What was the GPA and what was the story behind how they still managed to become an MD?
An SDNer got into UConn with a 2.92. The full tale is here: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=544011What was the GPA and what was the story behind how they still managed to become an MD?
To get past automatic cut-offs, it's recommended that you take undergrad college and/or postbac classes until your GPAs are greater than a 3.0. Then get a strong MCAT score. Then (if your MCAT score isn't a 40+ equivalent) do an SMP with a GPA >3.7.about this masters and post bacc stuff I keep hearing about, does it only save people that are borderline from getting in (people with 3.4 GPAs or something) or can it actually save people with GPAs in the low 2s?
To get past automatic cut-offs, it's recommended that you take undergrad college and/or postbac classes until your GPAs are greater than a 3.0. Then get a strong MCAT score. Then (if your MCAT score isn't a 40+ equivalent) do an SMP with a GPA >3.7.
If a GPA now is at a low 2.xx, you'd have to figure out how much straight A coursework it would take to get >3.0. Then decide if you have the cash, time, and fortitude to attempt this path, which comes with no guarantees, especially as there are other components to a good application that some folks can't manage: appropriate ECs, strong LORs, good interview skills, freedom from legal entanglements, etc.
Yep. That''s why aiming for DO schools is so much more time and cost efficient. You only have to retake the lowest grades from the first time around, since only the most recent grade "counts" toward your application GPAs.Raising a low 2 GPA you graduated with = repeating your entire undergraduate career all over again.
Yep. That''s why aiming for DO schools is so much more time and cost efficient. You only have to retake the lowest grades from the first time around, since only the most recent grade "counts" toward your application GPAs.
I have never heard that dental schools exercise a form of grade forgiveness. Or the others, either.How do chances of a person look if they want to go into other medical professions such as pharmacy, PA school, or dentistry? I've heard Dental school is harder to get into than med school, is that right?
You say this as if users get back on here and post pics of their MD when they graduate. For SDN purposes, I'm sure people who matriculated somewhere obtained, or will obtain their MD.Everyone here is answering a different question than was posed by the OP. OP is interested in people who SUCCEEDED in getting their MD, not just gained an acceptance to medical school. I realize that the attrition rate is low, but that's still not the question OP asked.
I'll tell you this, they all learned to use the search button on SDN. Spend many hours searching through the postbac forum if you want to learn what you need to do. Nobody gets anywhere lazily asking others to solve their problems for them.What was the GPA and what was the story behind how they still managed to become an MD?
People have done this, and it might be something you want to consider, assuming you are serious. Learn what DO is.Raising a low 2 GPA you graduated with = repeating your entire undergraduate career all over again.
Great if you have a low GPA from a few abnormally rough classes but no help if your low GPA is from consistent B-/C+ grades. I imagine the latter must be a lot more common from people who didn't realize their MD ambitions and half-assed their way through collegeYep. That''s why aiming for DO schools is so much more time and cost efficient. You only have to retake the lowest grades from the first time around, since only the most recent grade "counts" toward your application GPAs.
It certainly doesn't help if the low grades were in a specific discipline like, eg, engineering, nursing, or accounting where retaking is utterly pointless if that field is no longer a goal.Great if you have a low GPA from a few abnormally rough classes but no help if your low GPA is from consistent B-/C+ grades. I imagine the latter must be a lot more common from people who didn't realize their MD ambitions and half-assed their way through college
I'll tell you this, they all learned to use the search button on SDN. Spend many hours searching through the postbac forum if you want to learn what you need to do. Nobody gets anywhere lazily asking others to solve their problems for them.
People have done this, and it might be something you want to consider, assuming you are serious. Learn what DO is.
Edit: Was wondering why you were asking such amateurish questions with 100+ posts. So I briefly glanced at your previous posts and saw that you have asked this question like 4-5 times in the past couple years. That, coupled with other threads you have started like "Do the hot chicks really come running once your a doctor?" (which admittedly, was hilarious), makes me think you are not serious/are a troll.
Great if you have a low GPA from a few abnormally rough classes but no help if your low GPA is from consistent B-/C+ grades. I imagine the latter must be a lot more common from people who didn't realize their MD ambitions and half-assed their way through college
Almost DOA. A low GPA from a bad semester or bad year is much easier for an adcom to see and understand, A pattern of mediocrity thru out undergraduate gets into the "low" or "reject" stack of applications
Can Post Bacc at that point really do anything?
Fun fact, you can link to exact pages in a pdf by adding #page=XX for exampleYes, now you are talking a horse of another color. Adcoms will see your postbacc as a separate line item so it can be an impact larger than the impact to your overall GPA.
https://www.aamc.org/students/download/181676/data/amcas_grade_conversion_guide.pdf (see page 2 for sample grid
And a recent AAMC survey of medical school admissions found that post-bacc performance was a factor of high importance, which would imply most schools considered it strongly. That and a good MCAT may get you over the hurdle.
https://www.aamc.org/students/download/267622/data/mcatstudentselectionguide.pdf (see Table 1 on p13)
OldPreMeds.org has had lots of success stories of those screwed up the first round of college or were mediocre students. Then some time, years later frequently, decide they want to try for medical school. The founder of the group was originally dismissed from college freshman year with, and I am not making this up, a 0.67 GPA (yes 0.67). He is now dual board certified in anesthesiology and critical care after residency and fellowship at Dartmouth (from a DO school I might add). I deal primarily with nontrads and this situation comes up quite frequently.
The value of maturity, success in another aream academic redemption in postbacc/SMP and a good MCAT are worth alot, particularly now where nontrads are the new traditional
Almost DOA. A low GPA from a bad semester or bad year is much easier for an adcom to see and understand, A pattern of mediocrity thru out undergraduate gets into the "low" or "reject" stack of applications