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If you have a masters degree in Biology, are you chances MUCH MUCH HIGHER?

2006-10-28 12:59:29 · 3 answers · asked by Soccer Stud 2 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

the average is about 10

2006-10-28 14:37:16 · answer #1 · answered by Lea 7 · 0 0

You should probably apply the ones located closest to you or in the same state because medical schools give highest preference to students from the same area. If you don't want to go to any of the schools located near you pick a few locations that you would be most interested in living for the next four years, see what schools are nearby and apply to those.

I would advise against applying to all 126 schools as this will cost you a great deal of money. Application fees alone for most schools are about 100 dollars a piece. I'm sure your chances are probably greater having a masters degree.

2006-10-28 14:32:58 · answer #2 · answered by xdtsztr 3 · 0 0

You apply to the ones you would like to attend. Do it like you did in applying for undergraduate admission: apply to one dream school, several likely candidates, and one or two "safety" schools.

I suppose you could apply to all of them, but application isn't free; if it costs $100 per school, you'd drop $12,600 in application fees! Surely not the most efficient method.

"Higher" is a comparative; higher than what? Biology is better than English, probably not better than Biochemistry, for example.

2006-10-28 15:27:13 · answer #3 · answered by OR1234 7 · 0 0

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