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i'm curious about sdn rankings cause usnews says baylors ranked higher than ucla and ucsd and is 13K cheaper
Jalby said:Ahem. Baylor has more NIH funding (not that that matters much), has a more progressive curriculum, has more hospitals (including hospitals where you actually get to practice medicine instead of observing medicine), and their students (with relatively the same incoming MCAT and GPA) get higher board scores than UCLA and UCSD. Yes, it is a "better" school than UCLA and a lot "Better" school than UCSD.
kwanny said:If not, you've just wasted my time.
Jalby said:Some curriculums have been proven to get higher board scores than others.
I think it has to do with the fact Baylor gives you a TON more time to study for the boards, and they teach only the most relevant parts of medicine in the compressed curriculum so you don't have to know embryology and biochemistry pathways and stuff like that.
Jalby said:It is a Harvard study done in 1985. Not really linkable. But it along with schools experiences is one of the reason that most schools are moving from a traditional (~40 years old) curriculum to an organ or systems based curriculum.
They probably would, if so much of it wasn't taught and they wern't being graded on it
elias514 said:So let me get this straight: Baylor's affiliated hospitals are better than the UCLA medical center? According to whom? If you look at the US News rankings of hospitals, UCLA is pretty darn good. Heck, UCLA medical center ranked in the top ten in 12 different specialties.
There is a middle ground between your views that those of a rankings-slave, and I think that's probably where the true value of prestigous schools is shown.elias514 said:I wish America's obsession with rankings would stop. It's such a poisonous infatuation sometimes. I mean honestly, man, is there that much of a difference between a medical school ranked #64 or whatever on US News and Harvard? The only significant difference between these schools is the student body--Harvard is filled with academically gifted students with extraordinary resumes. Is it any surprise that Harvard grads succeed? Christ, you could send one of those kids to some backwater school in the middle of Central America and they would STILL probably become the chairmen of departments in the US. Extraordinary talent can surmount practically any obstacle.
What the hell difference is there between medical schools from the standpoint of educational quality? There are plenty of examples of people ,who were graduated by currently unranked or middle tier medical schools, that become truly outstanding clinicians or academicians.
We should all abandon this ridiculous obsession with rankings. All medical schools are excellent in the US and anyone admitted to the profession should feel privileged.
Interesting that this is coming from a guy who posted a thread promoting that his school will "penetrate" the USNWR Top 5 in the near future.elias514 said:I wish America's obsession with rankings would stop. It's such a poisonous infatuation sometimes. I mean honestly, man, is there that much of a difference between a medical school ranked #64 or whatever on US News and Harvard? The only significant difference between these schools is the student body--Harvard is filled with academically gifted students with extraordinary resumes. Is it any surprise that Harvard grads succeed? Christ, you could send one of those kids to some backwater school in the middle of Central America and they would STILL probably become the chairmen of departments in the US. Extraordinary talent can surmount practically any obstacle.
What the hell difference is there between medical schools from the standpoint of educational quality? There are plenty of examples of people ,who were graduated by currently unranked or middle tier medical schools, that become truly outstanding clinicians or academicians.
We should all abandon this ridiculous obsession with rankings. All medical schools are excellent in the US and anyone admitted to the profession should feel privileged.
elias514 said:So let me get this straight: Baylor's affiliated hospitals are better than the UCLA medical center? According to whom? If you look at the US News rankings of hospitals, UCLA is pretty darn good. Heck, UCLA medical center ranked in the top ten in 12 different specialties.
Granted, the rankings are partly based on the opinions of approximately 2,000 doctors around the country. But that means that a significant proportion of these doctors consider UCLA to be among the top 5 centers in the country for a wide range of specialties.
elias514 said:I wish America's obsession with rankings would stop. It's such a poisonous infatuation sometimes. I mean honestly, man, is there that much of a difference between a medical school ranked #64 or whatever on US News and Harvard? The only significant difference between these schools is the student body--Harvard is filled with academically gifted students with extraordinary resumes. Is it any surprise that Harvard grads succeed? Christ, you could send one of those kids to some backwater school in the middle of Central America and they would STILL probably become the chairmen of departments in the US. Extraordinary talent can surmount practically any obstacle.
What the hell difference is there between medical schools from the standpoint of educational quality? There are plenty of examples of people ,who were graduated by currently unranked or middle tier medical schools, that become truly outstanding clinicians or academicians.
We should all abandon this ridiculous obsession with rankings. All medical schools are excellent in the US and anyone admitted to the profession should feel privileged.
elias514 said:One cannot deny that UCLA medical center is an outstanding institution. As for Baylor hospitals being a better place to train. Who the hell knows the answer to that question?
elias514 said:I had to use SOME kind of evidence to support my argument that Baylor's affiliated hospitals are not "better" than UCLA medical center. What other evidence could I cite--more anecdotal garbage or rumors about how students at prestigious school X only get to watch or whatever? C'mon, man.
One cannot deny that UCLA medical center is an outstanding institution. As for Baylor hospitals being a better place to train. Who the hell knows the answer to that question? I've been told that clinical experiences during 3rd and 4th year are largely team-dependent--meaning that the quality and nature of a student's experience on the wards depends on who the supervising attendings and residents are. So honestly I don't know how anyone could answer this question.
And I'm so sick of having to defend myself on these boards. People can be such dinguses here. Is it that hard to believe that I think rankings of medical schools are a pile of crap and that success depends on the individual?
