Why do you think you got waitlisted/rejected post interview?

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Thanks for the feedback MedPR and Goro. 70 hrs is normal hours for me, not OT. So if I understand you correctly, if taking multiple classes at time is not a possibility, then I am at a significant disadvantage? This does present quite a dilemma for me. Kinda sucks to be honest. Cutting back hours is just not possible right now. I wonder how the non-science majors prove their ability to handle the course work? ( serious question, not meant to offend anyone)

Here's another thought...at some point in your undergrad, you probably need two or so full semesters with mostly (if not all) science classes. I've been told this by a number of adcoms. If you find a schools that accepts you without having done this, then you got lucky.

Next, it is possible to cut back hours. You can at least ask...and you can always quit. I cant think of any job that would keep me from pursuing medicine. I would even live off of loans entirely for a year before I let a job dictate my preparation. I don't know your academic history, but unless you have a good GPA(not lower than 3.25 and not a ton of W's or F's) and a good MCAT (25+) then I would, in your situation, have no problem cutting back significantly on work in order to take one or two FULL semesters of science courses. Even at a CC.

But, good luck whatever you choose.
 
Thanks HalfListic for sharing your thoughts. Actually as an EE, majority of semesters were 15+ credit hours with 3 of them being 18 credit hours. I have 4 semesters with a 4.0. I faced severe family issues in my 2nd semester where I received one C and that really dragged down my cgpa ( I had a 4.0 in the 1st semester). However, I managed to graduate with a 3.69 gpa (Cum Laude) and a minor in mathematics. My graduate school gpa in EE is very similar. I finished undergrad in 2008 and grad school in 2011.

I support other family members and I just can't take a pay cut now. I will have to suck it up and take it at a CC one at a time. I hope my prior academic record coupled with good MCAT (30+) will help me get admitted to a decent medical school. I am not concerned about allo/osteo. If all goes well, I hope to get into a school like PCOM/DMU or an allopathic school of similar recognition.

I appreciate your feedback. Please do not hesitate provide me with constructive criticism.
Here's another thought...at some point in your undergrad, you probably need two or so full semesters with mostly (if not all) science classes. I've been told this by a number of adcoms. If you find a schools that accepts you without having done this, then you got lucky.

Next, it is possible to cut back hours. You can at least ask...and you can always quit. I cant think of any job that would keep me from pursuing medicine. I would even live off of loans entirely for a year before I let a job dictate my preparation. I don't know your academic history, but unless you have a good GPA(not lower than 3.25 and not a ton of W's or F's) and a good MCAT (25+) then I would, in your situation, have no problem cutting back significantly on work in order to take one or two FULL semesters of science courses. Even at a CC.

But, good luck whatever you choose.
 
Thanks HalfListic for sharing your thoughts. Actually as an EE, majority of semesters were 15+ credit hours with 3 of them being 18 credit hours. I have 4 semesters with a 4.0. I faced severe family issues in my 2nd semester where I received one C and that really dragged down my cgpa ( I had a 4.0 in the 1st semester). However, I managed to graduate with a 3.69 gpa (Cum Laude) and a minor in mathematics. My graduate school gpa in EE is very similar. I finished undergrad in 2008 and grad school in 2011.

I support other family members and I just can't take a pay cut now. I will have to suck it up and take it at a CC one at a time. I hope my prior academic record coupled with good MCAT (30+) will help me get admitted to a decent medical school. I am not concerned about allo/osteo. If all goes well, I hope to get into a school like PCOM/DMU or an allopathic school of similar recognition.

I appreciate your feedback. Please do not hesitate provide me with constructive criticism.

To be honest, I don't see anything wrong with what you are doing. I know quite a few people that decided medicine was the career they wanted to pursue after completing other degrees. They took two pre-reqs a semester and had no problem when applying.
 
Here's another thought...at some point in your undergrad, you probably need two or so full semesters with mostly (if not all) science classes. I've been told this by a number of adcoms. If you find a schools that accepts you without having done this, then you got lucky.

Next, it is possible to cut back hours. You can at least ask...and you can always quit. I cant think of any job that would keep me from pursuing medicine. I would even live off of loans entirely for a year before I let a job dictate my preparation. I don't know your academic history, but unless you have a good GPA(not lower than 3.25 and not a ton of W's or F's) and a good MCAT (25+) then I would, in your situation, have no problem cutting back significantly on work in order to take one or two FULL semesters of science courses. Even at a CC.

