SUPER confused. UCLA vs UCSD vs UCI vs SDSU for pre-physical therapy?

Hello!
So I got accepted to all four of these schools. Many people thought it was pretty obvious that I’d pick UCLA, however they only begin to understand my uncertainty when I explain that I want to be a physical therapist so the hands on approach of a CSU may be a better choice.

I got into UCLA as a Physiology major, UCSD as a Physiology and Neurobiology major in Marshall, UCI as a Ecological and Evolutionary science major (I plan to transfer to their Exercise Science major once I fulfill the prerequisites) and SDSU as a Kinesiology Pre Physical Therapy major and made it to SDSU’s Honors Program.

My grades are pretty good, but I’m scared that if I go to a harder school then I would face an unnecessarily large amount of competition. However, I’ve experienced being one of the smartest people in some of my classes and being surrounded by smart people and enjoyed being surrounded. At UCs I’d be surrounded by very intelligent people and be able to learn from them, however I’d also be competing with them for grades. At UCs, I’d be surrounded by pre-med students. I am really interested in the exercise science major of UCI, granted I’m able to transfer into the major. It’s probably the closest thing the UCs have to pre-pt. I understand that I shouldn’t just take the easier route for the sake of it being easier but I don’t want my gpa to suffer due to the competition and diminish my chances of getting into grad school. It’s hard to convince me that my fear of unnecessarily high academic competition won’t happen because I watched my sister do very well in high school, struggle in UC Berkeley and have a gpa that crushed her dreams of dentistry school.

I’ve visited all schools but UCLA (I had accepted rejection long ago and was blindsided by an acceptance) and liked UCI the best because it was more comfortable but I really liked the other schools as well. I can honestly see myself in each school but I have to pick one. I’m from the Bay Area and, as you can see with my school choices, I want to go down south. Cost isn’t an issue. I can’t make out which would be the best fit academically/socially, I feel like I can fit in all. Everyone says they can see me at UCLA, which I can completely see too. I like to be at least somewhat involved in my school. I’d enjoy going to sporting and campus events. I’m not so fond of partying but I would like to go to a few.

Basically, my biggest concerns are (1) UCs are researched-based, not the hands-on I’d need for PT (2) The higher tier the school the lower my gpa could drop.

Side note, I sound like I may come across as bashing on UCs, but it’s kind of just me trying to fight wanting the simple “prestige” of a UC and stuff. I am worried about the lowered graduation rate, grad school acceptance rate, job rate and the fact that I am REQUIRED to study abroad at SDSU.

Alright that was a long post of me rambling, thank you for reading. Any advice, or simply encouragement, would be appreciated!

Don’t forget to consider this. If you change your mind about what you want to do for a career (most college students do), which school will most likely provide you the best education in the many other fields of study you might choose?

I would have difficulty advising anyone not to choose UCLA (or perhaps UCSD) from among those choices.

But if you are absolutely sure that you will be a physical therapist, then go to UC Irvine and be happy about it. Its a very good school.

If you’re going to be stressed and worried at UCLA then go somewhere where you feel you’ll be happier and perform better. There’s no rule that says you should take the highest ranked school offered. Take the one where you feel you will fit best and that best helps you reach your personal goals.

As far as the lower graduation rate at SDSU that’s not going to affect your chances of graduating, and if you do well, the lower average grad school acceptance rate won’t matter either. (Remember, it’s not about averages, it’s about how well you as an individual do.)

Having said that, grad schools do take the school you’re coming from into account, and they’ll know if a high GPA is much harder to get at UCLA than SDSU and take that into consideration. So if that’s your main concern, don’t let it stop you from UCLA.

Another idea is to start at UCLA and then transfer to SDSU after a year if you find that it’s not working. You might be surprised and find the UCLA is just the place and not as bad as you think. I assume it’ll be easier to transfer from UCLA to SDSU than the other way around.