I am fortunate enough to choose between U. Chicago and Cornell and just want to get some constructive opinions from others. For the purposes of this discussion, assume that financial aid packages are equivalent.
U. Chicago:
Pros- tremendous focus on research, diverse patient population, pure P/F curriculum, great students, smaller class size (88), access to undergraduate classes and activities and very friendly administrative staff.
Cons- Hyde Park is not centrally located in Chicago (may be a plus though), lots of lecture, limited free time, front loaded with anatomy first
Cornell:
Pros- Affiliations and across the street with many of the worlds best hospitals (HSS, MSK, Rockefeller), PBL?, great students as well, best location, out by 1pm most days and slightly better residency placement
Cons- Not next to undergrad campus, serves a more affluent and less diverse patient population, does not seem to have as much hands on experience in third and fourth year, P/F with honors
I am considering orthopedics for the time being which gives a slight advantage to Cornell with HSS nearby but also hope to get into academic medicine which supports U. Chicago as they are in the top three for graduating academic physicians.
I guess the purpose of this post is to just to see if anyone has some unique experiances or insight into either of these schools that I may have overlooked and what you all would do in my position given your history. Thanks in advance for all the help!
U. Chicago:
Pros- tremendous focus on research, diverse patient population, pure P/F curriculum, great students, smaller class size (88), access to undergraduate classes and activities and very friendly administrative staff.
Cons- Hyde Park is not centrally located in Chicago (may be a plus though), lots of lecture, limited free time, front loaded with anatomy first
Cornell:
Pros- Affiliations and across the street with many of the worlds best hospitals (HSS, MSK, Rockefeller), PBL?, great students as well, best location, out by 1pm most days and slightly better residency placement
Cons- Not next to undergrad campus, serves a more affluent and less diverse patient population, does not seem to have as much hands on experience in third and fourth year, P/F with honors
I am considering orthopedics for the time being which gives a slight advantage to Cornell with HSS nearby but also hope to get into academic medicine which supports U. Chicago as they are in the top three for graduating academic physicians.
I guess the purpose of this post is to just to see if anyone has some unique experiances or insight into either of these schools that I may have overlooked and what you all would do in my position given your history. Thanks in advance for all the help!