Clinical exposure the first 2 years is basically what you make of it and how much you want to do. We have ICM (Intro to Clinical med--teaches you how to do the interview, exam, etc) on
fridays and they block out a chunk of time Friday afternoon to meet with your preceptor. This will be a physician out in the community that you go to to practice the skills you've learned in ICM. You'll usually meet them at a hospital or their office and you'll first practice on a classmate and eventually on patients. This is really the only REQUIRED clinical exposure you have first 2 years.
HOWEVER...there is AMPLE opportunity to do much much more. It really just depends how much you take advantage of these opportunities. Any time you want to shadow...you can (literally any time..anywhere...see post above). There is also a free clinic called Reach Out that a lot of the med students volunteer at, this is GREAT clinical exposure because they let you triage the patients / do as much as your comfortable with, really. We also are required to do 60 hours of service learning and 2 electives... you get to choose what you do but a lot of the service learning and elective choices are other things that would give you some awesome clinical exposure (for example I'm doing some thing where I spend a whole weekend in alcohol rehab center doing small interventions...there's also things like surgery or family medicine electives where you basically do a 2 week mini rotation, etc etc).
I'm sure there's tons other stuff I can't think of right now. I'd HIGHLY recommend getting involved with stuff like this if you come to wright state (or anywhere you go, really). It's kind of easy to forget why you're really there the first 2 years....getting hands on experience in the hospitals always reminds me the true purpose of med school and re-inspires me when I'm ripping my hair out over biochem pathways....
If you (or anyone) have any other specific questions about stuff like this or anything about wright state, feel free to PM me and I'll send you my email.