<p>Isn't Medical school kind of like a graduate school?? Like Law School etc...</p>
<p>So would this apply to their ideology of allowing undergraduate pre-med oriented students to take a few first year medical courses/seminars with med students and gain credits??</p>
<p>I saw this idea on their brochure of allowing both undergrad/graduate students and allowing them to take undergraduate seminars/courses and graduate seminars/courses...</p>
<p>Its on the online stanford prospective student booklet... In PDF format u can get it from their website...</p>
<p>Anyways can someone confirm this idea that an individual is allowed to take graduate courses in medicine?</p>
<p>Undergrads are allowed to take graduate courses, not professional school courses (law, med, biz). Professional schools do offer a limited number of courses to all students.</p>
<p>well i know that... i was thinking they were graduate studies... as in it is something after undergrad... i wasnt trying to confuse the 2... i just thought of it as in medicine is graduate school... and undergrad etc...</p>
<p>Sure, they're both after undergrad, but graduate school is on the academia track whereas med school is definitively a trade/professional school. ENTIRELY different worlds.</p>
<p>I don't know for sure, but I do know that Stanford offers this anatomy course where undergrads can dissect a person. I know usually only med school students get that opportunity and I've never heard of any other school allowing that. It's really competitive and you pretty much have to be a senior to take it, but you don't have to be premed. It just happens that most people are premed.</p>
<p>Each professional school has its own tuition and budget, so classes are not normally open to other students: undergrads, grads, and other professional students. As I mentioned, some schools do offer a limited number of open classes.</p>
<p>Be aware also that when you take classes in other schools, especially the GSB (business school), you're subject to their deadlines, rules and grading scales, which in the GSB results in a wicked curve that's really tough.</p>
<p>Better late than never? Anyway, undergrads are able to take med. school courses for credit. The offerings are limited to electives like Wilderness Medicine, Medical Acupuncture).</p>
<p>old posting
but basic science years at most medical schools are open to undergrads - or other grad students - if they are qualified to take the course. Prime examples being biochemistry and physiology and histology</p>