But, good luck whatever you choose.

I don't necessarily agree with this, but I haven't been accepted into medical school yet so what do I know.

I never once took a full semester of only science classes and I've received 4 interview invites so far.
 
I don't necessarily agree with this, but I haven't been accepted into medical school yet so what do I know.

I never once took a full semester of only science classes and I've received 4 interview invites so far.

Yea I'm kind of confused about this too. I think, at most, I took two science classes simultaneously (non science major) and have 4 interviews from pretty good schools.
 
Yea I'm kind of confused about this too. I think, at most, I took two science classes simultaneously (non science major) and have 4 interviews from pretty good schools.

Yeah for me I took like a year and a half of simultaneous pre-reqs courses and I've been doing alright.

Two science classes simultaneously at my school can range anywhere between 7 and 10 credits...so IDK.
 
Yeah for me I took like a year and a half of simultaneous pre-reqs courses and I've been doing alright.

Two science classes simultaneously at my school can range anywhere between 7 and 10 credits...so IDK.

Two science for us is 8 credits. I obviously took other classes on top of that but still.
 
Two science for us is 8 credits. I obviously took other classes on top of that but still.

In my school the first two bio are 4 each
gen chem 5 each
org chem 4 each + lab 3 cred
phys 5 each

So yeah I took physics+O chem = 9
bio+ chem=9

On top of that stupid gen eds, major requirements and independent study...
idk...I wish that school would say upfront they have a problem with non bio majors cause then I would not waist my money applying.
 
idk...I wish that school would say upfront they have a problem with non bio majors cause then I would not waist my money applying.

Right? Well I know for sure that DMU, Western, SOMA and AZCOM dont hate non bio majors. Hopefully there are more than that though haha
 
Right? Well I know for sure that DMU, Western, SOMA and AZCOM dont hate non bio majors. Hopefully there are more than that though haha

I don't know, of the 17 or so schools I applied to, 11 so far think my major in Spanish was alright.
 
Right? Well I know for sure that DMU, Western, SOMA and AZCOM dont hate non bio majors. Hopefully there are more than that though haha

Man you already have 4 interviews? You are golden! Which one of those is your top choice?
 
I don't know, of the 17 or so schools I applied to, 11 so far think my major in Spanish was alright.

Yes, your major in Spanish is perfect, dudeliness. Everything you do is just precious!:laugh:

Seriously though...just a little jealous of 11 interviews...you could transfer some over to me.
 
Yes, your major in Spanish is perfect, dudeliness. Everything you do is just precious!:laugh:

Seriously though...just a little jealous of 11 interviews...you could transfer some over to me.

Yeah I wish I could transfer interviews. I can't afford them. Lol
And I'm sure it goes without saying, but I'm not trying to brag about interviews, just trying to use definitive proof that a non-science major is a-ok!
 
Yeah I wish I could transfer interviews. I can't afford them. Lol
And I'm sure it goes without saying, but I'm not trying to brag about interviews, just trying to use definitive proof that a non-science major is a-ok!

Don't worry about it, I think you are the only person in the planet that can say "I have 11 interviews" w/o sounding like a complete D-bag!

What are you thinking about Lecom? I am really excited for my interview there and really hope that I get a spot in their class! On the other hand...Florida...would be soooo nice 🙂
 
funny-celebrity-pictures-youre-in-the-wrong-neighborhood-kid.jpg

Trailer park boys? Haha where's your top choice?
 
Don't worry about it, I think you are the only person in the planet that can say "I have 11 interviews" w/o sounding like a complete D-bag!

What are you thinking about Lecom? I am really excited for my interview there and really hope that I get a spot in their class! On the other hand...Florida...would be soooo nice 🙂

I've kind of posted all over in excitement today so I'm not sure if I've already said it in this thread or not, but LECOM surprised me. It wasn't a top choice going in, but LECOM-Erie just blew me away. First of all, you have to realize that I'm extremely partial to the whole PBL thing and I've got a million reasons why that's the right curriculum for me and I'd be more than happy to explain in more detail, just PM me. The faculty and students were super friendly, nice facilities, and it seems like their focus was helping students to succeed.
Some have called LECOM a diploma mill. They are the biggest school in the country, but I didn't get the feeling that they are mainly concerned with making money. I mean look at their tuition.
Anyway, I just went off on a big rant. Bottom line, I like LECOM enough that I would be happy if they are the only acceptance I get. then again, I have yet to see other schools...
 
