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What Is the Best Premed Job to Get Into Medical School in 2025?
Are you a pre-med student wondering which job will wow medical school admissions committees? Should you spend your weekends volunteering at a hospital, or would a paid clinical job boost your application more? How many hours of experience do you really need, and what do admissions officers expect to see on your resume?
These are crucial questions every aspiring doctor asks. Medical school admission is fiercely competitive, and the experiences you gain before applying can
Jul 123 min read


Do Medical Schools Care What You Majored In?
When it comes to preparing for medical school, one of the most persistent myths is that you have to major in biology or another science to be a competitive applicant. While it’s true that many premed students lean toward science-heavy degrees, the truth is much more flexible—and, in some cases, more empowering than you'd think.
May 204 min read


Best Premed Majors for Medical School Admissions in 2025
Looking back, I wish someone had warned me about the GPA risk of science-heavy majors. Many upper-level science courses are graded harshly, have demanding lab components, and are packed with premeds vying for As. For someone like me — who wasn’t always the best at showing up to early classes or grinding through long lab reports — that added difficulty led to a few Bs that lowered my GPA just enough to make me a less competitive applicant.
May 205 min read


Complete Premed Checklist: Courses, MCAT, Clinical Hours, & More (MD/DO 2025 Guide)
Academics: Continue prerequisites (e.g. Chemistry II, Biology II or Physics I). Consider a math course (calculus or statistics) and a writing-intensive humanities elective – many schools expect calculus/statistics and English. Seek research opportunities: email biology/chemistry professors about assisting in a lab. Even entry-level lab work (e.g. charting, data entry) counts.
May 156 min read


50 Tips for Getting Into U.S. Medical School
Study what you love. You can major in anything if you excel in it. In fact, medical schools now accept students from all sorts of majors. The key is to still complete the pre-med science courses and do well in them, because grades and MCAT scores matter most.
Apr 3010 min read
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