<p>my choices are</p>
<li>RPI</li>
<li>WPI</li>
<li>Boston University</li>
<li>University of Mass. Amherst</li>
<li>University of Conn.</li>
</ol>
<p>my choices are</p>
<li>RPI</li>
<li>WPI</li>
<li>Boston University</li>
<li>University of Mass. Amherst</li>
<li>University of Conn.</li>
</ol>
<p>I was accepted to RPI for biology, as a pre-med student. I visited RPI today, and was really disappointed by the fact that they really downplayed pre-medicine. They really focus a lot on engineering, and the "pure sciences." Each class (grade) is more than 1,000 kids, and I was told that approximately 40 kids from the class applied for medical schools... That's a pretty small number.</p>
<p>Pretty much the same at uconn, only its a class of 3800 and only 50-60 apply and half get in.</p>
<p>that's pretty sad... haha</p>
<p>Pretty sad you say, I say its pretty good. Odds are that those who didn't apply/ didn't get in shouldn't of gotten in. A least looking at their grades tells you this. The people who deserve to go do. Those who don't don't.</p>
<p>WPI and Boston University are best off that list</p>
<p>Georgetown University vs. Brandeis University vs. University of Maryland Gemstone Program vs. LeHigh University. Feedback would be greatly appreciated. I am fairly sure that I want to do Biochemistry.</p>
<p>Go where you want to go, not where you think you have the best chance of improving your application. Seriously, where you go to undergrad does not matter nearly as much as things like gpa, MCAT, involvement, and in a lot of places state of residence.</p>
<p>You'll enjoy college a lot more if you find the right fit, rather than ignore college as some simple stepping stone that you don't care about.</p>