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1) In general, no, but it will be equivalant to a nice EC. There are some DO schools that will consider your combined uGPA and gGPA as your application GPA, which would help you.1) Will a "top 10 MBA" and a glowing letter of rec from the former program chairman (who i've known for 10+ years) and
2) 4.0 post bacc in all the pre-requisites overshadow a very old (10+years) ivy undergrad GPA on the very light side? Excellent extra-curriculars.
3) Will I even get past screens? MD or DO ok.
I see tremendous potential in the application of my skill-set to the practice of medicine ( I want to run a free clinic). No MCAT yet.
P.S. I am 35++years old.
I see you are reluctant to give me a straight answer, which makes it harder for me to give you the best response. But I will respect your reticence.Using D.O. grade replacement my sciences are a 3.9 with 45 post-bac credits at a 4 year college (one undergrad science class (Geology?) that wasnt replaced). Two years cutting edge research in neuroanesthesiology at major medical center and related medical school mission in third world. Total GPA including grad ~3.15. Amcas numbers too painful to mention.
The number we would like to have (since you are embarrassed about the uGPA alone) to evaluate your chances for MD admissions is your total GPA of all classes taken for undergraduate and post-bacc (so excluding graduate GPA). As Cat mentioned, it's going to be tough is this number is below 3.0Total GPA including grad ~3.15. Amcas numbers too painful to mention.
I've seen posts in PreMed-Osteo that stated that certain DO schools do not include grad grades in their considerations (though if they receive the AACOMAS application, all the uGPA and gGPA grades are melded together anyway). They all do include post bac grades though. You might do Search there or post a thread to ask so you don't apply to such schools. Or call the schools you're most interested in.Do all DO prgrams include grad grades? Any suggestions for applications?
I thought I was lock for DO or caribbean with the above.
The first time around you couldn't have because you had a 2.5ish GPA, so not even a point about the "jerks."Actually Triage I am glad you commented, because quite frankly, it did work out for me, and very well indeed. While you look forward to your time doing digital disimpaction for minimum wage, I will be living a life that you can only dream of. I am a multi-seven figure guy who never has to work another day in his life, and didnt do med school the first time around because I didnt want to deal with self-important jack***** like you in the first place. Maybe, just maybe some adcom will have the vision to try something outside of the box rather than the same routine that has has gotten U.S. healthcare to where it is today...
If I dont do MD/DO maybe I will be CEO of a hospital and then it will be pure joy to wipe the smug satisfaction off of the faces of tools like you..
Enjoy your time with Obamacare.
I don't think Osteopathic schools will be too hot over an MBA. It's not even science related in the least bit.
There's debate out there as to whether mathematics is even considered a science. The ones that argue that it isn't would say it's because you don't observe a phenomenon and go from there.So tell me smart "guy," the year of statistics that is required at almost every business school in the country, both graduate and undergraduate,
how is that not "M?" Duh.
See, you really arent that smart or even knowledgeable. Yet you feel that you are and that your opinion matters. Sounds like a malpractice suit waiting to happen. What you believe doesnt matter to me in the slightest. Anytime you would like to make a 7 figure wager to stand behind your words, let me know. Enjoy the disimpaction.![]()
Short response this time? All you could come up with?There is no debate. It is part of Amcas BPCM. Be a big girl and admit that you are wrong.
It will actually benefit you in the long term.![]()
MBA is not considered a real graduate degree. Most people know that the only reason the MBA was invented was because businessmen's ego was tormented by the fact that lawyers get a J.D. and doctors an M.D./D.O. Nowadays you can even get an MBA from University of Phoenix. The one from your "top 10" school is only worth it because of brand recognition and the networking. It has nothing to do with academic rigor.A 4.0 post-bacc in all of the pre-reqs plus some upper levels gets me no love in and of itself, not even with DOs? Am I in denial? I thought grad degree would be nice bonus...
MBA is not considered a real graduate degree. Most people know that the only reason the MBA was invented was because businessmen's ego was tormented by the fact that lawyers get a J.D. and doctors an M.D./D.O. Nowadays you can even get an MBA from University of Phoenix. The one from your "top 10" school is only worth it because of brand recognition and the networking. It has nothing to do with academic rigor.
You can go report me if you'd like, but I'm giving you an honest point of view on the MBA degree. It's not a research degree. It's not a science degree. It's not known for academic rigor. You should reevaluate how far you think your degree can get you.You've been reported. Now please go away.
MBA is not considered a real graduate degree. Most people know that the only reason the MBA was invented was because businessmen's ego was tormented by the fact that lawyers get a J.D. and doctors an M.D./D.O. Nowadays you can even get an MBA from University of Phoenix. The one from your "top 10" school is only worth it because of brand recognition and the networking. It has nothing to do with academic rigor.
I don't necessarily consider it to be a "bad" degree. My experience talking to business leaders is that most of them only find it beneficial for the networking. I have a few friends that have gotten an MBA not because they want it but because instead they were forced if they wanted to go up the ladder. I believe an undergraduate business degree or even community college courses in business can give you the necessary tools for starting your own business or even be able to function in the business world. The other part to business is your drive and personality. The MBA is not meant as a rigorous academic degree. It's a professional degree that's unnecessary. Unlike professional degrees like law, medicine, and pharmacy, the MBA is not necessary to be a businessman and doesn't make you an expert in business either. Like I said, it's mainly a degree that was invented to add prestige where there isn't. That's why they had to invent the weekend programs, executive programs, and distance learning.I don't know if I agree with you. I graduated with an MBA degree from a Top-20 school and I felt the program was very rigorous. Why do you consider it to be "bad" or inferior degree? It is because it has less to do with science and more to do with business? If anything, understanding business concepts (finance, accounting, economics) is useful for a future doctor.
PS I got a 34 on the AAMC practice exam that I took yesterday. In my opinion the CFA exam was twice as "rigorous."
There are posts bragging about AAMC practice exams scores now?
So basically if it goes with your opinion, it means that it's correct. You also seem to be above the pre-meds and "know your stuff." Why post here then? You already "know" your MBA will be seen positively.One of my least favorite things about SDN is uninformed p*** pre-meds freely inflicting their opinions on others, but perhaps that is the nature of the beast. What this site really needs is an "Ask the Adcom Member" thread. Some adcom members have contacted me with useful insights and I appreciate that.