<p>“2) I think, even with grade inflation, Top 20 colleges are still harder than state schools. There is limited data available. But my conjecture comes from a couple of things:”</p>
<p>^ Thank-you, someone who agrees with me</p>
<p>“The reason I asked is that the grade inflation-deflation issue is much more pronounced in the sciences. In the humanities, A’s and B’s are much more readily obtainable in the humanities, even at schools like Berkeley which give out a bunch of D’s and F’s in the premed sciences. Thus, I would guess that the grade range would not be as wide as it might be if we had science gpa’s and MCAT scores. But just a guess…”</p>
<p>^ This is true, as long as you do the work for your humanities classes(it can be a lot), you should get an A. For some of the pre-med classes at Vandy, no matter how much me and my friends study, there are certain tests and assignments where we all just get dominated. You guys thought I studied a lot, some of my friends here work twice as hard, and still don’t get the results they wanted.</p>