Dual enrollment courses/grades affect my admission decision to Medical Schools

<p>I took some dual enrollment courses, some of them are required courses by medical schools such as biology and chemistry. The questions ''Do medical schools look down courses taken when you are still in high school?" Say if you go to a top colleges, none of these credits counts, so you have to retake tjem, then the courses do not matter. If you go to a college, they accept these credits and you do not take them again, will these put you in disadvantage when you apply medical schools?</p>

<p>I guess not many people know this</p>

<p>Even if you retake them, they will count in your final application GPA. You must send all college level transcripts into AMCAS (the medical school application service) when applying. There are national clearinghouses that track college student enrollment, including dual credit programs, that AMCAS searches to make sure your application is complete. Failure to send in all transcripts flags your application. At best, you it delays the processing of your application as you have to be notified, then spend the time and effort tracking down the transcript, getting it sent to AMCAS, etc. At worst, medical schools consider it an example of unethical behavior, particularly if they feel like you failed to provide the transcripts on purpose, and not only does the grades hurt, but you receive marks against you in terms of professionalism (which is a MAJOR movement across all of medical education and training).</p>