A&M or CAP UT Austin or Honors at UTSA

<p>Can someone please tell me which would be the better route? I'm doing premed.</p>

<p>A&M, get your pre med courses done and head on over to some great med schools. Are they offering you any scholorships? If you really want to be a Longhorn/be on their campus, all you have to do is maintain a high GPA, then transfer over to UT to their natural science department.</p>

<p>Thank you for your reply! No, none but I’ve received quite a bit of money from scholarships. Why A&M? Could I do honors at UTSA for a year and then transfer?</p>

<p>You could; I just personally dislike the campus. I’ve heard the ‘atmosphere’ there is a bit lowdown </p>

<p>I see. Thank you for your input!</p>

<p>There are NO guarantees with transfer admission. Transfers are available in the quantity of the number of students that leave, so you are banking on someone’s failure to secure a spot and you are competing for that spot. With CAP, you are guaranteed that transfer as long as you meet the requirements, and if you don’t meet them, chances are you will not do well at UT anyway. If you want to go to UT, CAP is the best way to get there.</p>

<p>don’t do UTSA honors , no point , A&M or CAP depending on your major</p>

<p>I see. That was very helpful! Thank you very much. If I do CAP could I still be in honors in my freshman year?</p>

<p>@saddays…I honestly do not know the answer to that question, but in actuality, it probably does not matter since you are just there for your core classes and just for one year. That year will fly by!!</p>

<p>That’s true. Thank you very much!(:</p>

<p>I’m more or less in the same boat. At UTSA if you do CAPS you cannot be in the Honors program.</p>

<p>What’s your case? Wow, that’s not good. I’ll have to apply for college of sciences and I thought being in honors would look nice. Thank you for answering and good luck!</p>

<p>Go where ever you can earn the best grades while going in to the least amount of debt. Med school is hard to get in to and costs a lot. You will need good grades, great MCAT scores, and to not be in debt if at all possible from undergrad.</p>