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Can I get into Med-school if i am a criminology major?
I'm about to enroll in college. I want to be a criminology major, but i also want to go to med-school and specialize in emergency medicine. What would be some good pre-requesits(sp) to med school?
Also, i'm rather broke...my EFC score for financial aide was 0 lol does med school participate in financial aide??? Please say yes....
6 Answers
- ?Lv 79 years agoFavorite Answer
To go to medical school in Canada or the USA, you first need a bachelors degree. It can be in any major but you need 8 to 10 specific sciences courses. In most schools Pre-med is not a major but the set of specific sciences courses you take for medical school. The courses vary depending on the medical school you choose. If you are a high school, the courses you take or your grades are not that important as long as you can actually get into university or college. But you should take most of the AP sciences courses offered. Only your undergrad grades matter for medical school.
Your choice of undergrad school is not that important as long as it is regionally accredited and they have the science courses you need. It is suggested that you may be better off at a less competitive undergrad school as you will likely get a better GPA. Going to an extremely competitive undergrad school generally makes little difference for getting into medical school and can hurt you if it causes you to get a lower GPA.
You should make sure the major you select is not a personal enrichment major but one that actually leads to a career in case you do not get into medical school. Biomedical engineering is one such useful major.
It is NOT recommended to double major if you want to go to medical school as this will not improve your chances but does have the very real possibility of dragging your GPA down enough that you will not get into medical school. Also going to community college for 2 years and transferring is not a good idea. Many medical schools will not count the sciences you took at community college and with scheduling issues it is not likely you will get all of them you need in 2 years of university. It is possible but it is very hard. More likely you will end up doing an extra year at university which will blow the money you saved by going to community college first.
A typical mix of required courses would include one year each of:
English
General chemistry with labs
Organic chemistry with labs
Biology with labs
Biochemistry
Physics with labs
Statistics
Calculus
and others that would be specific to the medical school you apply to.
These courses generally take 2-3 years to complete.
If you are going the community college route and then transfer to a university as a junior, it is unlikely you can do the required courses in 2 years at the university. You will likely need three years which will wipe out your cost savings going the community college route. And if you went the community college route because of low high school GPA, it is doubling challenging as your chances are remote that you can improve your study habits enough get the very high university GPA needed for medical school..
As for what major to select, you may want to select a major that actually leads to a career just in case you do not get into medical school.
If you get a score on the MCAT exam of 32 you have a 3 in 4 chance of acceptance when accompanied by an undergrad GPA of 3.8 or higher. Go look at an MCAT study guide at a book store to get an idea of what you will need to learn.
Besides that, while an undergrad, you may want to become an Emergency Medical Technician. It will give you valuable experience in medical emergencies. And you will discover before it is to late if you have the stomach for the blood and you will learn how well you can handle life or death situations. Having pried bloody people out of car wrecks and saving most of them is something med schools like to see. And you may earn some money doing it.
My daughter got her EMT-B ticket while a senior in college by going to a community college three evenings a week for a semester. She tells me there is no rush like driving with lights and sirens. As well, some universities offer EMT training as an undergraduate course.
As a PhD student and EMT at a major university she that it appeared that 90% of the EMTs working for her school are pre-med as they believe it gave them an advantage, and after seeing a class of them graduate, it really did make a difference.
Regardless, to go to medical school requires a passion for medicine. If you are not passionate about medicine and the least bit doubtful whether it is the best choice for you, there is a very real possibility that you will not make it. That is, if you have to ask whether medical school is right for you, it likely is not.
Here is an example of what a top medical school costs excluding housing and board:
http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/fees/medfee.htm
As for specialties, you take those after you get your MD.
Also see:
https://www.aamc.org/download/157450/data/table24-...
As for aid, if you are deemed good enough you can get loans for the entire quarter million it will cost.
- ?Lv 45 years ago
1
Source(s): Criminal Records Search Database - http://criminalrecords.raiwi.com/?xvsm - Emily MLv 79 years ago
Yes, you can major in criminology as long as you also take the prerequisite courses required by the medical schools you might like to attend. See the web sites of the medical schools or the book/database MSAR (see link below) for details. You will have to take at least a year of lecture & lab courses in general/inorganic chemistry, organic chemistry, physics, and biology. You may also have to take math (possibly calculus), biochemistry, or other subjects.
Financial aid for medical school is limited. You can get the government to pay your way if you agree to serve in the military or do primary care in an underserved area. Emergency medicine does not count as primary care, unfortunately. Also, medical students are considered good credit risks, so getting a loan is not usually a problem. Also, students who choose to participate in MD/PhD programs to become clinical research scientists may get funding for their education.
After medical school, you would do a residency to specialize in Emergency Medicine. Residents are paid.
Source(s): www.aamc.org/msar - 9 years ago
Certainly, as long as you take all the classes required for medical school admissions -- this includes several biology, chemistry, and I believe physics courses. You'll have to check on medical schools' websites.
I suppose you could get some financial aid from the school, but it'll be much more limited than what you would get for undergrad. You'll have a substantial amount of loans. It's implied that your career after medical school should provide enough income to pay off that loan eventually, but it doesn't always work out that way...
- AlexLv 79 years ago
You can major in underwater basket weaving as long as you take the pre-med classes. They're pretty much the same for every med school:
1 year of biology w/labs
1 year of physics w/labs
1 year of general chemistry w/labs
1 year of organic chemistry w/labs
1 semester of calculus
1 semester of English composition
Most med schools have little to no financial aid. Most med students finance the entire thing with loans.
- eriLv 79 years ago
You can major in anything as long as you take the premed classes, which are required. All 4-year colleges and universities offer the classes. You'll need to take out loans for medical school; most doctors graduate over 250k in debt. You'd study emergency medicine after medical school.