcement after getting flamed by nerdy elitists like you. But why do you flame instead of congratulate? I want to go deeper. Is it because you are so narcisisistic (sp?) that you believe anyone who is interviewed or accepted to medical school that doesn't meet your standards somehow spoils your personal achievement? Or is it that you believe grades are the sole measure of a person? Or is it that your self esteem is just so low that disparaging others enables you to feel a little bit better about yourself? In my opinion, its option #1.
Lastly, why can't I give someone advice about how to address a fault in their application? I have plenty of experience interviewing for professional positions and promotions while addressing some shortcomings. I've sat in front of a panel of high ranking law enforcement officers and explained when, why, and how much weed I used to smoke when interviewing for a job as a police officer. (oh yeah, my answer was so good, I was offered the job) I have sat in front of a panel consisting of an army Col., Major, and Sgt. Major when interviewing for solider of the year. I have sat in front the Chief of Staff of a US Senator, interviewing for a job that I had no business even applying for. So I think that I can comment about how to address a few mistakes to a medical school adcom about a few C's. Unless medical school is intrinsically different than my experiences?
One more question, Tezzie. If I DO follow your logic and am not able to make comments to anyone about applying to medical school because I have yet to go through the process. How are YOU able to comment on the depth and knowlege needed to pass a medical school class when you have yet to even buy your books for the first class of first year?
Next time you want to attempt to embarass an SDN member for showing postiveness to another--make sure its someone who can't put together a coherent sentence (your logic MIGHT actually work with someone like that)--otherwise keep that weak **** outta my paint. (CJ is now doing the Dikembe Mutombo finger waggle)