Easiest programs to get into?

<p>Hey, I am from New Jersey, and I was wondering the ones affiliated with UMDNJ are easy to get into? Also, I am wondering what are other really easy ones to get into and what are their acceptance rates????</p>

<p>thanks so much.</p>

<p>from what i hear, the one affliated with UMDNJ are actually hard to get into (i used to think it was easy also). turns out that like every smart person in nj applies there ( and there are a lot of chinese and indian people). The other ones i hear are "easy" to get into, not that any are actually that easy, are like drexel.....but then again i hear this from smart people who get into like northwestern or other ivies. I dont know if this post was much help but maybe you got something out of it.</p>

<p>Siena/Albany Med is easier to get into than some others</p>

<p>Also NYIT has an affiliation with a DO school that is perhaps easier.</p>

<p>nah, I would be much better than a DO degree</p>

<p>*bump</p>

<p>please</p>

<p>drexel programs are pretty easy</p>

<p>as far as i know, the easier programs are the mid-tier ones.
Namely: Drexel, Umiami, New Jersey, etc.
If you are smart, then why would you want one of these anyways? Go to a better ugrad school and then just make it to a better med school via the normal applicant pool.
However, the top-tier med progs are good options because they give you both a good ugrad education AND med school.
Namely: Northwestern's HPME, USC's bac/md, Rice/Baylor, Case western, BU, and Brown (though brown's med school sucks--dont let the ivy league namebrand fool you; it isn't harvard or yale med).</p>

<p>is U o Miami only for florida residents?</p>

<p>Brown is ranked 14th in clinical care, above yale and harvard, though in research, you're right brownjigga, it does suck.</p>

<p>Sorry, it's only over Yale in primary care. It IS only 3 below Harvard though.</p>

<p>Um...Brown's med school does not <em>suck</em>. Even in research it's ranked #40, which for a school that is admittedly primary care-based, is still pretty strong. Who the heck are high school students to just throw phrases around like "oh, that med school sucks" when they know nothing about it? No, Brown is not as highly ranked as Harvard or Yale med. Guess what- the majority of med schools aren't. The majority of med schools aren't even ranked by US News, does that mean they all suck? I sense an undercurrent of resentment that Brown is automatically considered to be good because it's Ivy League. That assumption is wrong of course, but that doesn't mean that you're allowed to have a knee jerk reaction and insult it.</p>

<p>Hey hey, we can admit that there's a REASON Ivys are rough to get into; they have the smartest student populations, and in my opinion, there's nothing that makes a school better than a smart student population. In the end, it's the students doing the thinking and discussing....thats why private schools are better than public schools (for high school). So you don't have to automatically consider Brown good. But it is.</p>

<p>I think you misunderstood what I was saying. I obviously consider Brown is good, since I'm matriculating there next fall.</p>

<p>I see. Are you in the PLME prgram there? I'm going to be applying...</p>

<p>What are other programs.. are all NJ programs easy? Plus I hear Drexel is easy. What about the ones affiliated with ALBANY MEDICAL COLLEGE such as Sienna and Sophie-Davis..?</p>

<p>Which of the U-Grad colleges to UMDNJ are least selctive:</p>

<p>Drew, Stockton, NJIT, Stevens, College of New Jersey, or Rutgers?</p>

<hr>

<p>Also for ALBANY MED COLLEGE, which U-grad is least selective:?</p>

<p>Sienna, RPI, and sophie Davis</p>

<p>I was wondering if you can rank the selectivity rates..?</p>

<p>In addition, does anyone know some of the easier mid-low-tier schools to get into and their acceptance rates?</p>

<p>i thought U of Miami was hard to get in to??? you can get into the 8 yr i'm assuming, but 7 year is hard.</p>

<p>There are many accelerated bs/md programs that have unranked or "low-ranking" medical school, but have amazing placement in residencies for their students. A few of the best examples are UMiami, RPI/AMC Physician-Scientist, PSU/Jefferson. These three programs are definitely top bs/md programs because they are well reputed and have high success rates. UMiami program had the youngest Rhodes Scholar. RPI P-S is one of the oldest programs and every bs/md student has ranked in the top half of AMC at the very least and scored way above average on the steps compared to the AMC average and national average. And PSU/Jeff is the same way. The bs/md students at these programs got into great undergrads and know how to do well. Why not apply out? One reason, no MCATs, save a year of undergrad tuition, nice treatment in the med. school, stay with friends, alot less stress. These students tend to do as well as people who go to so called "better" medical schools because they perform at the same level.</p>

<p>For AMC, Sophie Davis is not part of it. Thats a separate program. AMC has three undergrad schools: RPI, Union, and Siena. The least to most selective order is Siena, Union, and RPI. The Siena program doesn't really give an edge. The RPI program is difficult to get in to, 7 years, has the most successful placement. The Union gives an MBA or a MS in Managment, but is 8 years, and students don't do as well at AMC in comparison to RPI students.</p>

<p>Is U of Miami only for florida residents? Also what are the cahnces for an out of state person for any of the 3 AMC programs?...lets just say he is as competetive as everyone else</p>