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Woke up at 5:30am from brooklyn to get to the interview via train LIRR and cab.
I think I met you on our interview day at Hofstra. I just wanted to say congrats on your acceptance!
Woke up at 5:30am from brooklyn to get to the interview via train LIRR and cab.
Can anyone talk a bit about the curriculum here? I know students do EMT training right off the bat and that there is focus on the integration of basic science and clinical practice, but my question is: in what format is the basic science material taught? I seem to remember something about small group learning? But I can't find this info for some reason! Thanks!!! 😀
Basically, there are a lot of short answer questions the students answer each week. Tests are short answer. There are essentially no formal lectures as the entire curriculum is based on group learning via discussion of case studies within each body system. There is also a lot of time for self-directed learning.
If any of this information is incorrect, please let me know Hofstra students!
i plan on driving to hofstra from nyc...........i live off the fdr drive. can anyone speak to what kind of traffic i can expect. do i have to leave at a crazy hour?
i plan on driving to hofstra from nyc...........i live off the fdr drive. can anyone speak to what kind of traffic i can expect. do i have to leave at a crazy hour?
There are lectures. About four hours a week of them. The school just has a tongue in cheek policy about not calling them that. They range from your standard professor talking in the front of a lecture hall to a professor lecturing to tables of 6-8 students and then having the groups work on some question/task for a portion of the time. The goal is for all of the lectures to be "interactive" and this is accomplished to varying degrees of success. Sometimes the interactivity amounts to cold calling, sometimes it involves giving the groups multiple choice tests that they go over as a group and then present their reasoning to the class.
We have tests at the end of every course -which means every 11 weeks and they are pass/fail. The weekly short answers are not graded.
As for how the basic sciences are taught, there is a focus on teaching the basic sciences in the context of clinical practice using cases. The best way to understand would be to just take a look at a case we are working on (when you interview or visit for second look i'm sure any student you run into would be happy to show you one), but it boils down to instead of being given a chapter on diabetes to read, you are given a clinical vignette describing someone who has a constellation of symptoms, goes to the doctor, gets some tests and then is told they have diabetes and is given some treatment. So you go read a chapter on diabetes, you figure out how whatever went wrong usually works, you figure out what the tests mean, and what the treatment was and why it was given. Then you meet with your group and discuss. The idea is that everyone will approach it from a slightly different angle, and that if someone didn't understand some part of it, someone who did will explain it to them. And that by seeking out the answers on your own, and linking it to a clinical scenario, you will retain the information better then being given a list of symptoms, a powerpoint on the pathways, and then six months later a class on the drugs used. The cases are six hours per week of in-class time (for two cases)
Does Hofstra do traditional interviews or MMIs?
Had my interview yesterday. Good experience. Everyone is very excited about the school and it shows 🙂
I forgot to ask about the admission process after interview. So they vote on you at the end of the day after the interviews and announce the decisions in mid Jan?
is this true? No accepts till jan?
If anyone has stayed at the Red Roof Inn near Hofstra...
What is the best way to get to Hofstra from the inn?
Finally got rejected. Complete since the end of July. This was inevitable.
+1 as well. Best of luck to everyone!+1. Complete since July as well. Ah well, better to know now!
I said that because it reminded me of the poem........not to be inconsiderate. good luck to you and I wish you the best.
Cab is your best bet.
Thanks. And is Garden City a shady area?
By the way, how many interview per day?
so i interviewed in late october, any idea on when we're supposed to hear back?
Hahaha, not at all. Garden City is a very rich, upscale, "waspy" town. Lots of million dollar homes there. A lot of the Jets' football players live there since the Jets used to have training camp at Hofstra.
First batch in January.
FYI, The med school WAS the Jets training facility.
Hi everybody,
I have an interview scheduled with Hofstra. Would anybody who has already interviewed mind posting some questions or directing me to where you found their interview questions? I wasn't able to find a list of questions for Hofstra.
Thank you
Find any school you interview at on this link: http://studentdoctor.net/schools/?view=medical
Hope this helps!
Hi everybody,
I have an interview scheduled with Hofstra. Would anybody who has already interviewed mind posting some questions or directing me to where you found their interview questions? I wasn't able to find a list of questions for Hofstra.
Thank you
Hey all,
Long time follower of SDN and finally decided I would join the community. Anyway, just got an interview invite here yesterday! First one of the season and I applied pretty late so this is a relief despite the large number of applicants interviewed. Can anyone shed some light on the exams here? I've heard there's no multiple choice...yikes!
Hey all,
Long time follower of SDN and finally decided I would join the community. Anyway, just got an interview invite here yesterday! First one of the season and I applied pretty late so this is a relief despite the large number of applicants interviewed. Can anyone shed some light on the exams here? I've heard there's no multiple choice...yikes!