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i want to go to Cornell's undergrad school and its medical school, do i get any benefits of applying for the medical school when i have already attended the undergrad school?

2007-08-19 05:04:42 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

5 answers

Usually the admissions are completely separate, so there is very little benefit (the people who said that it is a negative are referring to situations in which you would get your bachelors and grad degrees in the same department, so that the schools prefer you get a different perspective; it doesn't apply to going to one of the professional schools). The only plus I can see, though, is that at least they would be familiar with the quality of the school and might take references from your professors more seriously. That actually can be good or bad, depending upon whether they have pride in their quality or an inferiority complex, comparing themselves negatively to other schools.

I run into this a lot with students applying to law school, who assume that our university's law school will give priority to them because they graduated from the university, and I always have the feeling my students don't quite believe me when I tell them there is no advantage to that, but it is true.

2007-08-19 05:21:26 · answer #1 · answered by neniaf 7 · 1 0

I've heard that the higher end schools like to see their undergrads go to a different university for grad school. I guess the theory is that they want you to experience different universities.

2007-08-19 05:15:26 · answer #2 · answered by hplss.rmntc 5 · 0 0

2 years could be high-quality. It relies upon on the character of the analyze and how immediately issues replace interior the sphere. For some human beings, if we save as much as date with transformations in our field this would possibly not make any distinction. For others it could reason all varieties of issues. in the experience that your field became micro-electronics, working example, and you had carried out no examining or protecting up because college you would be working a intense danger of not being properly-called 2 years ought to correctly be with regard to the cut back of the 'waiting (for funds?)' era. sturdy success.

2016-11-12 22:01:34 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Usually it's the opposite. Schools think it's best for their students to go out and see the world.

2007-08-19 05:07:59 · answer #4 · answered by Thomas M 6 · 1 0

Heck no,

This is what I don;t like about the process. Med schools don;t really care if you went to their undergrad. In fact, they may not like this and may not accept you for this fact. They don;t really want to say it, but most of it is true. So please choose a college wisely. Choose one that you think you will enjoy the most in!

If you are interested in med school, please visit http://www.pre-med.info

2007-08-19 23:33:58 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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