Metadata
Title
Cornell Office ofUndergraduate Admissions
Category
undergraduate
UUID
15d6036518ea46c999ee49c8aff41e16
Source URL
https://admissions.cornell.edu/academics/colleges-schools-and-academic-areas-int...
Parent URL
https://admissions.cornell.edu/academics/colleges-schools-and-academic-areas-int...
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T06:10:14+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Cornell Office ofUndergraduate Admissions

Source: https://admissions.cornell.edu/academics/colleges-schools-and-academic-areas-interest/preparing-for-pre-professional-fields Parent: https://admissions.cornell.edu/academics/colleges-schools-and-academic-areas-interest

Preparing for a Health Career

Students who are interested in pursuing a health career find great opportunities at Cornell. In fact, nearly one out of every six Cornell undergraduates intend to pursue a career in medicine. Students may study in any of Cornell's undergraduate schools and colleges and graduate well-prepared for further medical career studies and options.

Explore Pre-Health Advising

What Medical and Veterinary Schools Look For

Admission to schools of human or veterinary medicine is based largely on three factors: your academic record; your scores on standardized admission tests; and your individual qualities, as seen in part through faculty evaluations and interviews.

Prerequisite courses for medical school
Prerequisite courses for veterinary school

Tips for Pre-Health Pathways

Preparing for Law School

Cornell’s undergraduate colleges and schools offer you almost unlimited opportunities to explore different areas of the curriculum as you consider the direction of your future legal career.

Explore Pre-Law Advising

A Pre-law Curriculum

At Cornell we agree completely with the Association of American Law Schools and the American Bar Association — both of which state, as policy, that there’s no ideal pre-law curriculum. Of course, if you have your sights set on law school, attending Cornell as an undergraduate is a great way to get there. You’re even welcome to call yourself a pre-law student. But if you look for a description of a pre-law major in our course catalog, you won’t find one.

Law schools look for people with good minds. To be a strong candidate for law school, we recommend selecting a major that you’re genuinely interested in and that develops your intellectual skills — particularly your skills in writing, research, problem solving, and analysis. A Cornell student planning to attend law school might consider pursuing one or more of the following opportunities:

Pre-law Advising Resources, Programs and Events

Top Enrollment Resources

Still need help? Look at the Frequently Asked Questions, or contact us.