Could someone give me some perspective on how competitive/difficult it would be to get into one of programs (Columbia, NYU, Chicago, CMU, Princeton) for my unique case, and also some advice on getting into this career path in general?
I've recently decided to take a one year break from medical school to explore other career paths, and this is the one I'm most interested in.
I'm pretty intelligent and pretty quantatively oriented (I'd probably score 800 or close to it on the quant section of GRE if and when i take it), but will need to take some more classes to become eligible as I've only taken one year of calculus. I'll need to learn C++, Diff EQ, Linear Algebra, etc.
Do these schools tend to take people who have worked for awhile, have done big projects, etc.? Is it unreasoanble to have any expectations of admission if I have a very good GPA, smoke the GRE, take the requisite coursework, but am light on "FE" experience as I had been, until now, gearing toward a career in medicine?
Any other general advice with respect to switching careers at this point or thoughts on going into FE instead of medicine or vice versa are also appreciated. Thank you.
I've recently decided to take a one year break from medical school to explore other career paths, and this is the one I'm most interested in.
I'm pretty intelligent and pretty quantatively oriented (I'd probably score 800 or close to it on the quant section of GRE if and when i take it), but will need to take some more classes to become eligible as I've only taken one year of calculus. I'll need to learn C++, Diff EQ, Linear Algebra, etc.
Do these schools tend to take people who have worked for awhile, have done big projects, etc.? Is it unreasoanble to have any expectations of admission if I have a very good GPA, smoke the GRE, take the requisite coursework, but am light on "FE" experience as I had been, until now, gearing toward a career in medicine?
Any other general advice with respect to switching careers at this point or thoughts on going into FE instead of medicine or vice versa are also appreciated. Thank you.