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Well. Most MDs turn out to be cookie cutter physicians. Most are burnouts by the time the become professional physicians.
Academic standards are increasing, too.The average gpa for med school matriculants raised from 3.6 to nearly a 3.7, and the mcat from a ~29 to a ~31. I'm just happy I'll be applying in this generation and not the next considering how much more difficult it's becoming to get any higher education. With how things are going now, 10 years from now you'll need a 3.8 gpa to be considered competitive.
I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with being a "cookie cutter pre-med." The schema exists because it works. But once you hit top tier med schools, it falls apart.
Academic standards are increasing, too.The average gpa for med school matriculants raised from 3.6 to nearly a 3.7, and the mcat from a ~29 to a ~31. I'm just happy I'll be applying in this generation and not the next considering how much more difficult it's becoming to get any higher education. With how things are going now, 10 years from now you'll need a 3.8 gpa to be considered competitive.
I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with being a "cookie cutter pre-med." The schema exists because it works. But once you hit top tier med schools, it falls apart.
Judging from these posts, it looks like I'll be a cookie cutter when I apply 🙁
... a Civil.War reenactor...
The medical school admissions game is like high school. One of the "cool" kids does something, and then everyone follows. I hate them for starting the trends that suck, and what will they come up with next?
I wonder if jumping off a bridge is the next "cool" thing to do for admissions. 🙄
It doesn't look very cyclical. It actually looks like a linear increase.It's cyclical. These last few years have been especially difficult with the ****ty economy driving people to seek out secure positions.
It doesn't look very cyclical. It actually looks like a linear increase.
Average matriculant MCAT/GPA
2000:29.7/3.60
2001:29.6/3.60
2002:29.6/3.61
2003:29.6/3.62
2004:29.9/3.62
2005:30.2/3.63
2006:30.3/3.64
2007:30.8/3.65
2008:30.9/3.66
2009:30.8/3.66
2010:31.1/3.67
2011.31.1/3.67
https://www.aamc.org/download/161690/data/table17.pdf
Don't count on standards going back down. They were rising when the economy was doing well, and the rise continued at the same rate(ie no special increase) when the economy tanked.
Some people might argue that there's a delay since people have to take prereqs, etc, once they realize they want to switch/enter into medicine.
I personally think too much stock is put into the economy's effects on the application cycle. But I love it when people bring data (and sources) into a thread. Kudos! 👍
Not just you. Everyone is a cookie cutter applicant. All pre-meds are required to take the same courses and MCAT. That is constant regardless of anything else. As for ECs, every applicant is required to do volunteering and research. Some get away without.research but volunteering is unwritten rule. As I said before, research can range from cleaning glassware to doing original experiments and writing publications. Volunteering can range from pre-meds who hate volunteering in the hospital and blow it off any chance they get to those who take a very active part and make a real difference.
A successful medical student can be at any end of spectrum or in-between. Then he can be sucessful physician. I have fellow students who blew off volunteering every chance they got and they are great students. I have fellow students who were active in many organizations and are great students. The ECs do not necessarily correlate to their success as physicians in the future. Think of your old family doctor, back then they may not have had any research and maybe volunteered just a few hours. They can be great physicians. A young physician who has a research publication and a thousand hours of volunteering will not be necessarily better.
As previous poster mentioned, pre-meds like to think of their activities as being unique, but they are not. You might think having a publication will not make you a cookie cutter. It does though. It is well known that a large numbers of pre-meds do research, so even a publication is not unique even if not too many pre-meds do them yet.
Many years ago the cookie cutter mold was a simple circle. Now the mold is much complex. Pre-meds keep pushing the bar higher. Now instead of cleaning glassware for a summer, research students will need to work many years and have publications. Instead of getting a reasonable amount of hours in a hospital and then calling it quits, pre-meds will need to.volunteer for hundreds or thousands of hours for multiple organizations. An alternative spring break will be more like mandatory spring break because every other pre-med will be doing it. Pre-meds will become slaves to the game, researching and volunteering throughout their breaks. Having personal freetime will become a crime, as some members treat not wanting to volunteer as a bad crime. Combine the 2015 MCAT and you will have pre-meds sacrificing everything to become doctor.
Phew! I am glad I am done with that. And to think that somehow successful physicians resulted from little or no research, and just a few hours volunteering! Unless you are a Civil.War reenactor, you are just fitting into a complex mold. It is not unique. If not common now, it will soon!
Thats what cookie cutter applicants always say
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I like the alligator.
I actually took a min to find the alligator 😳
Pshhh it's easy to be unique in medical school admissions.
sGPA=2.0
MCAT= 9J, 3VR,3PS,3BS
-No EC's...except clubbing of course, I'd list that, no research, no volunteering
I'd totally break the mold with those stats...maybe even draw the attention of some top 20 schools.
Can we argue that everyone is a cookie cutter applicant? . But when it comes to ECs, aren't all pre-meds doing the same things? For instance, the typical pre-mes may have under 100 hours of volunteering, but a so-called non-cookie cutter can have hundreds or thousands of hours. It becomes a race to have the most hours or different number of same activities. The same applies to other things like research or so-called leadership roles. Everyone doez same things, but the non-cookie cutters pile more of the same. Some activities used to look cool. Now I see pre-meds asking if volunteering overseas would look good, and the response is that it doesn't. It used to look good but now everyone does it! Pre-meds ruin plenty of things that used to ve unique, but now are expected. Very sad. It becomes a game of deception whether one admits it or not. I am grateful I am in school, and do not need to play this game anymore.
MOST people are cookie cutter
Maybe 10% are gonna be the "exception" people. Tons and tons of people don't do stuff outside of the cookie cutter stuff, which is how they got that name.
Do they have a chance at top 20s tho?
In addition to the great examples above:
If a male, wears a dark blue suit and matching tie to the interview.
Wanted to be a doctor "ever since they can remember".
Want to volunteer for humanitarian foreign missions (or at least, claim to)after they pay all their loans.
Are members of the pre-med club (a useless endeavour, especially in the era of the internet).
Have allergies.
Recently discovered their love for golf.
Mommy / Daddy is a professional, an engineer or a teacher.
Listens to "easy listening" or classical music while studying.
Have had a steady boyfriend/girlfriend for over a year at some point.
Hate mean people.
Claim not to be prejudiced against any group.
Want to solve all of society's problems, heal addicts and the homeless and turn them into hard working, productive members of society.
Are against hunting.