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Finding Your School

For each school to which you choose to apply, you may have to select from several different optometry programs — different specializations and joint degrees. As a result, you may be faced with hundreds of options. When you sit back and imagine your ideal optometry program, what issues come into play? You need to decide what is important to you. Do you need a program with a flexible schedule? How big a workload do you think you can handle? In what sort of learning environment do you thrive best? You will need to take a number of factors into account when assessing which programs fit your wants and needs. Some aspects to consider are:


Culture

Rankings

Average Starting Salary

Salaries at the 5-Year Mark

Placement Rate

Location

Campus

Class Profile

Cost

Specialized vs. General Curriculum

Class Size

Grading Policy

Where to Apply?
The trick to assessing your chances of getting into a particular program is knowing where you stand with regard to the various factors that programs consider when making admissions decisions.

A good way to get a sense of how optometry schools perceive you is to create a fact sheet with your OAT* scores (or projected scores), overall GPA, and GPA in your major (and minor, if applicable). Relevant outside activities, work experience, internships, publications, etc. will also contribute to the overall strength of your application.

Use A Guidebook
The next step is to find a current source of information about optometry programs. There are several guides published every year that provide rankings of schools, as well as data about acceptance rates and median GPA and OAT scores. In addition, some rank schools according to their reputations among students, professors, or prominent people in the field.

Put your OAT score and GPA alongside the median numbers of schools that interest you. The comparison will give you a rough idea of where you stand. But remember, OAT and GPA are not the only criteria for admissions. Many other factors like recommendations and "intangibles" like activities and relevant experience can factor prominently into the admissions equation.

Once you have some idea of where you fall in the applicant pool, you can begin to make decisions about your application strategy.

Make Sensible Choices
A sensible application strategy will include schools in three general categories:

1. Dream schools — places you'd love to attend, but where your chances of acceptance are up in the air or even unlikely.
2. Good possibilities — programs you'd like to attend and where your grades and OAT score are close to the median.
3. Safeties — schools where your numbers make acceptance likely.

Most prospective grad students apply to between four and seven schools. How many you should actually apply to, though, is best determined by your strength as an applicant, the difficulty of admission at schools to where you're applying, and the general difficulty of getting into any program in your specialty.

If you're applying to five or six optometry schools, pick a couple of dream schools, several in the "likely" category, and one or two safeties.

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