Jump to content
Premed 101 Forums

Hi


Guest Tara

Recommended Posts

Guest Ian Wong

I'm moving this to the General Premed Discussion forums.

 

Canadian med schools don't look at your high school marks, only the marks you will receive in university, so it's like getting a fresh start. All sorts of personality types go into medical school and become doctors. If you find the idea of medicine to be interesting and fascinating, then it could be a possible career for you.

 

Ian

UBC, Med 3

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Unknown


</username>
		<dateline>1154962920</dateline>
		<title>Unknown</title>
		<pagetext>(This

(This post is missing and can not be restored)</pagetext>

</post>

<post>

<thread>N</thread>

<threadtitle>Hi</threadtitle>

<threadviews>0</threadviews>

<threadsticky>0</threadsticky>

<poll></poll>

<username>Ian Wong</username>

<dateline>1009499160</dateline>

<title></title>

<pagetext>Hi Bran,

 

I've outlined some of my thoughts here:

 

premed101.com/undergrad.html#major

 

A couple of points. The first is that if you take a variety of courses in your first year of university, you still have a fair amount of flexibility in which majors you can still access. As a person who took the "standard" set of science courses in first year, I could have gone into Chemistry or Physics in second year university fairly easily, instead of the Biology degree that I ended up working towards. The exception to this are some of the more "professional" undergrad degrees, such as Engineering or Pharmacy, where your schedules are much more tightly controlled and inflexible.

 

The second point is that you need to consider what happens after university. Most university graduates then look for jobs. If you are still decided on applying to medical school, that's great, but many people who finish undergrad who originally wanted to become doctors have found other jobs that interest them more. If you are one of those people who decide after university that medicine is not the career for you, then it's much more reassuring to know that your university degree has prepared you to find a job that you love.

 

Finally, don't pick a major based on what you think the medical school is looking for. If you do well at your major, whatever it happens to be, you'll be in the running for medical school. Four years of university is a long time to spend in a program if you aren't too keen on it, and only chose it to "stand out" from the crowd.

 

Ian

UBC, Med 3

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Bran Wicks

Thanks for the reply. I guess I'll just hold off deciding until I find out what I enjoy. I'm just worried that I'll enjoy everything, like I do right now, and will have a hard time deciding then. I guess that's when eenie meenie minie moe comes in:-) Thanks again.

 

Bran

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...