Is UConn a good school for pre-med students?

I’m a high school junior trying to narrow down colleges, and UConn is one of the schools on my list. I’m interested in pre-med and want to know whether it has a solid reputation for helping students get into medical school.

I’m mostly trying to understand if it offers enough academic support, advising, and opportunities like research or clinical experience for pre-med students.
2 days ago
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Sundial Team
2 days ago
Yes, UConn can be a strong choice for pre-med, especially if you are looking for a large public university with solid science departments, access to research, and connections to a major academic medical center. UConn has well-established biology, chemistry, and allied health pathways, and its Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Advising Office is a real asset for course planning, committee letters, and application guidance. Its link to UConn Health in Farmington also gives students a meaningful route to clinical exposure, research, and shadowing-related opportunities.

Academically, UConn is well regarded in the sciences, and pre-med students can major in many fields while completing medical school prerequisites. The school offers advising specifically for pre-health students rather than expecting you to figure everything out through a general academic advisor alone. That matters because timing your prerequisites, MCAT prep, and recommendation strategy is a big part of being a successful applicant.

For opportunities, UConn is stronger than many students assume. Undergraduate research is available through science departments and university programs, and students can pursue work tied to labs on the Storrs campus and, in some cases, through UConn Health. Clinical experience is not automatically handed to you, but being in Connecticut and connected to a university health system makes it realistic to build volunteering, patient-facing experience, and physician shadowing over time.

The main caution is that UConn is a large university, so pre-med success depends on how proactively you use its resources. You will need to seek out office hours, advising, research positions, and clinical experiences rather than waiting for them to come to you.

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