# The $374,000 Med School Mistake (Gap Year Truth)

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Med School Insiders
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukVuwNxQ0xU

## Содержание

### [0:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukVuwNxQ0xU) Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00)

Everyone tells you to take a gap year. Strengthen your application. You'll be more competitive. But for many students, a gap year is the most expensive mistake they'll ever make. Dr. Jubal, medschoolinsiders. com. By the end of sophomore year, you need to make a decision that will define your entire premed trajectory, and it's one of the most popular questions we get asked. Should you take a gap year? If you don't take a gap year, you're applying to medical school at the end of junior year. If you take one gap year, you'll be applying at the end of your senior year. About 75% of students now take one or more gap years, making this the new norm. When I went to medical school, almost half of the students went straight through. But this has shifted dramatically over the years to just a quarter. After working with over 10,000 students and achieving a 97% acceptance rate, as the founder of Med School Insiders, I can say that med school is getting more and more competitive. This means more premeds feel like they need the extra time to participate in experiences that truly stand out. But that doesn't mean it's the right choice for everyone. I'll take you through the pros and cons of taking a gap year and illustrate how making the wrong decision has a profound impact on your career trajectory. By the end of this video, you'll know once and for all whether a gap year is right for you. If you don't take a gap year, you become a doctor one year earlier and start earning that $374,000 physician salary immediately after residency, which is the average salary of physicians in the US. Your specialty will dictate whether it's higher or lower, but it will still be at least $250,000. I started medical school at 21, which put me ahead financially throughout my career. But there are other less obvious benefits. For one thing, not taking a gap year means you can stay in student mode. The study grind is familiar. You're used to it. If you take one or more gap years, your work ethic and study muscles may atrophy, making it that much more difficult to get back into student mode. When we see students struggle to adapt to med school in the first half of MS1, it's often because they've taken one or more gap years and are unaccustomed to the demands of studying and test taking. Whereas, if you go straight through, it's just like taking another summer break after senior year. You won't lose your momentum. Another common argument for taking a gap year is the money you'll save up to put towards med school. But in reality, it's hard to save much when you have an entry-level job and regular living expenses. If the decision is purely financial, you're far better off getting to that high salary sooner, even if it means needing to borrow a little more in student loans. making and paying taxes on $30 to $50,000 during a gap year doesn't offset the loss of an attending's annual salary of 374K. And lastly, by not delaying your already lengthy training, you can reach your personal milestone sooner, such as buying a house or starting a family. For MCAT timing without a gap year, you have two options. The summer after sophomore year lets you focus almost exclusively on the MCAT. The trade-off, you'll have completed most, but not all of your med school prerequisite courses, which are precisely the subjects tested on the MCAT. The insider tip here is to only go down this path if you're strong in science classes and can self-study the topics you haven't taken coursework on yet. I took the MCAT without having taken biochemistry, as an example, but I knew I'd be fine since I was already doing well in my biology and chemistry coursework. Your alternative is the spring of junior year, which is a popular but compromised option. you're taking the MCAT while working on your med school application and managing regular coursework. The upside is that you'll have completed your prerequisites. On the other hand, taking a gap year allows you to breathe a bit more. Instead of fitting everything, including your prerequisite courses, MCAT, volunteering, clinical experience, research, and so on in the first 3 years, you can spread it out over four. You're also going to have better MCAT timing. For gapyear students, the summer after junior year is the optimal time. You'll have recently completed all of your prerequisites, so the material is fresh and you won't be taking other classes. You can focus entirely on preparation. This is the single best time to take the MCAT if you're taking a gap year. But why has the gap year trend exploded? Today, medical schools want much more. Extensive clinical experience, meaningful research, demonstrated leadership, and a compelling narrative. It's become more difficult to assemble a truly competitive application during the first 3 years of undergrad. According to 2024AMC data, this is what students actually do during their gap year. About 50% work in another career, 50% pursue research, and 41% work to improve their finances. Many do multiple of these simultaneously. Gap years also come with documented benefits beyond application padding, such as increased adaptability, clearer professional identity, better stress management, and improved patient communication skills. Medical school is grueling. Showing up mentally refreshed and confident in your decision matters. There are definite benefits to taking a gap year, but you don't want to delay

### [5:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukVuwNxQ0xU&t=300s) Segment 2 (05:00 - 08:00)

applying to med school if you've already done the leg work. Too many students put off applying or even delay taking the MCAT because they're scared they aren't ready. The reality is that they are ready, they're just afraid. This is where working with successful physicians with adcom experience becomes invaluable. They have an unbiased lens with which to assess your readiness to ensure you one don't apply when you're not ready. This is extremely costly both financially and emotionally. Applying once as a practice round while planning to reapply in a subsequent cycle is a terrible idea that puts you at a major disadvantage. And two, don't put off applying when you're actually in a great place to be accepted. No candidate is 100% perfect when they apply. With more time, everyone can improve their application. The key is knowing when you're competitive enough for your dream programs. This one decision impacts your MCAT preparation, your application timeline, your financial trajectory, and your ultimate competitiveness. Making the wrong choice can mean the difference between acceptance and reapplication, which costs $374,000 in lost physician salary alone. So, should I take a gap year? What if I choose wrong? What if I'm not ready? What if I mess up my entire timeline? These questions keep premeds awake at night and rightfully so. One wrong decision can derail years of hard work and the pitfalls aren't always obvious. One factor that most students overlook is MCAT score expiration. Most medical schools only accept MCAT scores earned within 3 years of expected metriculation and some schools are now moving toward a 2-year limit. If you're considering multiple gap years, you need to plan carefully. Take the MCAT too early and your score might expire before you apply. take it too late and you won't have time to retake it if needed. There's also the financial side. When you finish undergrad, your federal student loans enter a grace period of about 6 to9 months. After that, you either need to start repaying or apply for a deferment. It's critical that you factor this into your financial planning before deciding to take a gap year. These are the kinds of details that can blindside you if you're navigating this process alone. But you don't have to second guess this critical choice. The same strategic guidance that helped 97% of our students gain acceptance includes personalized timeline planning designed to eliminate the guesswork from gapyear decisions. Every student's academic performance timeline and circumstances are different. The path that works for your roommate might be disastrous for you. When to take the MCAT, whether a gap year makes sense, and how to structure your remaining years for maximum competitiveness all determine your success. After working with thousands of students in situations just like yours, we can pinpoint the precise timeline and approach that maximizes your chances of acceptance based on your specific circumstances. You'll walk away knowing exactly what to do and when to do it. Not sure where you stand? Access a free one-on-one strategy call where we'll apply the approach that's earned our students a 97% acceptance rate, more than double the national average of 40%. It's absolutely free and available in the video description.

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*Источник: https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/39864*