<p>Chance me for NEOUCOM and Cincinnati dual admissions
I wanna be a doctor. Chance me for the above schools pleaseeee.</p>
<p>Sex: M
Ethnicity: White
School: Public
GPA: 4.0/4.62
Rank: 6/593
ACT: 33</p>
<p>SAT 2: Didn't take any
APs: Biology (5), Us History (4), Government (5)
Next year: BC Calc, Physics, English, Chemistry</p>
<p>Extracurricular during year:
Founder and President of Ethical Issues Club
President of Debate and Speech Club
President of Church Youth Group
Sunday School Teacher (Volunteering approx. 500 hours)
Volunteering at Hospital (300hrs prolly)
Varsity Tennis</p>
<p>Extracurricular during summer:
Shadowing Physicians
Clinical Internship at Cleveland Clinic during summer (9 weeks, 40 hrs a week)
Microbiology research at Case Western Reserve University during summer
Principles of Biology I at local community college got an A</p>
<p>hey! i got into both programs and im going to the cincinnati program. i hd really similar stats so you should be fine! go for it! good luck! message me if you have any questions! :)</p>
<p>My D. got into both 4 years ago. She had similar stats. We are IS, but Cinci program accepted many more 4 years ago - 50 into 5 UG’s. D. went to Cinci program and applied out. She is starting at different Med. School in few weeks. </p>
<p>In state = go for it
Out of state, i’d say dont even apply. Its not worth it. They have all of TWO seats for OOS kids, and the fees arent exactly cheap.</p>
<p>^ I am not sure it is true for Cinci program. They used to have 5 spots for OOS at NEOUCOM.</p>
<p>However, if you maintain close to 4.0 at college which is very doable (but lots of work), you will have a good chance at Med. School regualr route.</p>
<p>Oh okay, miamiDAP, 5 seats makes it all that much better? There are a lot of kids applying to Neoucom, and the fees make me cringe (in hindsight). If you can get into neoucom OOS, i’d say you have a good shot at other places.</p>
<p>^No, actually it’s not plenty of seats, especially for an education that is frankly not worth all the money (my opinion, don’t hate on me now MiamiDAP)</p>
<p>^I agree with both sides of this argument. First I agree with Miami bcuz the residencies for NEOUCOM are the same as any other med school. I also agree with Bsmd because it is not worth competing for an OOS spot when you can go to either another better college then med school or another better dual admissions program.</p>
<p>^^It does matter, actually. Working hard doesn’t actually always yield the results we want. As a full-grown adult, I’m sure you’re aware of that. And working hard means nothing when you apply for bs/md programs; nearly everyone has worked hard.</p>
<p>“Working hard doesn’t actually always yield the results we want. As a full-grown adult, I’m sure you’re aware of that.”</p>
<p>-Also as a full-frown adult with teenage grandchildren, I can assure you that working hard yeld results ALWAYS. However, what some people call "working hard’ actually might not be working hard at all. In general, as a full-grown adult I can assure you, that most time we should not take what people are saying at face value, you need to know what they are actually doing.</p>
<p>Oh really? Then please, define for all of us what true hard work really is. Hard work does NOT always yield results, whether you like it or not. Gosh, we don’t live in a world of fairy tails here. Not everything we wish for and work hard towards comes true.</p>
<p>And trust me, I don’t take what people say at face value. That’s why I question your opinions.</p>
<p>True hard work is doing every single thing that needs to be done and meeting all deadlines. Hard work is when people around you want you for leadership positions because they know for sure that everything that needs to be done in this position will be done well and timely. Hard working is when you also know that you will do everything well, you know it to the point that you have to turn down some opportunities knowing that your plate is overflown already, so you let somebody else to step in. The true hard work is when you taking care of all open tasks at hand before you go off to the bar to have fun. This attitude is developed starting around 5 years old. However, it is not the only way to reach success, there are other ways.</p>