Comprehensive List of Med Programs

<p>So, I recently spent some time putting together a comprehensive (some even I didn't know of!) list of all the BA/BS/MD, BS/DO, and BS/DDS programs together to help future applicants. I thought the one in the stickied thread above was getting kind of muddied... This is what I came up with. If there are any missing ones, please feel free to add on! =)</p>

<p>BA/BS/MD Programs:
Northwestern HPME
Case Western PPSP
Rice/Baylor
Baylor/Baylor
RPI/Albany
Union/Albany
Siena/Albany
Boston U
Univ. of Rochester REMS
Drexel/Drexel
Lehigh/Drexel
Villanova/Drexel
Rosemont/Drexel
TCNJ/NJMS
DREW/NJMS
Rutgers/NJMS
SLU
U of Miami HPM
UMKC
USC Bacc/MD
GWU
St. Bonaventure/GWU (MD) or LECOM (DO)
VCU Guaranteed Admissions Program
Univ. of Cincinnati/Miami U – UC Med School
Penn State
Wayne State
USF/USF Med
UCF/USF Med
Temple MedScholars
University of South Alabama
Hampton-Sydney/EVMS
Old Dominion (ET/MD)
UConn
Stony Brook
MSU
Akron/Kent/Youngstown – NEOUCOM
Caltech/UCSD
Vandy ENGAGE</p>

<p>BS/DO Programs:
New York Institute of Technology/NYCOM
SUNY New Paltz/NYCOM
Illinois Institute of Technology/Midwestern University CCOM
Pitzer College/Western University of Health Sciences
St. Bonaventure/LECOM
Duquesne University/LECOM
University of North Texas/TCOM</p>

<p>BS/DDS Programs:
Univ. of the Pacific (BS/DDS)
Villanova/UPenn (BS/DMD)
Farleigh Dickinson/NYU (BS/DDS)</p>

<p>Thanks for the list!</p>

<p>UCSD med scholars, thanks for the list</p>

<p>UCSD is only for California residents...I think we should me a separate list with State only programs</p>

<p>You're welcome.</p>

<p>okay now how many of them prefer instate and out of state?</p>

<p>Michigan State University has both BA/MD and BA/ DO programs</p>

<p>u forgot a few, but great list that will help many people, the ones u forgot:</p>

<p>BS/MD and BS/DDS:
UIC GPPA medicine/dentistry-in state only Illinois
Northwestern HPME medicine
Nova Southeastern University dentistry, and more medical careers</p>

<p>BS/DO:
Gannon/PCOM or LECOM
Utica College/UNECOM or LECOM
Wilkes/PCOM and a few MD schools too
Nova Southeastern University Dual Admissions Program-
NSU-COM 7 and 8 year program</p>

<p>that's some more, hope it helps people:)</p>

<p>nm the NW lol...first one</p>

<p>Key factors to get accepted:</p>

<p>*A solid application with creative essays-they read them and they want something special-memorable childhood impact or something of the sort</p>

<p>*A GREAT ACT/SAT with GREAT GPA/CLASS RANK - this is the key to success, a solid foundation leads to great opportunities, take difficult classes Honors and AP level and you must practice and excel on standardized tests since some schools use this as a cut off before giving interviews</p>

<p>*Good medical experiences/leadership roles/volunteering-EC's matter and the more unique the better-do research or something totally different like a pageant queen or make your own club</p>

<p>*Practice the interview and be confident in yourself! You need to believe in yourself because that's what matters, but don't get cocky since that will cost you. Many people think they are smart, but there are 10 people like them across the school...You need to speak eloquently in the interview, provide good answers, engage the interviewer in a good conversation and ASK QUESTIONS that show your interest: If you show interest in their school/program, they will show interest in you</p>

<p>BEST OF LUCK TO ALL!!!</p>

<p>brown plme?</p>

<p>FutureDr- What would you consider a GREAT ACT/SAT and GREAT GPA/CLASS RANK?</p>

<p>a DECENT ACT is above 30- it makes you competitive with the other applicants, but a REALLY GREAT ACT would be near 33, now that is hard, but the higher you get, the better of course, and its SAT equivalent</p>