I've kind of posted all over in excitement today so I'm not sure if I've already said it in this thread or not, but LECOM surprised me. It wasn't a top choice going in, but LECOM-Erie just blew me away. First of all, you have to realize that I'm extremely partial to the whole PBL thing and I've got a million reasons why that's the right curriculum for me and I'd be more than happy to explain in more detail, just PM me. The faculty and students were super friendly, nice facilities, and it seems like their focus was helping students to succeed.
Some have called LECOM a diploma mill. They are the biggest school in the country, but I didn't get the feeling that they are mainly concerned with making money. I mean look at their tuition.
Anyway, I just went off on a big rant. Bottom line, I like LECOM enough that I would be happy if they are the only acceptance I get. then again, I have yet to see other schools...

You know how LECOM can buy everything straight cash? Requiring $1500 deposits within 30 days of acceptance outside of AACOMAS guidelines. They know they can get tons of money that way by accepting highly qualified applicants that they know will matriculate elsewhere. Just sayin' 😎

In all seriousness, you should visit more schools before you make your choice. Personally I was pretty underwhelmed by LECOM-Erie as I come from a UC school with a large campus. This may be the reason why I am partial to AZCOM. Also the weather blows in Erie, BFE, etc etc.

Edit: Oh, and their lunch sucked. I judge a school based on the quality of their free lunch.
 
You know how LECOM can buy everything straight cash? Requiring $1500 deposits within 30 days of acceptance outside of AACOMAS guidelines. They know they can get tons of money that way by accepting highly qualified applicants that they know will matriculate elsewhere. Just sayin' 😎

In all seriousness, you should visit more schools before you make your choice. Personally I was pretty underwhelmed by LECOM-Erie as I come from a UC school with a large campus. This may be the reason why I am partial to AZCOM. Also the weather blows in Erie, BFE, etc etc.

Edit: Oh, and their lunch sucked. I judge a school based on the quality of their free lunch.

I have to admit those are some pretty valid points. They are the only school that doesn't follow aacomas guidelines, right? As for the lunch, it was pretty one-dimensional but I had really been hankerin for some meatloaf, and not the musical variety. 😀
I come from a small town (pop 350) in the great lakes state so the weather doesn't bother me, and I'm used to smaller areas. I am very excited to go see other schools, AZCOM being one of the most proximate visits I will be making. Hopefully the size of some of these schools/areas don't impersonalize them. That would make me less comfortable.

Edit: just remembered the potatoes were phenomenal. Just thought I'd throw that in.
 
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I come from a small town (pop 350) in the great lakes state so the weather doesn't bother me, and I'm used to smaller areas. I am very excited to go see other schools, AZCOM being one of the most proximate visits I will be making. Hopefully the size of some of these schools/areas don't impersonalize them. That would make me less comfortable.

I don't really know what this means. Explain plox
 
I don't really know what this means. Explain plox

First of all sorry that I can't do the whole hyperlink thing from my phone. Lol
According to websters dictionary (http://i.word.com/idictionary/impersonalize)
it means to make impersonal. Impersonal means not engaging the human personality or emotions. (http://i.word.com/idictionary/impersonal)
It may be an antiquated term? I just meant that large organizations can lose the personal touch that smaller groups more easily have.
 
I mean, what exactly are you looking for in terms of a school being "personal"
 
You know how LECOM can buy everything straight cash? Requiring $1500 deposits within 30 days of acceptance outside of AACOMAS guidelines. They know they can get tons of money that way by accepting highly qualified applicants that they know will matriculate elsewhere. Just sayin' 😎

In all seriousness, you should visit more schools before you make your choice. Personally I was pretty underwhelmed by LECOM-Erie as I come from a UC school with a large campus. This may be the reason why I am partial to AZCOM. Also the weather blows in Erie, BFE, etc etc.

Edit: Oh, and their lunch sucked. I judge a school based on the quality of their free lunch.

Actually Lecom made it pretty clear that they didn't just want to take our money and gave us the option to defer notification until December to push the 1500 back to January.
 
Isn't that your first one? You're gonna rock it and get in!

It is! Hahaha it would be so sweet to get my top choice and drop everything else. Wow. I try not to think about it too much though.
 
