The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.

The important but difficult choice of vocational trajectory often takes place in college, beginning with majoring in a subject and taking relevant coursework. Of all possible disciplines, pre-medical studies are often not a formally defined major but pursued by a substantial proportion of the colleg...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Charlene Zhang, Nathan R Kuncel, Paul R Sackett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243546
id doaj-8b400daac3314ee69fc7592358d335e5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8b400daac3314ee69fc7592358d335e52021-03-04T12:59:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024354610.1371/journal.pone.0243546The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.Charlene ZhangNathan R KuncelPaul R SackettThe important but difficult choice of vocational trajectory often takes place in college, beginning with majoring in a subject and taking relevant coursework. Of all possible disciplines, pre-medical studies are often not a formally defined major but pursued by a substantial proportion of the college population. Understanding students' experiences with pre-med coursework is valuable and understudied, as most research on medical education focuses on the later medical school and residency. We examined the pattern and predictors of attrition at various milestones along the pre-med coursework track during college. Using a College Board dataset, we analyzed a sample of 15,442 students spanning 102 institutions who began their post-secondary education in years between 2006 and 2009. We examined whether students fulfilled the required coursework to remain eligible for medical schools at several milestones: 1) one semester of general chemistry, biology, physics, 2) two semesters of general chemistry, biology, physics, 3) one semester of organic chemistry, and 4) either the second semester of organic chemistry or one semester of biochemistry, and predictors of persistence at each milestone. Only 16.5% of students who intended to major in pre-med graduate college with the required coursework for medical schools. Attrition rates are highest initially but drop as students take more advanced courses. Predictors of persistence include academic preparedness before college (e.g., SAT scores, high school GPA) and college performance (e.g., grades in pre-med courses). Students who perform better academically both in high school and in college courses are more likely to remain eligible for medical school.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243546
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlene Zhang
Nathan R Kuncel
Paul R Sackett
spellingShingle Charlene Zhang
Nathan R Kuncel
Paul R Sackett
The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Charlene Zhang
Nathan R Kuncel
Paul R Sackett
author_sort Charlene Zhang
title The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
title_short The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
title_full The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
title_fullStr The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
title_full_unstemmed The process of attrition in pre-medical studies: A large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
title_sort process of attrition in pre-medical studies: a large-scale analysis across 102 schools.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The important but difficult choice of vocational trajectory often takes place in college, beginning with majoring in a subject and taking relevant coursework. Of all possible disciplines, pre-medical studies are often not a formally defined major but pursued by a substantial proportion of the college population. Understanding students' experiences with pre-med coursework is valuable and understudied, as most research on medical education focuses on the later medical school and residency. We examined the pattern and predictors of attrition at various milestones along the pre-med coursework track during college. Using a College Board dataset, we analyzed a sample of 15,442 students spanning 102 institutions who began their post-secondary education in years between 2006 and 2009. We examined whether students fulfilled the required coursework to remain eligible for medical schools at several milestones: 1) one semester of general chemistry, biology, physics, 2) two semesters of general chemistry, biology, physics, 3) one semester of organic chemistry, and 4) either the second semester of organic chemistry or one semester of biochemistry, and predictors of persistence at each milestone. Only 16.5% of students who intended to major in pre-med graduate college with the required coursework for medical schools. Attrition rates are highest initially but drop as students take more advanced courses. Predictors of persistence include academic preparedness before college (e.g., SAT scores, high school GPA) and college performance (e.g., grades in pre-med courses). Students who perform better academically both in high school and in college courses are more likely to remain eligible for medical school.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243546
work_keys_str_mv AT charlenezhang theprocessofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
AT nathanrkuncel theprocessofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
AT paulrsackett theprocessofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
AT charlenezhang processofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
AT nathanrkuncel processofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
AT paulrsackett processofattritioninpremedicalstudiesalargescaleanalysisacross102schools
_version_ 1714800860246048768