<p>*princeton review, kaplan offer review courses that do help increase your overall composite by a few points or self-study always works</p>

<p>Great GPA: above 3.8 towards 4.0, I know many applicants have perfect 4.0's, and Class Rank: top 10% is good, top 5% is GREAT</p>

<p>I know those factors I consider great are different for various schools and people, but I think they are good guidelines, even I didn't have everything I say, but the closer you are to what I said, your chances are better</p>

<p>good luck</p>

<p>To add to what FutureDr has said.</p>

<p>Most of the BS/MD programs tend to accept candidates with these qualities:
33+ ACT scores
2250+ SAT scores
4.0+ Weighted 3.8+ UW</p>

<p>But, BS/MD programs are also looking for much, much more. Candidates should prove to these programs that they are hard working students, leaders in their classrooms. Their classes and extra curricular activities should show a clear interest in medicine. Most of all, they should prove that they are students that will make great physicians in the future.</p>

<p>going with xcrunner...even then with those stats...it's a total crapshoot with interview fortunes and the simple fact that applicant numbers are skyrocketing</p>

<p>one of my interviewers told me its silly for them to comb through every1's app...so they take say...the 1st 50 or 60 "solid" applicants and go with them</p>

<p>quote "its impossible to get the "perfect" entering class, but we go with a group of people we feel comfortable with and thats it"</p>

<p>lol this is exactly what Wayne State does and a few other programs because they trust students that prove themselves academically strong and they offer them interviews and a shot at the program...</p>

<p>Medical School Length Out-of-state students </p>

<p>Albany Medical College 8 years 49%<br>
Baylor College of Medicine 8 years 47%<br>
Boston University School of Medicine 7 years 90%<br>
Brown Medical School 8 years 94%<br>
Case Western Reserve University School of Med 8 years 75%<br>
Drexel University College of Medicine 7 years 84%<br>
East Tennessee State University James H. Quil 8 years %<br>
Eastern Virginia Medical School 8 years 17%<br>
George Washington University School of Medici 7 years ?
Howard University College of Medicine 8 years ?
Keck School of Medicine of the University of 8 years 36%<br>
Meharry Medical College 7 years<br>
Michigan State University College of Human Me 8 years 10%<br>
New York University School of Medicine 7 years %<br>
Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Med 6 years 8%<br>
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Me 7 years 100%
Ohio State University College of Medicine and 7 years 35%<br>
Pennsylvania State University College of Medi 6 years 82%<br>
Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and<br>
Saint Louis University School of Medicine 8 years 42%<br>
State University of New York Downstate Medica 8 years %<br>
State University of New York Upstate Medical 8 years %<br>
Stony Brook University Health Sciences Center 8 years %<br>
Temple University School of Medicine 8 years<br>
UMDNJ--New Jersey Medical School 7 years<br>
UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School 8 years %<br>
University of Alabama School of Medicine 8 years 10%<br>
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine 8 years 27%<br>
University of Connecticut School of Medicine 8 years 14%<br>
University of Florida College of Medicine 7 years %<br>
University of Illinois at Chicago College of 7 years %<br>
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine 6 years<br>
University of Missouri-Kansas City School of 6 years 17%<br>
University of Rochester School of Medicine an 8 years 36%<br>
University of South Alabama College of Medici 8 years 33%<br>
University of Texas Medical School at San Ant 7 years %<br>
University of Wisconsin Medical School 7 years %<br>
Virginia Commonwealth University School of Me 8 years 62%<br>
Wayne State University School of Medicine 8 years % </p>

<p>Not sure if all the data is up to date or correct.The list gives some ideas about OOS acceptance rates.</p>

<p>sorry, but what do those percents mean?</p>

<p>Is that the percentage of students accepted to out of state programs or in general the acceptance rates of people that applied?</p>

<p>or do you mean the number of people that successfully finish the program, what is OOS?</p>

<p>@futuredr08: Maybe you should read the top of psychicreader's post. lol.</p>