I mean, what exactly are you looking for in terms of a school being "personal"

Oh gotcha, now I'm kind of embarrassed for posting that huge dictionary thing. Lol
LECOM seemed personal to me because i got the impression that they care a lot about student success. I know that med schools don't generally just let their matriculants fail without a fight, it looks bad on the school, right? Well it just seemed like LECOM was going above that self-preservation instinct that one would expect from a med school. The faculty who interviewed us were very friendly. They seemed genuinely interested in us as people and tried to offer suggestions as to how we might integrate into the school and area. The students we met with were the same. HockeyDr09 gave me his email and offered to answer any other questions I might have had.
Chances are, this is how most schools are. Like a big family almost. But I've only interviewed at two, and LECOM-Bradenton didn't really do it for me as much. They weren't unfriendly, but there was a definite difference and I wasn't the only one who noticed it.
So yeah, big explanation. I just want to feel like the school really cares about me, my family, and our success as students there.
 
Actually Lecom made it pretty clear that they didn't just want to take our money and gave us the option to defer notification until December to push the 1500 back to January.

As I understand it from last cycle, this means they won't even look at your application/review your interview until December which really meant that interviewing early does nothing for you since they will continue to accept students and put you on hold essentially. Like neurotic pre-meds are going to do that?

dudeliness said:
So yeah, big explanation. I just want to feel like the school really cares about me, my family, and our success as students there.

As you said, most schools are like this. It's mostly a show they put on to attract you to their school just like the show they put on about their stats and curriculum, etc. just like the technology they present to you and say "we have the best stuff." At AZCOM orientation, we were told like 200x that if we ever needed help with anything ever, come talk to someone about it. We have free tutoring going on now and a heavy emphasis on "Open Door" policy which I imagine most schools have as well. Like you said, a failing student is a poor reflection on the school, especially with COMLEX pass rates, etc.

We have "Big Sibs" assigned to us who are 2nd years that take us under their wing and answer any questions we may ever have. Just today during our Histology exam, all the Big Sibs dropped off packages of goodies in bags with our names on it right outside the exam hall. I got 5 cans of Monster and Rohen's Anatomy Flash Cards. There's very much a "family" atmosphere.

That being said, I don't feel a personal connection to people at my school. With a class of 250, I know maybe 6 people. I study on my own, and I do extremely well. Medical school is very much an individual thing (for me at least).

Anyway, the point is that since I've always been in large class sizes, the personal or impersonal feel of a school didn't factor into my criteria for selecting a school. It might be your top criteria which is definitely ok. I would choose your school based on what you feel is most important to your success and if that is the small personal feel of LECOM-Erie, then that's great and I wish you the best of luck. I looked at more objective things like desired location, 3rd and 4th yr rotations, COMLEX/USMLE Pass Rates and Mean Scores, and lastly, Match List (in that order).

Edit: Another thing I loved about AZCOM was that they encourage taking the USMLE. Some D.O. schools do not do this, and even outright discourage you from taking it.
 
As I understand it from last cycle, this means they won't even look at your application/review your interview until December which really meant that interviewing early does nothing for you since they will continue to accept students and put you on hold essentially. Like neurotic pre-meds are going to do that?

They told us that they would decide on our applications on Tuesday along with everyone else's and we were ay no disadvantage, they simply would not inform us until December 14.
 
They told us that they would decide on our applications on Tuesday along with everyone else's and we were ay no disadvantage, they simply would not inform us until December 14.

I stand corrected
 
Nonsense! We accpet students who have had the bare minimum of 1 year Bio/2 yrs Chem/1 yr Physics and 1 yr math. As the majority of our students are Bio or Pre-med, they naturally have more science hours. But mostly or all science hrs for a semester or two. We never look for that!

A rough rule of thumb is that by Junior or Senior year, students will be taking 1-2 biology classes (3-8 hrs/semester, out of, say, anywhere from 12-17 credit hours.

What we look for in this regard varies among my colleagues on the AdCom. One guuy likes people who take classes because they're interesting to them (say, neuroscience), not because they're required.

I'm only gun-shy when I see something that looks like someone is protecting their GPA by taking less than challenging courses. You can see this!

Here's another thought...at some point in your undergrad, you probably need two or so full semesters with mostly (if not all) science classes. I've been told this by a number of adcoms. If you find a schools that accepts you without having done this, then you got lucky.
 
Nonsense! We accpet students who have had the bare minimum of 1 year Bio/2 yrs Chem/1 yr Physics and 1 yr math. As the majority of our students are Bio or Pre-med, they naturally have more science hours. But mostly or all science hrs for a semester or two. We never look for that!

