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<p>Many medical schools - if that counts as ‘graduate school’ - do not formally require that you finish your bachelor’s degree.  Granted, it may be difficult for you to win admission without such a degree or a plan to complete it, but you don’t formally need it.</p>
<p>…we only require completion of three years (135 quarter units or 90 semester units) of acceptable transfer college credit from an accredited institution,</p>
<p>[Getting</a> Started | How to Apply | Office of Admissions | UCSF School of Medicine](<a href=“http://medschool.ucsf.edu/admissions/apply/getting-started.aspx#importantinfo]Getting”>http://medschool.ucsf.edu/admissions/apply/getting-started.aspx#importantinfo)</p>
<p>…Ordinarily a bachelor’s degree is required for admission, but in certain instances students who have completed three full academic years at an accredited college or university might be accepted.</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.medstudent.ucla.edu/offices/admiss/admreq.cfm[/url]”>http://www.medstudent.ucla.edu/offices/admiss/admreq.cfm</a></p>
<p>*The MCAT and three years (90 semester hours or 135 quarter hours) in an accredited college or university in the United States are required. Applicants are urged to take the MCAT in the spring but no later than the summer in which the application is made. A course of study leading to a bachelor’s degree is recommended [but not required] *</p>
<p>[UC</a> Davis School of Medicine: Office of Admissions: Admissions requirements](<a href=“http://www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/mdprogram/admissions/requirements.html]UC”>Admissions requirements | UC Davis School of Medicine)</p>
<p>You also have the infamous case of the college dropout who was nevertheless admitted to the MBA program at Harvard Business School.</p>
<p>[Bush?s</a> Personal Aide To Enroll at Business School | News | The Harvard Crimson](<a href=“http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2006/5/22/bushs-personal-aide-to-enroll-at/]Bush?s”>Bush’s Personal Aide To Enroll at Business School | News | The Harvard Crimson)</p>
<p>And then you have somebody like Donald Tsang, the Chief Executive (basically equivalent to the political leader) of Hong Kong, who was somehow able to procure a MPA from Harvard despite no evidence of him ever having earned anything approaching the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree.  {Note, references to ‘Wah Yen College’ in his biography are actually a reference to the Hong Kong equivalent of high school.}  It’s not as if Hong Kong lacks undergraduate education offerings - indeed, Hong Kong has 9 public universities and a number of private universities that offer bachelor’s degree.  To this day, people in Hong Kong still wonder exactly how he managed to get into a graduate program at Harvard without ever having completed a bachelor’s degree.</p>