Please help me decide my major. Please!

Hi, so im a sophomore in a small charter school in south florida. I want to be a doctor. My top choice school for undergrad and med school is University of Florida.

Personally, I want to dual enroll at Indian River State College before graduating high school… but if I do this what should I major in?

Here are my options:
Nutrition and Dietetics
Health Services Management
Occupational Therapy
Pharmacy
Pre-Med
Nursing

I want to build a foundation in medicine and sciences before continuing my education, so I think one of these majors would be best.
I want to do Pre-medicine, but this is not a major at UF…
My second choice in Nutrition and Dietetics… is this a bad major for a premed?
Would nursing be a good major?

Should I drop DE and do all AP or what?? So lost PLEASE help me I schedule classes soon and I am panicking because nobody will help me online or in real life! Please!!

Start by reading this thread:
[What should a pre-med major in?](http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/pre-med-topics/214387-what-should-premed-major.html)

  1. Pre-med is not a major (except at Penn State) ; it’s an intention. A pre-med can major in anything so long as med school pre-reqs are fulfilled.

  2. Pharmacy is not an undergraduate major; it’s graduate level professional degree.

  3. Occupational therapy is not an undergraduate major; it’s a graduate level professional degree.

  4. Nursing, nutrition &dietetics, and health service management are all vocational majors–which are less than ideal majors for a pre-med for a number of reasons, including the fact that science coursework for vocational majors usually doesn’t meet med school admission requirements. (There are different levels of science courses at college. At many colleges, vocational students take a less competitive/comprehensive version of science classes than do science majors.)

Vocation degrees also signal med school admission committees that you are less than committed to becoming a physician. (For example, nutrition & dietetics will cause your interview to ask: if you want to be doctor, why are studying to become a dietitian? Ditto for nursing or health service management.)

Additionally according to AMCAS data, vocational majors are less likely to score well on the MCAT and are significantly less likely to gain an acceptance to med school even when the lower average MCAT scores are taken into consideration. IOW, vocational majors hurt your chances of gaining a med school admission.

tl;dr-- major in any academic subject you enjoy. It’s not necessary to major in a biological or physical science. My daughters’ med school classmates have majors ranging from agriculture to music performance to women’s studies to mathematics to theology to computer engineering.


AP or DE--it really doesn't matter so long as you understand that any classes you take DE must reported to medical schools and all DE grades earned will be included in your GPA and sGPA when you apply to medical schools.

(IOW, you need to be earning As in your DE classes. Don't slack off.)

Thank you so, so much!

I heard that med schools frown upon community colleges… Is that true?

http://irsc.smartcatalogiq.com/en/2011-2012/Catalog/Associate-in-Arts-Degree/Pre-MedicinePre-DentalPre-VeterinaryPre-Physical-Therapy-track/Associate-in-Arts-Degree-Pre-Medicine-Pre-Dental-Pre-Veterinary-Pre-Physical-Therapy-track

By the way, this is what my college offers, isn’t this a premed major?

Some medical schools will not accept credits for pre-requisites done at community college. Or only will accept a limited number of credits (typically 8 credits).

And there is a lingering preconception among adcomms that CC coursework is less rigorous than coursework completed at a 4 year college. If you do attend a CC, postpone taking your pre-reqs classes until after you transfer to your 4 year college. Or plan to take upper level science coursework there to show any good CC grades aren’t a fluke.

There is no such thing as a pre-med major. The program you’ve linked to is a an associates degree program that includes some, but not all, of the more commonly required pre-reqs for medical, dental, vet, OT, PT, pharm and other health profession careers.