Wouldn't touch the Columbia program with a 10 foot pole.
I just finished up the Columbia Postbac program in May 2014. I agree with a few of the points here, but given this post was made in 2012 when Plecopotamus was a resident, there has certainly been enough time for the program to change.
I interviewed at several postbac programs on the East Coast, but settled on Columbia because my wife had a job in NYC and we couldn't move. The top programs pick the best students who will get into medical school no matter where they go. Absolutely nothing wrong with this. It reduces the risk of lower matriculation rates and they are able to advertise the amazing med schools all their students go to. Columbia is different, it's definitely perceived to be a step-down from top tier and has a much larger class. This means they admit a broader range of students, and thus have lower matriculation rates into medical school. That's just the nature of the beast when everyone in the program doesn't have a 4.o from Harvard with three year of clinical research experience. I would hardly describe Columbia's admission's policy as predatory, though. They provide the opportunity for students to prove themselves in the sciences, albeit at a high cost. Make no mistake about it, postbac programs offer virtually no student aid other than loans (if you can call that aid). They are
money makers for pretty much all private schools that offer them. At the end of the day applicants are responsible for their own decisions, and need to know if they are ready for the rigors of a postbac curriculum.
Like several other private schools, you're pretty much guaranteed a B or above in most classes if you apply yourself (one of my professors straight out admitted this in class), so I don't think the curves are that terrible. People sometimes complain that a class is meant to weed out students, but what do you think traditional pre-med students went though? I hate the idea that a school should hold a student's hand through a program and give him/her all A's just because they paid tuition. Yea, some of the classes take a lot of time and effort to do well in, but they should!
Some of the professors weren't amazing, but at the end of they day they all got the job done and I learned exactly what I needed to know to do well on the MCAT. I will say my biology professor (the dreaded Dr. Mowshowitz) was one of the best lecturers I've ever had - she was fantastic at explaining difficult concepts. Her class was hard because it challenged students to approach biology in a different way. You couldn't just memorize material, you had to be able to apply it. Well that's how jobs in the real world work - you apply what you know to new situations, so it's best to get used to it as a student. In my opinion more classes should be taught in this manner.
I think the advising department has gotten a lot better in the past few years. Most complaints I heard about the advising boiled down to my peers being too lazy to look up information on their own. Yes, you can ask your adviser and then complain that they don't know the average MCAT score of students admitted to P&S in 2013, or you can spend two minutes on Google and figure it out yourself. The advisers here expect you to read your emails and pay attention to the deadlines they set. They expect you to do your research and know what the med school process involves. They expect you to work your ass off to do well in class if necessary. Ultimately, they expect you do act like an adult who is responsible for your own destiny. I hardly think that is too much to ask, but if you want your hand held there are probably better options out there.
I have been told numerous times during med school interviews what a great job my adviser did with my recommendation packet. It was submitted on time and without incident. The only people I heard complain about late letters were those who turned in their application materials weeks after the advising department's deadline. If that's the case, I hardly think you have the right to complain when your letter is a few weeks late.
Things certainly might have been different at Columbia 5-10 years ago, but I think they have made constant improvements to their program and a lot of complaints people had in the past just don't hold up anymore.