<p>Which programs are easiest to get into and which are the hardest to get into? I know the medical school is really hard. What about the Faculty of the Arts? Faculty of Sciences?
Thanks</p>
<p>A lady who came to my school said that management is hard to make.</p>
<p>does anyone know if neuroscience is hard to get into? I know, that would be decided during one's sophmore year, but I'm just wondering.</p>
<p>my other option is psychology, which I can't imagine is too difficult to get into... right?</p>
<p>neuroscience just got approved a few months ago so I don't know if there's really much to base that off of...</p>
<p>but that's what I'm going for if I get in. I'd think the Neurological Institute right there would be a great resource as well...</p>
<p>I believe that the management faculty is quite hard to get into -- my friend tried to transfer from the faculty of science and it took her over two years to do so -- However, McGill's Business program is not as reputable as Western's Ivy Program or UPenn's Wharton
-- Science is a reputable faculty at McGill and around the word. I was on the Faculty of Science committee and the new neuroscience program was just approved last March/April, so I am pretty sure that they are heavily recruiting for it. However, when you apply to McGill, you apply to a particular faculty, not program. Therefore, you would apply to the Faculty of Science. Honestly, as long as you have good grades, you should not have a problem getting in
-- Lastly, Engineering is an exceptional faculty at McGill as well. I have absolutely no idea how hard it is to get in, however the curriculum is extremely hard and does a great job in preparing students for their career</p>
<p>thanks sd1986! one less thing to worry about :)</p>
<p>Hey, they have the admission standards for american students the past few years here:
Admissions</a> standards for previous years</p>
<p>it breaks it down by program, i think. they say to apply if you are within 5% of the average because it fluctuates so much between years. Take a look, and i'd say apply anyway! I believe when you apply you choose two faculties to apply to, so you may end up getting in to one of your two choices.</p>
<p>I am a canadian student going through the application process myself, plus have tons of first-hand knowledge of people's experience from applying last year and the eyar before and their different results coming from different levels of schooling and applying to different programs so i can definitely help to answer anybody's questions on this subject </p>
<p>if you have any, please feel free to PM me!</p>