A rough rule of thumb is that by Junior or Senior year, students will be taking 1-2 biology classes (3-8 hrs/semester, out of, say, anywhere from 12-17 credit hours.

What we look for in this regard varies among my colleagues on the AdCom. One guuy likes people who take classes because they're interesting to them (say, neuroscience), not because they're required.

I'm only gun-shy when I see something that looks like someone is protecting their GPA by taking less than challenging courses. You can see this!

Just have a question, how do you know whether a course is more or less challenging? I took 2 300 level courses one in bio and another one in psychology and can say that the psych class was a lot more challenging to me than the bio course. I got an A in both but how would an adcom know the difficulty of the course?
 
I knew why I got waitlisted on one occasion because I was still finishing up courses. I thought my MCAT would go well so I kind of postponed my degree and took some additional credits, boy was I wrong. Now I am back to square 1.
 
I knew why I got waitlisted on one occasion because I was still finishing up courses. I thought my MCAT would go well so I kind of postponed my degree and took some additional credits, boy was I wrong. Now I am back to square 1.
Uh oh, is this a common practice among schools. I was surprised that I was a minority at my last couple of interviews in that I still had a year left of undergrad. Almost all my pre-reqs are done excluding an english class and ochem lab
 
If I get rejected/waitlisted after today's NSU interview it's because I didn't make enough eye contact with my interviewer.
 
Agreed. Same here, gotta give DMU mad propz for their lunch.

Nova's lunch was ok.. Sandwiches and wraps. I wasn't hungry yet though so it might've been better than I think.
 
Nonsense! We accpet students who have had the bare minimum of 1 year Bio/2 yrs Chem/1 yr Physics and 1 yr math. As the majority of our students are Bio or Pre-med, they naturally have more science hours. But mostly or all science hrs for a semester or two. We never look for that!

A rough rule of thumb is that by Junior or Senior year, students will be taking 1-2 biology classes (3-8 hrs/semester, out of, say, anywhere from 12-17 credit hours.

What we look for in this regard varies among my colleagues on the AdCom. One guuy likes people who take classes because they're interesting to them (say, neuroscience), not because they're required.

I'm only gun-shy when I see something that looks like someone is protecting their GPA by taking less than challenging courses. You can see this!


Interesting. I obviously defer to you in this case, but I have heard this sentiment from both adcoms and my pre-med advisor (I know, pre-med advisors barely count 😉 ).

They seemed to think that if you want to utilize community colleges for science pre-reqs or grade repair, you should have two full semesters of science courses. I wonder if some schools value this more than others?

Either way, Im sure, like you said, many students are accepted each year with good a good GPA and the minimum of science courses.

In my opinion, if you aren't a science major especially, you'd be crazy to enter med school without at least one science heavy semester...but I guess thats another discussion.

Thanks for your input though, Goro👍
 
If I get rejected/waitlisted after today's NSU interview it's because I didn't make enough eye contact with my interviewer.

Did you fidget, or stumble, or were you able to maintain composure? Sometimes I stare directly into someone's eyes and watch them squirm. Feels good brah.
 
Did you fidget, or stumble, or were you able to maintain composure? Sometimes I stare directly into someone's eyes and watch them squirm. Feels good brah.

I didn't fidget, but I did stumble once.. Not because I was nervous, but because I have a little bit of a stuttering disorder. It's really mild and I can usually feel it coming on and just pause for a second instead of actually repeating the syllable multiple times. Slipped during the interview though. It was very early on and the rest of it went fine.

I do that to my supervisor at work 🙂 She hates eye contact. I don't think I really had an eye contact problem with this interview though. She would look down and write as I was speaking and while she was doing that I shifted my attention to the wall behind her to help me think better. Usually my eyes would be back on her before she looked up again, but a few times I think she caught me looking away. This is probably (hopefully) just SDN-induced neuroticism though.
 
I didn't fidget, but I did stumble once.. Not because I was nervous, but because I have a little bit of a stuttering disorder. It's really mild and I can usually feel it coming on and just pause for a second instead of actually repeating the syllable multiple times. Slipped during the interview though. It was very early on and the rest of it went fine.

I do that to my supervisor at work 🙂 She hates eye contact. I don't think I really had an eye contact problem with this interview though. She would look down and write as I was speaking and while she was doing that I shifted my attention to the wall behind her to help me think better. Usually my eyes would be back on her before she looked up again, but a few times I think she caught me looking away. This is probably (hopefully) just SDN-induced neuroticism though.

