<p>Well it isn’t very often that a medical student will flunk out, but it does happen. You are right, always try to choose the cheaper school in regards to both undergrad and medical school unless the money difference is not so big and the other school is more prestigious. </p>
<p>Also, pick a major besides Biology (unless you really enjoy it). Medical school dont care about your major, in fact, it may even help you by choosing a more unique major since just about every other med school applicant is a Bio or Chem major.</p>
<p>there’s always 2 sides to a story, they say. I’d say what’s posted above is a very skewed account of the story.</p>
<p>Med schools don’t like to admit they made a mistake and so they bend over backwards to get students thru, let them drop back a year and repeat if they’re in trouble academically, etc. So it’s unlikely to be the case that this guy was surprised one day to find out he was failing a class, and then the school kicked him out without trying to help him. I bet there’s a lot more to the story.</p>
<p>Moral of the story is: Do well in medical school. Or else you would get kicked out, become unemployed, and can’t pay your insurance and undergrad debt bills.</p>
<p>If the Moral of the story is to “always pick a cheaper school to go to”, then your setting yourself up for failure. You go to school for aspirations to win, you don’t pick schools for safety nets so as when you fail, you fail “less miserably.” </p>
<p>I’d rather try to focus my money on a good education and try to succeed in life.</p>
<p>Some CCers insist on going to private schools where the difference in cost can be up to 200k. Moral of the story: be financial responsible. If a school costs too much, state school is good, too.</p>
He graduated with honors. Made it to med school. I say he’s better than those who were kept outside of the gate.
Another thing is how high is med school drop out rate? PhD hovers around 40 to 50%. That’s the way it should be. I want my doctor to be competent.</p>
<p>You are right, but you are being a bit harsh. I think middsmith is also right that people ought to choose the more financially responsible choice.</p>
<p>before u post a story, u could at least read it…he was in fact going to dental school, failed a class, then failed the retake and doesnt want to do anything…
moral of the story is not to fail a class and then retake and fail again…thanks for not reading the story u decided to post as a warning to the wrong person middsmith…:)</p>
<p>rated:
posted: Apr. 29, 2008 @ 8:55p [link to this post]</p>
<p>I wish I was making this story up, but I am not. I used med school as a generic term, it was actually dental school. I failed a class and I was dismissed. MY transcript says academic dismissal. I did not cheat or get caught dong anything illegal or anything like that. I failed a class and that’s basically it. I went from being in one of the top dental programs in the nation, to having no degree to show for it and owe so much in school debt with no way to pay it. I went from expecting to earn in the top 5% of US adults, to negative hundreds of thousands of dollars. I might not have a real job now, and I am not asking for anyones sympathy, but my life was totally flipped upside down when this happened. It is not easy.</p>
<p>I was an average student, transfers in dental school are extremely rare to begin with. I tried every dental school in the USA to see if I could transfer all the classes i did pass or anything, restart at another school. But no schools will accept a student like me. I reapplied as a new student as well as transfer, it just does not work.</p>
<p>I appreciate all the comments so far, especially since most have been constructive. Perhaps I am due some criticism, but I am here to learn and to get ideas from fatwallet members. Thanks.
Message edited by: rickross on 2008-04-29 21:00:54 CDT</p>
<p>Hehe, in that case, I used med school as a generic term. His profile is almost like any pre-med students’, biology major, etc… So it wasn’t non-sequitur.</p>
The PhD dropout rate is around 40-50% for many programs, but that’s not the fail-out rate – most of the people who leave a PhD program leave by choice, not because they’re forced to leave.</p>
<p>As far as I know, the med school fail-out/dropout rate is much lower than the PhD dropout rate.</p>