As for rankings of residency programs, my opinion is still in works--I don't know if it matters that much or not. I have a lot to learn about residency. But for medical schools, I wholeheartedly believe that the US News rankings system is ******ed--too many great medical schools get screwed over by it.
Jalby said:I lived with UCLA med students for two years. Almost any place is better to train to become a doctor. UCLA is better than almost any place to train to become an academic. Big difference.
romed81 said:I read this somewhere here on SDN, and I totally agree with it:
" There is no such thing as bad medical schools; what you have is bad medical students".
And don't fall into the fallacy of believing that good board scores necessarily mean good doctors.
Newquagmire said:Have you ever lived with Baylor med students?
Jalby said:Seriously. Stuff like this is so annoying.
think about it.Newquagmire said:I don't understand why you mention living with UCLA students then.
Jalby said:jalby whips it out and gets a ruler
Newquagmire said:I don't understand why you mention living with UCLA students then.
That's what I said. I thought people who are going to med school might be more mature.Gleevec said:This is ridiculous now. For someone to respond to this thread by that criteria, they would have to SIMULTANEOUSLY be and live with baylor, ucla, and ucsd students. We might as well not even talk about med schools at all then.
Jalby said:That's what I said. I thought people who are going to med school might be more mature.
elias514 said:Gleevec, you've taken my statements out of context, which isn't a nice thing to do. My first response was to newquagmire, who claimed that Baylor's hospitals were more "well-respected." The US News rankings of HOSPITALS rests partly on the opinions of approximately 2500 doctors around the country. Obviously these physicians think very highly of UCLA medical center. My point was just that it's unreasonable to say that Baylor's hospitals are more well-respected than UCLA med center. Quagmire countered that he was talking about the TRAINING at these hospitals. Notice that I didn't respond. Why? Because I don't know if the rankings of hospitals correlate with the quality of training. But I do believe that these rankings are fairly decent indicators of the quality of patient care.
Even so, this belief doesn't contradict my overall disdain for rankings, which is that they engender stupid mudslinging contests where people try to argue that one institution is BETTER than another rather than state that they are both excellent. Rankings often cause people to praise one institution at the expense of another--that's my fundamental problem with rankings in general.
My second comment focused on the ranking of MEDICAL SCHOOLS in particular. US News rankings system for medical schools is ridiculously flawed and very misleading. No one should draw any conclusions regarding the quality of education--clinical or preclinical--from US News rankings of medical schools. Now the rankings are great indicators of research opportunities, but does outstanding research opportunities mean that a medical student will become a better physician?
What you, Gleevec, did kinda bothers me, man. I mean your juxtaposition of my comments and some of your statements on this thread basically imply that either I'm a hypocrite or a liar. How can I not take that personally? The truth is that I'm neither. I think rankings in general create poisonous atmospheres, not that all rankings are complete bullsh*t and completely misleading. However, I'm 100% convinced that the US News ranking of MEDICAL schools is a crock of crap for anyone trying to assess quality of education.
Be nice, Gleevec, and offer your opinions without attacking someone else's character.
pollster123 said:i'm curious about sdn rankings cause usnews says baylors ranked higher than ucla and ucsd and is 13K cheaper
TheFlash said:Interesting that this is coming from a guy who posted a thread promoting that his school will "penetrate" the USNWR Top 5 in the near future.
If you abhor rankings and USNWR methodology (as I do) then you should have no concern over such matters.
elias514 said:My opinion regarding the ranking of medical schools has changed dramatically in the past few months as I've researched the issue myself. I used to subscribe to the whole prestige argument, but now I don't. Academicians think that the US News rankings system is unscientific and misleading. Further, I've found so many examples of individuals who contradict the arguments that prestige matters if one wants to become an academic or get into a hypercompetitive residency. Now I strongly believe that the success of individuals in the Match and in career placement depends almost entirely on the leg work of the individual; institutional affiliation is only a minor factor that can help a person achieve goals but not whitewash lackluster performance and mediocre talent. In other words, medical school is what one makes of it. I am 100% convinced of this assertion.
As for the UM selection, I chose Michigan because I loved Ann Arbor, the school, and the curriculum. When I interviewed there, I just felt like it was the right place for me. I clicked with all my interviewers and the town itself had the atmosphere that I was looking for--a sophisticated college town without all the congestion and pollution of a big city. Ann Arbor seems like a truly great place to spend the next four years (maybe more) of my life; it's a smaller version of where I currently live, Austin, which I love so much (and I will miss dearly when I move in a couple of weeks). So my decision was based largely on a "gestalt feeling" regarding Ann Arbor and UM; certain aspects of the curriculum merely sealed the deal for me. I don't give a crap about the ranking of Michigan. If I don't excel academically there, Michigan's ranking won't do me a bit of good.
Why did I choose UM over my state school (KU)? Because my extremely dysfunctional family lives in Kansas City. I don't want all the freakin drama. Medical school will be stressful enough. So I stayed away from my state school, even though I was accepted there.
Don't try to call me a hypocrite, because I'm not. My opinions regarding prestige have radically changed in the wake of my own research regarding the role of it in academic and professional success. Moreover, the fact that I will be attending a "top tier school" reflects my personal preferences regarding location and curriculum, and my desire to be as happy as possible as a medical student, not the bullsh*t ranking of the school. Many students at Michigan right now (especially 3rd and 4th years) will tell you that the school's ranking only benefits those who excel, which is really difficult at Michigan.
I don't subscribe to the rankings argument and I judge individuals on their own merits and character, not on their institutional affiliations.
elias514 said:I wish America's obsession with rankings would stop.