Got the II yesterday.
Could a current/former student help answer these questions?
Thank you so much!
I have a couple questions:
1. Are preclinical and clinical years both P/F?
2. Are clinical rotations based on how you do from preclinical years or is it lottery?
3. How are the professors?
4. How is the prep for boards?
5. How long is dedicated time to study for boards?
6. What is the exam schedule like?
7. What is the remediation policy? Is it only one retake and if you fail another course, you repeat or are you dismissed?
8. Is the student environment competitive or chill?
9. What's your favorite thing about BCOM?
10. Are you happy?
THANK YOU!! 🙂
I can answer a few of these questions for you!
1. Preclinical years are P/F. Clinical years are P/F as well (I would assume, sorry I'm not there yet).
2. There are a few clinical rotation sites (TX, NM x2, Four Corners, AZ, and FL) where students get to pick their top 3, and in the end, it is a lottery system. However, TX students must rotate in TX.
3. Professors are really supportive of their students and most of them have open office hours. They do care for your education and will try their best to make the content more enjoyable, and simple as possible.
4. I believe there will be dedicated time periods where you can study for your boards, and many advisors will help you along the way with scheduling. In terms of content that is given during in-house lectures that prepares you for boards is subjective to every student. Take that with a grain of salt. Our board passing rate has been going up, but like I said it is subjective to every student.
5. (I can't answer you that because I'm not there yet)
6. You'll usually get an exam every 2 weeks. More or less, every exam covers at least 16-35 lectures (which is a lot, but it's totally doable). Exams are usually in the morning.
7. (I can't answer that because most of us do well on our exams to move on, but you really have to be that bad of a student to fail a course. However, most professors would reach out to help you)
8. Once again, it's subjective, but since it is a P/F school, I would say most of us are very chill. Once test scores come out, you do sometimes feel that you could've done better (given that most of your other classmates performed higher).
9. My favorite thing about BCOM is the amount of volunteer opportunities you get. There is seemingly always something going on within the city that a club/organization is planning for and you can jump to different experiences anytime.
10. It's subjective as well, but for the most part, I am happy. If you never visited here before and come from an urban city, it might feel a bit different, but you will adapt very quickly.