I just got back from a Cornell revisit and I'm absolutely psyched about the school. This is really the first time I got to hang out with students and live in the housing. The students (mostly MD and some MD/PhD that I met) were some of the coolest people I've met since beginning the process. I honestly can't believe that the housing is soo cheap. I stayed in the second year housing and I was very pleased. The weather was amazing, the night events were perfect, and the food was good. If I had to pick right now, Cornell would be it. That being said, I am impatiently waiting for Penn's decision and I'm keeping an open mind for the Columbia revisit.
Addition:
Addition,
For those interested, I got a chance to sit through a mock PBL session. Essentially 6 students sat with a first year moderator and we all talked together about solving a proposed problem. When we reached a certain point, we were given another clue on the problem. By the end, we actually had a pretty good model of what was going on. I was impressed by how well this method worked for learning material. My question is does this work in practice. Is PBL an adequate way to learn the material? Also, the med students all said they liked Cornell because of the lack of lecture and the freedom they have. How much lecture does Cornell actually have?
In a related question, I got the sense from the MD-only applicants that Cornell Med is "easy." I can't really define "easy" but I heard this description from multiple prospectives. Since we have a current student reading this post, I was wondering if he could talk about the strengths of Cornell med. We all know that Rock and Sloan are huge selling points, but is the medical school too easy? I guess a good readout would be board scores and matches. How does Cornell stand in comparison to Penn/Hopkins Med? I know the rankings, but (practically) so those matter.
I would like to hear all opinions, so applicants feel free to post what you've heard through the grapevine.