no it doesnt, you need to remember, going to med school means you getting a high score on your mcat, its sort of a 50/50, the test and your gpa, i will say though, the better and more prestigious the shcool, the better it looks on your resume, but thats it,
2006-10-24 14:44:49
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No, it won't hurt your chances.
Graduate schools will care what type of grades you got. They may ultimately care which university granted your degree ... but not how you got to that point.
More important than the name on your diploma are your grades, your MCAT scores, and your letters of recommendation.
I just got accepted into grad school (Public Health, not medicine) at one of the best programs in the country. I had a degree from a pefectly good university 20 years ago, with some graduate work shortly after. I intentionally took a couple courses at the local community college while I was working. This was to assure myself that I could still do college academics and get good grades; it also assured the grad school that I wasn't totally out of the loop about studying. They were much more interested in the fact that I got 4.0 in my classes.
Many, many people go to junior/community colleges before transferring into 4-year universities. I would actually recommend it. It's cheaper; you usually get much more 1-on-1 time with your professors; your professors tend to have much more hands-on experience in the "real world". Especially if you think you might need a little extra work or help to get you up to speed at the 4-year school.
Afterall, it will look worse if you go to a big university and get a 2.5 after 4 years, rather than starting at a jr. coll., getting a 2.5, transferring to a university, and getting a 3.5. Universities do not transfer grades for your GPA! The med school will see them on your transcripts, of course - but you get to start at the univeristy with a clean slate as far as GPA goes.
2006-10-24 15:38:16
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answer #2
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answered by Elizabeth S 3
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No, but maintain a high gpa at the JC also - it will factor in, too. And do well on your mcat! Even though you go to a JC - you still have to get accepted as a transfer student - JC's aren't shady and actually in my experience, my JC classes were tougher than my classes at UC.
2006-10-24 15:25:33
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answer #3
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answered by sunshine 4
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the place you went to college would not truly impact your probabilities of stepping into. it is the place you stand from the college you're graduating from and the type you stand happy with something of the applicants. i think of the rationalization why fairly some pupils from Cal are not getting into scientific college is via fact there are fairly some those with the comparable staggering grade with the comparable significant and intense MCAT rankings. it is like they're all of the comparable. Admissions human beings seem for type of their applicants. The premed path/technological know-how classes are a ought to for scientific college, yet on authentic of that, they decide for to make certain somebody with diverse backgrounds. working in a wellbeing facility placing facilitates, yet back fairly some pupils try this too. Assuming which you have the mandatory grades and rankings, the base line is to ask your self the thank you to look greater efficient than something of your opposition. As for in case you fail, you need to use Google to discover a occupation that makes over six figures. truthfully, i do no longer think of having the approach which you would be able to fail is going that may assist you gain your scientific expert dream. you're genuinely able as long as you're prepared to artwork frustrating for it.
2016-10-02 22:26:16
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answer #4
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answered by laseter 4
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No it will not hurt your image in a med schools eyes. They care about how well you do in your classes not where you took them.
2006-10-24 14:53:24
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answer #5
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answered by jshepard17 5
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nope. In fact, a lot of people do that.
2006-10-24 14:40:41
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answer #6
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answered by daniswired 3
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