A few questions for current students:
1. Looking at the academic calendar, I'm unclear on whether the WR2 curriculum is a 4-semester or 3-semester curriculum and I forget (it's been a while since my interview). Can someone answer this? I'm choosing between here and a school that has 3-semester curriculum.
2. Are you ACTUALLY done at noon every day? Like--no labs, no small groups, or anything like that after noon, ever?
3. Why the early start in July? How does that effect the rest of the academic year?
4. How are exams structured? Do you really just have one exam (or a few exams in one week) per block? What is Structure Exam, SSEQ Exam, and NBME Exam? Are there quizzes at other times during the blocks?
5. What is Clinical Immersion Week?
Thanks!! 🙂
Yo, 4th year here.
1. We do things in "blocks" rather than semesters. First year is 4 "blocks" with block 1 (foundations of clinical medicine) being much lighter and relaxed compared to blocks 2-4. Second year is two blocks, and then you have dedicated time to study for step 1.
2. For the most part, yes. Usually, the first week of each block has a slightly different schedule, and we may *gasp* have lecture until 1 or so. There are some weeks as well where we have clinical requirements in the afternoon or the evening, usually for 2-3 hours. But these are the exception rather than the norm. I'd say 80% of the time I had nothing scheduled after noon during the week, but our IQ groups sometimes decided to meet informally in the afternoon to go over some stuff for the week.
3. No idea, didn't seem to really affect the rest of the year that much. The first 5-week block in July is sort of an intro block to get you used to med school - it covers biostats, bioethics, and things like social determinants of health. You won't get heavy into biochem or "hard science" until block 2, and at this point you should know your classmates a little better, which is nice.
4. Usually 3 exams during the last week of the block. There's anatomy (practical and written), histopathology (multiple choice, easy), and the short-answer/essay test, called the SSEQ. I honestly can't remember what it stands for, it's been awhile! But it's a 4 hour exam. There are not any quizzes, but there are small weekly assignments (multiple choice, short answer) that you have to complete, as well as weekly reflections, which can get annoying even if they aren't difficult.
5. Clinical immersion week typically happens during the week or second week before the end of block exams. You're scheduled to go to a clinic / inpatient ward that has to do with the material that you were covering during the previous block. For example, during the GI block, you might be assigned to go for a few hours to observe endoscopies/colonoscopies or something similarly poop related. It's fairly relaxing and you still get ample time to study for the exams.
Hopefully this helps!