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is it something to do with medical program...? ie. neuroscience, or cell and molecular biology?

2007-02-20 12:08:16 · 0 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

0 answers

They are all hard.

I would say though that my harest subject was neuroscience. It was only slightly harder than the other sciences though.

Medicine and dental are all very hard to get into but not impossible. It depends on how dedicated you are as a person. You have the ability to do whatever your will-power dictates.

2007-02-20 12:23:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

medicine generally is hardest both in terms of prerequisite marks to get in and the work load and length of course in general. Conceptually certain other courses are more academically difficult (for example nuclear physics or advanced math) but the course is shorter. Medicine does not actually require much thinking in terms of creativity ro challenge - you are required in fact to learn vast amounts of information that other people have discovered and then apply that in solving problems (patient's symptom spectra). Law is similar. Conceptually and creatively something like applied physics or philoisophy actually demand more creative and thinking effort. Medicine and law require unquestioning digestion of vast amounts of material and little else. I have done degrees in cell biology, cytogenetics and medicine and have some little perspective on this issue.

2007-02-20 12:17:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Towson does not look like the highest caliber PA program, but you can take the NCCPA exam, you would need to find out their PASS rates. However, it requires you to have a bachelors degree first, which you can not get at a community college (where you are at). So no, you can't transfer in. You need to get a bachelors degree & then you APPLY to the program, not transfer.

2016-03-13 00:09:31 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Depends whether you mean a graduate or undergraduate program. As far as graduate programs, I would say medicine or vet school. The reason vet schools are difficult to get into is because there aren't that many in the U.S. As far as undergraduate school I would say computer science, nursing, engineering

2007-02-20 12:15:10 · answer #4 · answered by batscout 2 · 0 0

Stanford Buisness

2007-02-20 12:48:36 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Probably neuro...

2007-02-20 12:13:33 · answer #6 · answered by JiveSly 4 · 0 0

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