Hi I have some questions and hope some VTCSOM students can reply.
1. I know research is a huge part @vtcsom, but I didn’t see any labs that focus on clinical research related to surgery. (I did find lots of research on cancer, brain related issues, substance control etc). What kind of research do students interested in surgery/dermatology/plastics/ortho do and where?
2. Can students get into their top choice of residency ? What is a student has a ton of research in cancer but is actually interested in surgery ? What kind of support/help is provided to ensure students get into their choice program?
3. With the class size being this small, how is the general feeling among students ?
4. How are lectures ? In person or online ? Do students use third party materials to study for step 1?
Thanks
I am a current student here, to address some of your questions:
1. In terms of research, there are some bench type labs, but the majority of us find our projects by identifying a mentor physician and just asking them for any projects. So your best bet regarding research related to surgery is to email one of the surgeons who does research at Carilion and ask to be involved in one of their projects. There are far more opportunities than there are students so its really easy to set something up.
Every student does research in some capacity here.
2. I would say the sky is the limit here, I heard
most students match into their top 5 if not top 3 choices (but dont quote me on that, I forgot where I heard this). We've had a 100% match rate every year since the school's beginning. I don't think we list the match lists publicly, but I think some of the match day live streams are up on youtube if you want to lurk through it... honestly what's going to determine your success though is your ability to stay motivated throughout school. So choose a school where you can see yourself being happy and have plenty of outlets for decompressing for those inevitable frustrating days. Do some research on Roanoke and see if its somewhere you would like to live (it isnt for everyone). I can say that VTC has amazingly supportive faculty and in general the classes support each other and are friendly. There is plenty of opportunity for 1 on 1 counseling regarding applying for match and stuff but again, I can't stress enough that you need to have a good baseline mental for anything else to matter.
The only caviat I would give is that if you are interested in a HEAVILY academic career (like publishing regularly for NEJM at a top 10 institute regarding surgery on the left 5th middle phalange or whatever), this may not be the right choice for you since in that world, networking and pedigree is king. Although we do a lot of research here, VTC just doesn't have a the same academic UNF to the name that a top 20 would.
This is just if you want to be an investigator first and have a very specific area of research interest - you want to go where the networking is for that interest. For most of us, we want to be physicians first who happen to also do research and VTC will set you up wonderfully for that career path.
3. I like the small class size, and I feel like I get know all of my classmates pretty well. VTC tends to accept non-traditional students who have had work/interprofessional/life experience (or younger students with significant distance travelled), so my classmates all have very interesting and unique perspectives. Every class is overall very collaborative, sharing notes and resources and helping each other out in a pinch. I personally have not witnessed cutthroat behavior. The fact we are a true P/F (none of that BS high pass or whatever) helps a lot. No class is the same though!
4. Basic science lectures are not mandatory, and recorded so you can watch online. I never even watched them though and only studied using 3rd party resources. The basic science exam questions
are not lecture based. They come directly from NBME (the people being USMLE Step) so you can just study for the in-house exams as if you are studying for step 1. This is huge, and I highly recommend attending a school that has this approach.
We do have mandatory PBL (group learning). I didn't consider this as "study time" so much as "hanging out with my friends" though HAHA. Overall I enjoyed PBL a lot more then I thought I would, and this is coming from someone who is pretty introverted.
In summary, I love going to this school and am really happy I chose it. Feel free to PM more questions or whatever (have not been on this site in some time so sort of forgot how it works)