Will medical schools view a BA (Bachelor of Art) degree less than a BS (Bachelor of Science) degree?

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Itachi Uchiha

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I am conflicted. I have been thinking about this for weeks now and cannot get a good answer. I feel like BA (Bachelor of Art) will be more suited for me but I am worried that medical schools will think it is less challenging and not as important as BS (Bachelor of science). Has any of you dealt with this. Did any of you matriculate into medical school with a BA? Preferably top 20?

Thanks in advance.
 
I am conflicted. I have been thinking about this for weeks now and cannot get a good answer. I feel like BA (Bachelor of Art) will be more suited for me but I am worried that medical schools will think it is less challenging and not as important as BS (Bachelor of science). Has any of you dealt with this. Did any of you matriculate into medical school with a BA? Preferably top 20?

Thanks in advance.
I have a BA, not at a top 20 school but a good Florida school.
 
I am conflicted. I have been thinking about this for weeks now and cannot get a good answer. I feel like BA (Bachelor of Art) will be more suited for me but I am worried that medical schools will think it is less challenging and not as important as BS (Bachelor of science). Has any of you dealt with this. Did any of you matriculate into medical school with a BA? Preferably top 20?

Thanks in advance.
No. The admissions process including prerequisites and the MCAT put everyone on the same page. If OP needs further clarification or more in depth perspectives, they should ask in pre-allo.
 
If you are deciding between a BS and a BA at a particular school and the BS requires original research and a thesis and the BA does not, and you don't get some research experience outside of your curriculum, then the choice of a BA rather than BS could put you at a disadvantage ,all else equal.
 
I am conflicted. I have been thinking about this for weeks now and cannot get a good answer. I feel like BA (Bachelor of Art) will be more suited for me but I am worried that medical schools will think it is less challenging and not as important as BS (Bachelor of science). Has any of you dealt with this. Did any of you matriculate into medical school with a BA? Preferably top 20?

Thanks in advance.
No one will care. We don't care about majors or minors either. Just do well
 
If you are deciding between a BS and a BA at a particular school and the BS requires original research and a thesis and the BA does not, and you don't get some research experience outside of your curriculum, then the choice of a BA rather than BS could put you at a disadvantage ,all else equal.
I forgot that some schools offer both, and my school actually did that if I remember correctly. In this case, I think a BA would be a poor choice since research and thesis is an obvious boost for a medical school app, like you said.
 
If you are deciding between a BS and a BA at a particular school and the BS requires original research and a thesis and the BA does not, and you don't get some research experience outside of your curriculum, then the choice of a BA rather than BS could put you at a disadvantage ,all else equal.
At my S's school research and thesis are required to get honors.
 
My school has only BAs for all biology concentrations, econ, computer science, math and physics lol. I had a BA
 
Short answer:


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If you are deciding between a BS and a BA at a particular school and the BS requires original research and a thesis and the BA does not, and you don't get some research experience outside of your curriculum, then the choice of a BA rather than BS could put you at a disadvantage ,all else equal.
This is an interesting post. I didn't know that some BS programs require original research while BAs don't. Thank you.
 
Considering that a school like Princeton doesn't even offer BS's and only BA's (or AB as they call it, not counting engineering) and it should be pretty evident that it doesn't matter..
 
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