Here's the general layout of our day. Our curriculum is now integrated. Note that the bulk of our experience is from Unit 1, but it will vary unit by unit due to differences in the subject matter as I'll explain.
In Unit 1, we started with a "systems overview" (cardio, pulmonary, renal) for the first two weeks and then moved on to musculoskeletal for the remaining six weeks (our exam week was last week). On Mondays, we'd normally have a lecture followed by a PBL session and then an anatomy or clinical skills lab. The CS lab would generally correspond to the material we were covering in lecture/lab. For example, in the first week, we were learning cardio in lecture and learned how to do a basic cardiac exam in one CS session, and then learned how to do an echocardiogram on another afternoon. When we moved into musculoskeletal and were working on the shoulder, we learned how to perform a full exam of the shoulder in CS lab. Tuesdays & Wednesdays we had two lectures in the morning followed again by either anatomy or CS in the afternoons. Thursday, we'd normally have lecture in the morning and another PBL session in the afternoon. Sometimes we had radiology labs where we'd go through reading x-rays/MRI/CT based on the region we were studying (ie. shoulder, wrist, knee, hip, etc.). Then Fridays we usually had two lectures in the morning and either we were done relatively early or we had a histology lab (virtual microscopy looking at different types of tissue). All lectures in Unit 1 were 1 hour.
Unit 2 just started, but the unit is subtitled "Molecules to Cells" so it's more genetics/biochem based so we have a bit more lecture time each day (either 2.5 or 3 hours). Also, there's no anatomy in this unit, that picks up again next unit, and there's a bit more histology. Again, it's a molecular biology focus, and we end with an introduction to oncology. We've also begun "preceptorships" this Unit where we spend 3 hours, every two weeks, with a mentor that we're assigned in various departments at Downstate, Kings County, or other hospitals for those who live closer to other places. Our preceptorship consists of a series of checklists of things that we need to complete with real patients. This includes everything from taking a patient history, to performing cardiac/pulmonary/abdominal exams; all within the realm of things we've already learned. I've been placed in the ER and started this past Tuesday where I was asked to take a patient's history (Symptoms, family history, social history, etc.) and then had to "present" to my preceptor just as I will have to do during my rotations in the wards during 3rd year, so it's amazing early experience!
TL;DR: Downstate is awesome. Here's a link to our schedules for...
Unit 1:
http://sls.downstate.edu/registrar/documents/UNIT1IncomingClassCalendar2014.pdf
Unit 2:
http://sls.downstate.edu/registrar/documents/UNIT2_Calendar_2014.pdf
Just a heads up, our class is split into two halves, so you'll notice that there's often two things going on at the same time. Our schedules are basically flipped, so if one half has PBL in the morning and a Clinical Skills lab in the afternoon, the other half will have the opposite.
Hope this helps! If you have any more specific questions, feel free to PM me.