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tacrum43 said:I don't understand what the big debate about this is. Buy a copy of the MSAR. It is the official, and most useful book out there for getting into med school (hence it being called "Medical School Admission Requirements"). And, it's $25 freaking dollars! Most people spend several grand between secondary fees and interview expenses, not to mention tuition once you get there. The phrase "drop in the bucket" seems very applicable here.
Depakote said:I would have bought one except it comes out in May and I wanted to pick my schools before then, so I bought a few non-MSAR med school guides and read those.
tacrum43 said:It comes out in April. And why would you want to already have your schools picked out?
tacrum43 said:It comes out in April. And why would you want to already have your schools picked out?
Well whatever. I loved your Dr. Zoidberg in the other thread, BTW. 👍
Rafa said:Technically, it comes out in May. But wouldn't you want to have thought about which schools you'd like to apply to more than ~1 week before the AMCAS app comes online?
Flopotomist said:How on EARTH can you pick schools without the MSAR?? You might end up wasting money on schools that don't accept oos'ers (man, that looks like a typo for loosers), you might not even know about a certain school, you might be applying to too many reaches, or not enough reaches.
Me too...I can't imagine going through this process without it. I ended up buying the previous application year's MSAR (unknowingly) but it worked out alright. Even after I finished the AMCAS I would still open it up to read descriptions again of schools where I was interviewing...particularly how many people they accept post-interview, what their deadlines are, etc. Well worth the $25 if you have the money. If not, most school libraries or pre-med advising offices have a copy that you can look at.Thundrstorm said:Yes, it's the major way I picked schools. Went to the states I was interested in, made a list of the schools in major cities in those states, then read the actual descriptions to cut the list down. It's also a reliable source of avg. MCAT and GPA, which is helpful. I went to the bookstore and flipped through other me dschool guides for further data, but the MSAR had the most accurate info, so I found it useful.
Rafa said:Technically, it comes out in May. But wouldn't you want to have thought about which schools you'd like to apply to more than ~1 week before the AMCAS app comes online?
That's a good idea. They could also have links to the schools' webpages instead of just listing the addresses in the book, which would make the whole thing much more user-friendly. Of course, this is the AAMC we're talking about here, so they'd probably make it impossible to print any of the school spreads.MollyMalone said:I really wish they had an online version of the MSAR you could subscribe to for a year, rather than have to print so many paper copies of information that changes regularly.
gujuDoc said:BTW:
If you don't buy an MSAR or obtain one by other means, another way to find info is to look on individual school websites and through SDN or through Princeton Review guide to medical schools.
However, I find the MSAR to be more accurate and the newest one (we bought it for AED library) had even listed the percent of people doing certain kinds of activities as well as both the averages as well as how it compared to national averages in terms of numbers.
It was pretty informative, but not absolutely necessary. Nonetheless, it does help you save money in terms of preventing you from applying to schools you have 0 chance at such as those that don't accept OOS at all.
Zoom-Zoom said:USNews gives great stats too...percentages of out of staters accepted, average gpa, ave MCAT per section, etc. Is there something the MSAR does that USNews does't?
gujuDoc said:USNews only covers about 62 of the medical schools. There are 125+ schools, so it doesn't do any good for the unranked schools.
That's what is probably missing.