Text Drivers are Killers
Joe Biden - "Time to put Trump in the bullseye."
More special treatment for our dusky friends. Can negroz do anything on merit outside of sports?
https://www.thecollegefix.com/penn-...ce=wnd&utm_medium=wnd&utm_campaign=syndicated
aug 24 2022 The University of Pennsylvania expanded a program that admitted minority and other underrepresented college applicants into its Perelman School of Medicine under special criteria, including waiving the Medical College Admission Test requirement.
The program has “officially broadened” this year to include students from Howard University, Oakwood University, Xavier University of Louisiana, Morehouse College and Spelman College, according to a Perelman School of Medicine news release.
Some medical professionals have been critical of this particular affirmative action approach.
“The stakes are too high (life and death) to start lowering standards or taking shortcuts with basic fundamental scientific knowledge necessary for developing critical thinking skills to diagnose and properly treat diseases,” Dr. Diana Blum, a neurologist in private practice, told The College Fix in an August 19 email inquiring about the program specifically.
“If the school wants to improve diversity in the applicant/acceptance candidate pool, it would be better to focus on providing resources (perhaps free MCAT prep classes?) to lift the caliber of diverse candidates up and get them better prepared for the challenges of medical school instead of lowering the standards (which indirectly insinuates that these students are somehow not as capable),” Dr. Blum wrote.
Perelman School of Medicine is highly competitive
The Perelman School of Medicine is among the most competitive medical schools in the US. Its acceptance rate is around 4 percent, with admitted students having an average GPA of 3.89, according to Kaplan.
The average MCAT score of Penn medical graduates is around 520, placing the school in the 98th percentile.