<p>Would a student would have a better chance of being admitted to medical school if his undergrad was done at the University of California vs the California State University system?</p>
<p>The student with better grades, more volunteer hours, better recommendation letters, and a better interview.</p>
<p>What school they went to is irrelevant as long as it isn’t Devry, University of Pheonix online, or a community college.<br>
However, it sometimes is better to go to the more prestigious school because if you just aren’t cut out for med school…at least you’ll have a degree from a prestigious school ya dig?</p>
<p>Whether a student graduates from a CSU or a UC if they have a GPA of at least 3.6 and an MCAT score of at least 30. On the other hand, unless the applicant is a URM, a GPA of less than 3.4 and a MCAT score of less than 28 is an almost certain rejection at any medical school no matter where you received your UG degree.</p>
<p>If the OP is really asking “what school is easier to get a medical school acceptable GPA in?”, then it may take a fair amount of digging for information. More selective schools tend to have more competitive students, but also higher grade inflation; someone focused only on GPA would want to find the school with the most grade inflation relative to the competitiveness of the student body. [url=<a href=“http://www.gradeinflation.com%5Dgradeinflation.com%5B/url”>http://www.gradeinflation.com]gradeinflation.com[/url</a>] does note that private schools tend to have more grade inflation than public schools, and that humanities tends to have more grade inflation than sciences (so a pre-med focused only on GPA would take only enough science to fulfill requirements and learn MCAT material, while majoring in humanities, if s/he is at a school that follows this pattern).</p>