February 20th, 2012 5:27 pm
In the United States, Medical School is a professional degree, obtained after your undergraduate degree. At age 18, you go to college, obtaining a bachelors degree in any subject you want. To be accepted to a medical school, you need to take certain courses during your undergraduate years: Biology I and II, Chemistry I and II, Organic Chemistry I and II, Physics I and II, Calculus I, and Calculus II or Statistics I. Additionally you need to take two English courses.Certain Medical Schools may impose stricter requirements, but generally, the above courses are all that you need. You can complete any degree program you wish, as long as those above courses are done. The most typical major is Biology, but you could major in English, Economics, Political Science, Finance, or anything else you want, as long as the minimum coursework described above is done. Many students refer to the above listing of courses as Pre-Med requirements, but that is not a major, merely the list of specific courses that are the minimum to be accepted to a US Medical School. Bachelors degrees in the United States typically take four years to complete, but that can be shorter or longer depending on your particular program.Medical School is an additional four years, with the first two years spent completing coursework, and the later two years spent doing clinical rotations and obtaining hands on experience. The first year after graduation, is the beginning of your residency, which can take anywhere between two and 11 years, depending on what specialty you have chosen.To summarize, it is typically around eight years, in the United States, from high school graduation to first year intern. 2 years ago Thanks!! that was perfect exactly what i wanted to know!!