<p>I'm sorry if this is a stupid question, but I remember reading somewhere that when you write down your premedical courses for the AMCAS, you can write down whether they are BCPM or other. This lets you write down courses that you took in psychology, for example, that are Neuroscience courses, and then the AMCAS correct it if it's unacceptable. Is that basically correct?</p>
<p>I can’t answer your question exactly.</p>
<p>However, I do know that at my college they often cross-listed more “science-esque” courses (such as neuroscience courses in the psych department) in biology, so students could choose whether to register their course with a BIO or PSYC before the course number. I always thought this was for medical school/graduate school purposes, but I’m not entirely sure.</p>
<p>At my school, a premed committee verifies everything you take and prepares it for AMCAS, such as which courses were science/math, etc. You may want to ask them.</p>
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<p>Yes, that is correct. If you believe that the content of a course (that isn’t already under a course title that is automatically included in BCPM) was more BCPM content than not, you can list it as such on AMCAS. The AMCAS verifier who looks over your application will then change anything they don’t agree with.</p>