Choosing courses that will give you the information and background required to write the MCAT is vital to your success. This will guide you on what courses you should be taking to prepare for the MCAT. This is the at the start part of a two part series. Any comments, questions or suggestions are salutation. As usual, please rate, comment and subscribe. I will answer to any comments that are left for me. -MCAT Strategy
24
Jul
MCAT Strategy – Course Selection for MCAT Success Ep1
Filed under Misc | 4 Comments
Tags: CBT, Course, Examkrackers, Gold Standard, kaplan, MCAT, MCAT Exam, MCAT Prep, MCAT Review, MCAT Study, MCAT Studying, MCAT Test, medical school, Medicine, Meds, Oxford, Prep, Preparation, Princeton, Strategy, study, Studying, Tips, Tutorial, Verbal, Verbal Reasoning
It is uncommon here in Canada and the States. We have to start our undergrad and after 3-4 years we apply to a medical school program. The medcal school program itself is 4 years.
I’m in the UK and though I am still quite young, I am starting to choose which college or academe I want to go to after I turn 18. Most Universities here offer a seven year course for those wanting to practice medicine, I was wondering if the same was right for Canada and the United States?
Thank you for the information. I’m a Canadian student so I didn’t know the specifics.
I made an annotation at the end of the video to read your comment.
Thanks again!
For U.S. Medical School, pre-medical students HAVE to take a full year of Biology, Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Physics. The video states that these courses are required for most medical school, but they are really required of all U.S. medical colleges. Many U.S. medical school also REQUIRE that applicants take Biochemistry. Thus, research the school you wish to apply to, many schools have additional prerequisites, such as Calculus, Social Sciences, English etc.