A most intense young man,
A soul-eyed young man,
An ultra political, super-aesthetical
young man
An out-of-the way young man.
W.S. Gilbert (1836-1911), Patience
Can the MCAT identify that ethereal mix
of scientist, humanist, and spiritual that makes a good doctor?Elizabeth Rosenthal, MD, “Moulding a New Medical Student,” New York Times, April 15, 2012.
April 16, 2012- Elizabeth Rosenthal, medical doctor, dermatologist, and full time journalist ,who writes often in
the New York Times, reports in the
Sunday Times about the new MCAT (Medical College Admissions Test).
The new
MCAT, used to sort the wheat from the chaff among prospective doctors, will be 6 1/2 hours long instead of 4 1/2 hours
for the old MCAT. It took more than 3 years to design. It will place more emphasis on the social sciences, humanities, psychology, and emotions. The idea behind the new test is to select and
produce a caring doctor who knows just as much about the patient’s holistic life as about
technology and science. The new test will potentially miminize technological skills and maximize the healing arts.
Will the new MCAT work? Will potential doctors have time in undergraduate years to master both the hard and soft sciences? No one knows. As Dr. Rosenthal says, this is “uncharted territory.” Will the new MCAT help find those students, more and more of whom are “later bloomers,” who have lived a little longer among the rest of humanity than the youngsters applying for medical school?
Will the new MCAT work? Will potential doctors have time in undergraduate years to master both the hard and soft sciences? No one knows. As Dr. Rosenthal says, this is “uncharted territory.” Will the new MCAT help find those students, more and more of whom are “later bloomers,” who have lived a little longer among the rest of humanity than the youngsters applying for medical school?
I have no idea. But I found the following statistics
fascinating, intimidating, and even a little disturbing.
Table 1
Total Number of Applicants
|
Accepted
|
Rejected
|
Men
Accepted
|
Women Accepted
|
43,
919
|
20,176
|
23,
743
|
10,193
|
9,037
|
Table 2
Majors
|
Accepted
|
Rejected
|
% Accepted
|
Biological
Sciences
|
22,863
|
10,228
|
69.1%
|
Social
Sciences
|
5,107
|
2,323
|
68.1%
|
Physical
Sciences
|
4,670
|
3,25
|
65.9%
|
Humanities
|
1,999
|
1035
|
65.8%
|
Specialized
Health Sciences
|
1,268
|
443
|
74.1%
|
Math
and Statistics
|
387
|
200
|
65.9%
|
Table 3
Major
|
GPA,
mean, maximum, 4.0, of those accepted
|
MCAT,
mean, maxixum, 45 of those accepted
|
Biological
Sciences
|
3.68
|
30.9
|
Humanities
|
3.66
|
31.7
|
Math
and Statistics
|
3.66
|
32.6
|
Physical
Sciences
|
3.66
|
32.2
|
Social
Sciences
|
3.63
|
31.1
|
Specialized
Health Sciences
|
3.66
|
29.4
|
Mean GPAs
and MCAT score by age
|
GPA (Grade Point Average)
|
MCAT (Medical College Admissions Test)
|
Under
20
|
3.81
|
31.5
|
20-22
|
3.77
|
31,4
|
23-25
|
3.64
|
31.0
|
26-28
|
3.49
|
30.4
|
28
and over
|
3.47
|
30.4
|
Table 5
Applicants
by Race/Ethnicity
|
Applicants/Accepted
|
%
Accepted
|
White
|
27,373/13,290
|
48.6%
|
Hispanic
|
3,459/1,701
|
49.2%
|
Others
|
1,892/909
|
48.0%
|
Non-US
|
1,647/310
|
18.8%
|
Asian
|
9,980/4542
|
45.5%
|
Black
|
3,640/1437
|
39.5%
|
Overall
|
47,991/22,189
|
46.2%
|
In fact straight A’s may reflect a report card mentality and a false barrier to selecting good doctors. Straight A's by themselves never made anybody a good doctor. In fact, some of the most successful practitioners came from the middle of lower reaches of their medical school class.
Give me a well-rounded solid B student over the straight A nerd. In my day, a GPA of 3.0 was considered good enough to be considered for medical school. Today you need a 3.5 GPA to make the grade. Do I detect a whiff of GPA inflation in the modern era? I notice older students tend to have slightly lower GPA and MCAT scores. That doesn’t bother me. They make up for it with life experience and determination to become a doctor in spite of their age.
Tweet: The
new MCAT (Medical College Admissions
Test), 3 years in the making, is designed to pick individuals who may become
more humane doctors.
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