bbtitle]
» CC HOME » FORUM HOME

Go Back   College Confidential > College Admissions and Search > Colleges and Universities > Alphabetic List of Colleges > C > Cornell College
New User

Welcome to College Confidential, the leading college-bound community on the Web!
 
Here you'll find hundreds of pages of articles about choosing a college, getting into the college you want, how to pay for it, and much more. You'll also find the Web's busiest discussion community related to college admissions, and our College Visits section!

You are currently viewing the site as a guest.
Registration is simple and easy, and provides full site access.

Join our FREE community:

  • Post and reply to topics
  • Talk privately with other members
  • Participate in polls
  • View less ads
  • Remove this welcome message

 REGISTER NOW

Discussion Menu
»Discussion Home
»Help & Rules
»Latest Posts
»NEW! College Visits
»NEW! Stats Profiles
Top Forums
»College Search
»College Admissions
»Financial Aid
»SAT/ACT
»Parents
»Colleges
»Ivy League
Main CC Site
»College Confidential
»College Search
»College Admissions
»Paying for College
Sponsors
CC Resources for Cornell College
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 04-12-2009, 06:57 PM   #1
New Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 24
Vet Grad School

I am a senior ion high school who has a strong desire to attend Cornell's veterinary graduate school as a grad student in 4 years. I am currently deciding between UC davis and UC Berkeley, and am wondering which one Cornell would find more appealing. UC Berkeley has the prestige,but UC Davis rivals Cornell all the time in terms of ranking for the top vet schools in the nation, but I"m not sure if such a relationship would help in terms of getting accepted to Cornell. Does anyone here have any idea which COrnell would look more favorably upon?
Thanks
JHodzic is offline   Reply   
Old 04-12-2009, 07:12 PM   #2
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 866
The three most important criteria for getting into vet school are grades/test scores, state of residence, and experience working with animals. You don't say which state you're a resident of, but if you're not a resident of NY at the time of application to Cornell's vet school, you will be at a significant disadvantage to applicants who are NY residents. Is there any particular reason that you are so focused on Cornell for veterinary medicine? There are only 28 accredited vet schools in the U.S., and ALL of them are excellent and will prepare you well. If you have a vet school in your home state, that is BY FAR your best bet for admission. Vet school is harder to get into than medical school, so you need to take every advantage that you can get. If you are a NY resident, have you applied to Cornell undergrad? If you fiind yourself in the enviable position of having to choose between UC-Davis and UC-Berkely, then I suspect that you would be a competitive applicant for Cornell undergrad as well. To get back to your question, all other things being equal, choose UC-Davis over UC-Berkeley if you want to go to vet school. The reason is simple -- Davis has an excellent undergraduate animal science department, which is the major of choice for most vet school applicants. Berkeley doesn't. You'll also get more opportunities to work with animals and/or perform veterinary related research at Davis than you will at Berkeley.
gbesq is offline   Reply   
Old 04-12-2009, 08:40 PM   #3
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 881
This should be posted in Cornell University NOT Cornell College.
cpeltz is offline   Reply   
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:45 AM.


Copyright 2001-2009, Hobsons, Inc., All Rights Reserved