Investigating the Impact of Educational Backgrounds on Medical Students’ Perceptions of Admissions Pathways at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University
Abstract
1. Introduction
Admissions, Inequality, and Equity-Oriented Reform in Higher Education
2. Methods
Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Demographic Data
3.2. Likert-Scale Responses
3.3. Impact of Educational Background
3.4. Qualitative Results
3.4.1. Theme 1: Lack of Transparency and Communication
3.4.2. Theme 2: Unfairness Versus Social Purpose
3.4.3. Theme 3: Socioeconomic/Intersectional Concerns
3.4.4. Outlier Views
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Category | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | ||
| 20–22 | 27 (28.4%) | |
| 23–25 | 51 (53.7%) | |
| 26–28 | 13 (13.7%) | |
| 29–31 | 2 (2.1%) | |
| 32–34 | 2 (2.1%) | |
| Cohort | ||
| C2025 | 23 (24.2%) | |
| C2026 | 23 (24.2%) | |
| C2027 | 49 (51.6%) | |
| Location | ||
| First Nations reservation or community | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Small Town/Village (<10,000) | 5 (5.3%) | |
| Town (10,000–50,000) | 9 (9.5%) | |
| Large Town/Small City (50,000–100,000) | 5 (5.3%) | |
| Mid-Sized City (100,000–500,000) | 29 (30.5%) | |
| Large City/Urban Center (500,000–1,000,000) | 18 (18.9%) | |
| Metropolitan Area/Major city (>1,000,000) | 27 (28.4%) | |
| Other (“country—near small town”) | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Gender Identity | ||
| Woman | 61 (64.2%) | |
| Man | 29 (30.5%) | |
| Non-binary | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 3 (3.2%) | |
| Other | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| First Nations | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Métis | 0 | |
| Inuit | 0 | |
| Other Indigenous origins | 0 | |
| East Asian origins | 21 (22.1%) | |
| South Asian origins | 17 (17.9%) | |
| Southeast Asian origins | 5 (5.3%) | |
| West Central Asian origins | 2 (2.1%) | |
| Other Asian origins | 0 | |
| Middle Eastern origins | 7 (7.4%) | |
| Black/African American/African Canadian | 8 (8.4%) | |
| Caribbean origins | 3 (3.2%) | |
| African origins | 3 (3.2%) | |
| European/White (Caucasian) origins | 41 (43.2%) | |
| Latin, Central, and South American origins | 0 | |
| Polynesian | 0 | |
| Prefer not to answer | 4 (4.2%) | |
| Other (Jewish) | 2 (2.1%) | |
| Other (Ashkenazi Jewish) | 1 (1.1%) | |
| Other (North African) | 1 (1.1%) |
| Number of Humanities and/or Social Sciences Courses Taken Prior to Entering Medical School | n (%) |
|---|---|
| 0 courses | 2 (2.1%) |
| 1–2 courses | 17 (17.9%) |
| 3–4 courses | 23 (24.2%) |
| 5–6 courses | 24 (25.3%) |
| 7–9 courses | 16 (16.8%) |
| 10+ courses | 13 (13.7%) |
| Theme | Quote Number | Respondent Number | Representative Quote from Participant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lack of transparency and misconceptions | 1 | 17 | “What are the standards … and how different are they from other applicants?” |
| 2 | 31 | “The standards by which ‘qualifications’ are judged should be made as uniform as possible.” | |
| 3 | 167 | “No formal insight or education into the purpose of the facilitated pathways, allowing for misconceptions to rule.” | |
| Perceptions of Unfairness and the Purpose of Medical Education | 4 | 15 | “Medical schools DO NOT exist for applicants … schools exist to serve the needs of the public.” |
| 5 | 78 | “Advantages… aren’t necessarily a bad thing… some groups need that extra lift.” | |
| 6 | 138 | “Anyone who enters via an equity pathway still has to pass medical school…” | |
| 7 | 64 | “I deeply value the diversity of our class… safer space for visible minorities.” | |
| 8 | 31 | “Diversity is about more than skin color… think the same (politically)…” | |
| 9 | 139 | “Black and Indigenous applicants… much harder… due to systematic, oppressive structures.” | |
| SES and unequal opportunity | 10 | 158 | “The Black pathway favours students who are wealthy…” |
| 11 | 64 | “Many of the individuals that enter our class are of very high SES, including those using the Black and Indigenous pathways.” | |
| 12 | 130 | “…[There] should be a general disenfranchised application pathway. SES is by far the largest factor preventing students from entering medicine.” | |
| Dissenting view | 13 | 31 | “This is racial discrimination and should be illegal.” |
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© 2026 by the authors. Published by MDPI on behalf of the Academic Society for International Medical Education. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
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Cruickshank, M.H.; Gadalla, H.; Akomolafe, E.; Johnson, N.; Farrugia, P. Investigating the Impact of Educational Backgrounds on Medical Students’ Perceptions of Admissions Pathways at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University. Int. Med. Educ. 2026, 5, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/ime5010015
Cruickshank MH, Gadalla H, Akomolafe E, Johnson N, Farrugia P. Investigating the Impact of Educational Backgrounds on Medical Students’ Perceptions of Admissions Pathways at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University. International Medical Education. 2026; 5(1):15. https://doi.org/10.3390/ime5010015
Chicago/Turabian StyleCruickshank, Michelle Helen, Heather Gadalla, Ewaoluwa Akomolafe, Natasha Johnson, and Patricia Farrugia. 2026. "Investigating the Impact of Educational Backgrounds on Medical Students’ Perceptions of Admissions Pathways at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University" International Medical Education 5, no. 1: 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/ime5010015
APA StyleCruickshank, M. H., Gadalla, H., Akomolafe, E., Johnson, N., & Farrugia, P. (2026). Investigating the Impact of Educational Backgrounds on Medical Students’ Perceptions of Admissions Pathways at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University. International Medical Education, 5(1), 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/ime5010015

