<p>no they have 100% accpetence rating when applying FROM their school to other med schools CNU doesn't have a med school themself</p>
<p>"no they have 100% accpetence rating when applying FROM their school to other med schools CNU doesn't have a med school themself"</p>
<p>Are you sure about this? I can't see this being true... I mean CNU isn't even a high ranked college it's a third tier liberal arts college...</p>
<p>Austin College in Sherman, Texas.</p>
<p>Any school can have a 100% rate if it screens. And any school can, easily. Few schools do at all, and even fewer do so in any meaningful manner.</p>
<p>Shazilla, i think they're trying to say that schools such as CNU only have a 100% admissions rate because they don't allow everybody to apply to med school. They only let the people that they believe will be accepted apply, therefore creating an extremely high feeder rate for their school.</p>
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It depends on the state school. But generally, I think it is better.Difference between 3.4 and 3.6 may be 2c+ vs 2As over 4 years;and despite Harvard's reputation for grade inflation, I think the competition at Harvard is much more intense than let's say U of WV, or U of Az.</p>
<p>CB does point out correctly that how you got the grades matters - two B's is probably better than one C, even though the GPA comes out the same - and that which school it is matters, too. Berkeley isn't the same as UVa, which isn't the same as Colorado State, etc.</p>
<p>Is it true that Harvard medical school does not prefer applicants who are Harvard graduates?</p>
<p>From Swarthmore Premed Guide: In 2004, Swarthmore's acceptance rate for the 13 graduating seniors was 92% and the 26 alumni/ae applicants was 81% for an overall acceptance rate of 85%</p>
<p>Looks pretty high to me</p>