You'll be fine. Its not like you have to maintain eye-lock the whole time. It's only natural to glance away. Unless you are a robot.
 
Goro, I more or less destroyed my cGPA by taking classes I was interested in (4semesters of Japanese, crazy upper level Econ and math classes...etc). Thankfully, my science Gpa is a 3.6 but cGPA is 3.15.

How badly does following my interests and doing poorly look to adcoms?
 
Goro, I more or less destroyed my cGPA by taking classes I was interested in (4semesters of Japanese, crazy upper level Econ and math classes...etc). Thankfully, my science Gpa is a 3.6 but cGPA is 3.15.

How badly does following my interests and doing poorly look to adcoms?

So you followed your first interest, which is definitely easier than medicine, and didn't do well. Now your new interest is medicine. Connect the dots?

But really, it shouldn't matter. Both of your GPAs are acceptable provided you have a decent MCAT score.
 
Not too bad if this was a single semester or single year dip. The high sGPA is more indicative that you can do well in medical school, and that's what we look for. the low cGPA wiull hurt you at some but not all DO schools, so don't fret too much. If I saw a transcript where you were doing fine in the science courses, but also see four Cs in Japanese or Economics, I'd give you the pass.

In terms of difficulty or which is more challenging, well, my view is that an upper level Med Micro course would be more challenging than, say, upper level Ecology or Plant Biology.

Goro, I more or less destroyed my cGPA by taking classes I was interested in (4semesters of Japanese, crazy upper level Econ and math classes...etc). Thankfully, my science Gpa is a 3.6 but cGPA is 3.15.

How badly does following my interests and doing poorly look to adcoms?
 
Edit: Oh, and their lunch sucked. I judge a school based on the quality of their free lunch.

That iceberg lettuce was sooo good
 
I didn't want to start a new thread, but I was curious, how much better are your chances of getting accepted if you were picked to interview on the first day of that school's interview season?

I'm not looking for a specific number, but people throw out stats for overall interview/acceptance chances, so I was curious about this after reading an SDN article:

http://studentdoctor.net/2009/03/the-application-process-why-apply-early/
 
I didn't want to start a new thread, but I was curious, how much better are your chances of getting accepted if you were picked to interview on the first day of that school's interview season?

I'm not looking for a specific number, but people throw out stats for overall interview/acceptance chances, so I was curious about this after reading an SDN article:

http://studentdoctor.net/2009/03/the-application-process-why-apply-early/

the earlier you interview, the better your chances are because they have a lot of unfilled spots. Nobody can really tell you exactly how much this improves your chances.
 
That iceberg lettuce was sooo good

Community salad with iceberg lettuce. I bet LECOM bought that straight cash too amirite?

>2012
>School with no debt and tells it to everyone
>Terrible, cheap lunch
>mfw -_-
 
Community salad with iceberg lettuce. I bet LECOM bought that straight cash too amirite?

>2012
>School with no debt and tells it to everyone
>Terrible, cheap lunch
>mfw -_-

Didn't like the school in the first place (I got accepted before anyone says I'm just being bitter), but that was the icing on the cake.

I will say picking a school is a personal decision, obviously. Not picking on anyone for going there...it's great for some and not so great for others. It's all a means to an end.
 
Nonsense! We accpet students who have had the bare minimum of 1 year Bio/2 yrs Chem/1 yr Physics and 1 yr math. As the majority of our students are Bio or Pre-med, they naturally have more science hours. But mostly or all science hrs for a semester or two. We never look for that!

A rough rule of thumb is that by Junior or Senior year, students will be taking 1-2 biology classes (3-8 hrs/semester, out of, say, anywhere from 12-17 credit hours.

What we look for in this regard varies among my colleagues on the AdCom. One guuy likes people who take classes because they're interesting to them (say, neuroscience), not because they're required.

I'm only gun-shy when I see something that looks like someone is protecting their GPA by taking less than challenging courses. You can see this!

yikes I hope schools don't see my rather easy senior semesters as trying to coddle my GPA. I transferred from a school with completely different requirements for undergrads and am now stuck doing all these stupid generals I need to graduate.
 
That iceberg lettuce was sooo good

Community salad with iceberg lettuce. I bet LECOM bought that straight cash too amirite?

>2012
>School with no debt and tells it to everyone
>Terrible, cheap lunch
>mfw -_-

I love how 99% of SDN hates on LECOM 🙂

Most hated DO schools in no particular order.

1. LECOM
2. RVU
3. Pikesville
 
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