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anyone ever heard of this...a resident told me not to do any away rotations because the PD's at places that I didn't do away rotations would wonder why I didn't rotate at their program? any truth to this, I hadn't heard this before. Thanks
Yes, I'm afraid you have been given bad advice by the resident you spoke with. Do away rotations if you are interested in them, they will not have a negative impact on your applications elsewhere.
But they can easily have a bad impact on your application at the program. All it takes is looking stupid or mean to 1 person to torpedo an application. Conversely, it will take a whole month of superstar to move your application substantially higher than your paperwork/interview would otherwise merit.
The rotations are expensive. You have to learn all new faces, places and systems. And presumably you go there because you think you will like it - if you do, so what, you already liked it. If you don't like it because you found out things you otherwise wouldn't, how do you know that program X's warts are worse than program Y where you didn't rotate.
I just don't see the benefit.
But they can easily have a bad impact on your application at the program. All it takes is looking stupid or mean to 1 person to torpedo an application. Conversely, it will take a whole month of superstar to move your application substantially higher than your paperwork/interview would otherwise merit.
The rotations are expensive. You have to learn all new faces, places and systems. And presumably you go there because you think you will like it - if you do, so what, you already liked it. If you don't like it because you found out things you otherwise wouldn't, how do you know that program X's warts are worse than program Y where you didn't rotate.
I just don't see the benefit.
But they can easily have a bad impact on your application at the program. All it takes is looking stupid or mean to 1 person to torpedo an application. Conversely, it will take a whole month of superstar to move your application substantially higher than your paperwork/interview would otherwise merit.
The rotations are expensive. You have to learn all new faces, places and systems. And presumably you go there because you think you will like it - if you do, so what, you already liked it. If you don't like it because you found out things you otherwise wouldn't, how do you know that program X's warts are worse than program Y where you didn't rotate.
I just don't see the benefit.
But the OP was advised not to do away rotations because PDs at OTHER programs would be hurt by the assumption that you didn't like their program enough to do an audition rotation there. Balderdash, say I.
No arguments there.
I do stand by my initial comments, though. It's far easier to make yourself look bad than to look good. I think methyldopa substantially underestimates the ways in which you can torpedo your application. Surgery residencies have lots of good applicants these days. The residents don't have to hate you - all it takes is "methyldopa didn't seem interested some of the time" or "he was kinda hard to work with ... I liked X better."
This isn't to say the rotations are entirely worthless ... just that the cost/benefit ratio is poor