<p>In fact, I've never heard of it mattering at all. It strikes me as being very important, actually, but adcoms don't seem to agree with that assessment.</p>
<p>it seems pretty silly to ask what a 2400 in particular converts to on the MCAT scale..
45??
But yeah, no correlation.</p>
<p>but see that's half the point about not being able to compare the two. People with 2400s are a dime a dozen - nobody, and I mean nobody, gets a 45. Half the time a scaling for a given test tops out at 43 even, so it'd be statistically impossible to score higher.</p>
<p>i have some questions i am a 14 year old who is interstead on becoming a physicans ive been looking into some things lately and discovered you have to take a test as the (MCAT) but my ?? is if u fail the test can you take it over again and if so how many times can you take it ??</p>
<p>You don’t “Pass” or “Fail” the MCAT. You take it and earn a score. In turn the score (along with your college GPA and other factors is used by medical schools to decide if they want to interview you–which is the first step toward admission.</p>
<p>In theory, you can take the MCAT as many times as you’d like; in practice, medical schools tend to reject individuals who take it more than once. So you need to prepare hard, take it once and score well.</p>