Emcee77
latress on the men-jay
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I mean even if you knew 100 doctors the sample size would still be extremely small.
Yes, of course, but wouldn't you agree that if I know 100 doctors, half of whom did not go directly to medical school out of undergrad, it would be strange if 90% of all doctors went to medical school right out of undergrad? Not saying it's impossible, but I doubt it's the case; it would mean I know a dramatically atypical sample set.
The statement said "and." "About 90 percent of medical school applicants apply during their junior year of college AND start medical school right after college." If you take it at face value, it means that 90% do both of these things.
Yes, I agree that's what it said, but don't you agree that the bolded simply cannot be true? There is no way that 90% of med school applicants are admitted to med school on their first try. The highest ratio of applicants to matriculants that I've seen lately is like 45%, and I'm skeptical of even that. The sentence in the article you linked which seems to say that 90% of med school applicants apply in college and are admitted to med school on their first try simply must have been poorly written so as to be unintentionally misleading.
Either way, I think most people take the MCAT and go straight to school, or intend to. And your interpretation of the statement doesn't make sense anyway, because almost all MCAT scores are only good for 2-3 years.
This I don't follow... How does this come into play? First of all, people may retake the MCAT, or people who apply out of undergrad and don't get in may give up on med school and go a different route (I have several friends from school who weren't admitted to med school and became very successful in various other walks of life), or people who never considered med school at all in college enroll in a post-bac program and take the MCAT several years after graduating. But even all that aside, all I'm talking about is waiting one year. I'm certain you can take the MCAT in your junior year of college and go to med school in your second year out of school without retaking it.
I agree with you that depth will be a worry next year, and we should start thinking about it now. But not because Hendrix is going to put off med-school because most people do.
I'm not saying that. I'm saying that nothing prevents Hendrix from putting off med school for one year--indeed, people often do that for various reasons--and I expect him to do that as well, since he has invested so much in being a college QB and he will want to a chance to play somewhere for a year.
Let's just assume for a second that it's true that 90% of people who go to med school do so right after college. That 10% is still a large enough percentage that I'm confident Hendrix won't feel like he has to rush into medical school if he'd prefer to play football as a starting QB somewhere for one year.
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