A-Level and academic profile
Aston University requires A*AA including Chemistry and Biology (A* in Chemistry or Biology). Swansea (GEM) requires Graduate entry programme - degree required. Aston University is the stricter A-Level offer; Swansea (GEM) is slightly more forgiving. If your predicted grades are borderline, Swansea (GEM) carries the lower academic-rejection risk pre-interview. GCSE profile matters at both schools — Aston University: Min 5 GCSEs at grade 6 (B) including Maths, English Language, dual-award Science. Swansea (GEM): Not applicable - graduate-entry programme. Requires a 2:1 honours degree.
Interview formats
Aston University uses MMI (Multiple Mini Interviews (MMI)); Swansea (GEM) uses Panel (Assessment Day). These two formats reward different skills — MMI emphasises breadth, station-recovery and structured answers under time pressure, while Panel rewards depth and consistency. If your strengths lie in conversational depth, Swansea (GEM) may suit you more. If you prefer discrete capsule answers under time pressure, Aston University is the better fit. Interview windows: Aston University interviews in December - March; Swansea (GEM) in March.
Curriculum and teaching style
Both schools deliver a PBL-style curriculum, so day-to-day study habits will feel similar across years 1-3. Specifics: Five-year MBChB with PBL. Clinical placements across Birmingham NHS sites (UHB, Sandwell, Walsall, Heart of England). Four-year accelerated graduate-entry MBBCh. Swansea-based with South Wales NHS placements (Swansea Bay UHB, Hywel Dda UHB). Intake size: Aston University — ~110 places per year.; Swansea (GEM) — ~70 home + ~10 international places per year (4-year accelerated MBBCh).. A larger cohort means more peer breadth; a smaller cohort means more tutor contact.
What makes each distinctive
Aston University: UCAT and GCSE used heavily post-interview (academic:UCAT:interview ratio = 2:1:1). Interview is just 25% of final scoring, so post-interview chances are excellent for high-stat applicants. SJT not used - band 4 is fine. Swansea (GEM): Graduate entry programme with a written SJT exercise as part of the selection day. Personal statement and detailed course knowledge feature prominently - applicants should know Swansea's programme structure in detail.