Ienan wrote:
I agree with you mostly, Nephyr. A&P for med school isn't nearly as important as biochemistry. Though I do disagree with you on Analytical. There isn't anything substantial from Analytical Chemistry that I needed when I took my practice MCAT's. There isn't really a lot of anatomy on the MCAT (outside of Biology-based anatomy) because you're expected to do a heavy amount of that work in your first year. But biochemistry is invaluable. In fact, I would argue a lot of the chemistry focuses on Biochemistry, even over Gen Chem or Orgo. All three are important though ultimately. Orgo wasn't a pre-requisite for anything except Molecular and Cellular Biology and Biochemistry at my college and the upper level chemistry courses, of course. Microbiology could be taken without it.
When did you take the MCAT? I wonder if it was a year based thing. The year I took it, probably half of the "physical sciences" questions were things that came straight out of my second year Analytical course. I know a lot of the "balance" of the questions has to do with the year. Most of the questions could have been answered with something else, but really, they were right out of our analytical textbook which made it very easy.
Personally, I'm a big fan of encouraging people to major in Chemical or Biomedical Engineering, or Chemistry if they want to go to med school. Seems to make the apps a lot more competitive, and generally higher MCAT scores.
I do know that all of my friends in med school said if they had it to do over again, they wouldn't have taken undergrad A&P... That it really wasn't as helpful as most other courses. On the flip side, everyone that took the two course series of Biochem said it was one of the most helpful courses they had taken- it covered all the material that you'd hit in your 1st year Biochem course at med school, and really took it down a notch from "brutal" to "manageable". Obviously not a choice for you with your major, though.