<p>Can Anyone rank the following BA/MD programs from less to more selective please (you can use the numbers)? </p>
<li>Rice/Baylor 8 years program</li>
<li>University of Rochester</li>
<li>USC/Keck school of medecine</li>
<li>George Washington</li>
<li>Temple University</li>
<li>Cinnannatti 8 years program (with Dayton, U of Miami)</li>
<li>SUNY Albany 8 years program</li>
<li>Virginia commonwealth</li>
<li>Stony Brook program</li>
</ol>
<p>Any comments or informations are welcome!
Thanks everyone!!</p>
<p>Obviously you will have to define selectivity more concretely before this is a doable task. (Percent admitted? Importance of numbers? Importance of clinical experience?) Two people may find opposite schools easier to get into.</p>
<p>I mean selectivity by the percent admitted but also the credentials required in terms of SAT scores, SATII scores (perhaps AP scores?), and class ranking (mine is bad)</p>
<p>i'll just go ahead and add my school's program to your list.
Case Western Reserve University has a BA/MD program, but it is very competitive.
I'm not positive about the numbers but i think there was something like a 1500average SAT score (out of 1600), and it is also very important that you have a lot of experience in the health system prior to applying.
I believe there are roughly 25 spots and they recieve a huge amount of apps for the program.</p>
<p>hmmm...where's HPME and PLME on that list
those two along with R/B are the hardest ones to get into</p>
<p>most selective three are Northwestern, Rice/baylor, and Brown PLME. For R/B, they accept a very very very small % of ppl from out of texas. Northwestern is better for interviews, but still pulls a larger % of the ppl from chicago than proportionately apply. dunno about brown. but those definitely the hardest three to get into.</p>
<p>Anyone know about the selectivity of Virginia commonwealth, Suny Albany, Stony Brook, Temple...??</p>