yogurtexpress
Active Member
- Local time
- Today 8:15 PM
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2011
- Messages
- 127
English-creative writing
Yes, but I have not chosen yet. I am going to wait until I learn significantly more before I commit.
^ are you studying things that interest you or just for your regular schoolwork?
^you feel like critiquing a couple of my short (quite short) stories for me?
It doesn't matter too much what major you choose in terms of getting into med school. As long as you get the grades that's what counts. Med schools give a little bit more respect to "difficult" majors, but not that much and it is way better to get straight A's than to master a difficult subject (In the eyes of med school admissions boards.)
Though if you're taking the route of "I had no direction before, but after becoming an EMT-Paramedic I discovered that I'm really interested in medicine" I would recommend taking a path that is at least somewhat related to medicine.
Most schools you go to will have med advisors though and there's a lot of info online you can find pretty easily. The med school advisor at UF told me to just major in what I was most interested in, and that seemed like sound advice.
Engineering is really hard to get through (at some schools) with a strong GPA, although pretty much all the majors you listed can be.
If you're really interested in the "real world applications" part though, some of the engineering subsets might let you down as they are mostly theory courses until you are an upper-class-man.
That's a great idea. (Though I didn't mean to discourage engineering if you have a genuine interest, it's just that some professors seem bent on piling huge amounts of work on their students to "weed out" the lazy ones (read as "weed out the INTPs))
Granted you will probably have to take some science courses even if you have already taken them in community college, Med schools want to see that you have succeeded in science/math courses recently and at the school you graduate from.
If you can get good grades in the Calc sequence, Chem 1+2 plus labs and probably organic chem, physics + lab, etc. While you also major in a humanities type discipline, Med schools will eat you up.
Especially if you score well on MCAT (which I'm sure you will as an INTP you are probably good with standardized tests and stuff, yes?)
Thanks@MEDICaustik
You might like geology a lot. My best friend majored in geology and there's a lot of opportunity for field work.
I learned French, and I found languages are much harder than mathy stuff (at least for me.)
All of those sound super interesting to me actually. This is the problem I had a few years ago where I just couldn't choose.
@Wasp I love programming, but there's someone on this forum named Architect who I believe does that for a living. You might want to ask him?
Any advice on which undergrad to pursue?
I like the other 3 more because there is room to use those to do field work.. outdoors.
I have to disagree about ending up jobless. Geologists and Environmental scientists work closely with one another, and with the recent interest in global climate I'd bet that paleomagnetism and paleoclimatology are going to be growing fields IMO. Geology is broad.
lolz. my turn
Major: Mechanical Engineering
Major: Psychology Grad preperation
Minor: Communications
Minor: Economics
lol my advisor is gonna kill me when he sees I switched to econ.
Communications classes were a joke, classes designed for ESF's. not like standard academia. Learned the same stuff as psych but taught in a horrible manner. eh and comm major ppl, the most talkative Sensor bunch so annoying
A bit late to the party, but hey, what the hell.
If med school is your goal:
Biology
*Bioengineering
Neuroscience
Chemistry
*Given your background and INTP nature, Bioengineering is the way to go if you're interested in the research aspect of the medical field. Bioeng, Bio, and Neuro will give you a general background for med school in general, and Chem and Neuro are good if you want to enter psychiatry. Bioengineering gives you the most options, IMHO.
If you're dead set on traveling the world as a physician you should consider minoring in a foreign language (FYI, way more people speak Spanish, Swahili, Mandarin Chinese and Hindi than German and French...), but you can have just as much, if not more of an impact as a researcher. Create something/s useful and awesome and make it widely available for as cheap as possible.
I can answer questions regarding the life sciences (Biology, Ecology, Wildlife, and some aspects of the medical field (I teach pre-meds). Generally speaking, the life sciences are something you do because you love what you do, not because the pay is close to good and not because there are jobs available. Competition is very high (most employment comes via state or fed governments, which have slashed funding), e.g. an entry level full time position in wildlife is now a M.S. level deal for $30,000 a year.
If you can't stand repetition, do yourself a favor and knock Horticulture off the list. It's a dying (nearly dead) repetitive field best served as a hobby. And as for Earth Sci and Geology, you'll likely be able to get a job quickly due to the natural gas industry, but it isn't exactly the most altruistic field of employment and due to the gas boom and nature of the industry you could find yourself jobless in 20 years.
I've got a better major than you all!
A major in not going to drilling, mind-numbing, individuality-erasing place called college.
Why Americans decide their major in university? Aren't you wasting money during that time? Or am I wrong here?
Why Americans decide their major in university? Aren't you wasting money during that time? Or am I wrong here?
The point of college nowdays is to obtain recognized certification in a certain field of study. At least in the U.S., most professionally skilled jobs require Bachelor's Degrees or higher, and pretty much it's those jobs that allow upwards financial mobility.@Valentas
Unless there's a really specific niche you're after which requires specific training, I'd nix college.
Agreed.The whole thing's a colossal waste of money, time, and energy. I'd rather live my life, thanks.![]()
So far, I'm looking at Virginia Tech