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What are the major differences between the top 10 schools per usnews rankings? I thought it might be useful to create a list of distinguishing characteristics to help people figure out which ones fit what they're looking for. I'll start, but please add.
Columbia University, New York, NY
- urban
- 1.5 year preclinical
- P/F unranked pre-clinicals
- Can take 2 free classes per semester anywhere in Columbia
- required thesis
- high percentage of students later specialize in surgery (30%)
- offers merit aid scholarships
Duke University, Durham, NC
- not urban (pop. 229k)
- 1 year preclinical
- 3rd year 'off' to do research or dual-degree
- required thesis
- horrible secondary
- offers merit aid scholarships
Harvard University, Boston, MA
- urban
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- required scholarly project
- it's Harvard!
- low graduate indebtedness
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
- urban (less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required scholarly project during preclinical
- it's Hopkins!
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
- not urban (pop. 11k, but near Palo Alto)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
- Scholarly Concentrations program
- low graduate indebtedness
University of California, San Francisco
- urban
- state school (84% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- optional thesis
University of Chicago (Pritzker), Chicago, IL
- urban (less desirable part of Chicago)
- 2 years preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness
- offers merit aid scholarships
University of Michigan, Ann Harbor
- not urban (pop. 114k)
- state school (51% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- optional thesis
- high average indebtedness
University of Pennsylvania (Perelman), Philadelphia, PA
- urban
- 1.5 year preclinical
- first semester pass/fail, next year honors/pass/fail
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness
- recent 225 million dollar donation (20% increase in financial aid)
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
- urban
- state school (57% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness (140k avg., highest on this list)
Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO
- urban (less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- first year pass/fail
- optional thesis
Yale University, New Haven, CT
- not urban (pop. 130k, less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
Disclaimer: if mentioned, average graduate indebtedness below 100k falls into the 'low' category while above 120k falls into the 'high' category. These valuations are relative to the average, which seems to be ~110k. One should take into account that even the highest value is relatively low compared to medical schools nationally. (Source: MSAR)
I know this list is far from informative in its current form, but hopefully you all can add some highlights to it. With any luck, this should become a great resource for everyone in their attempts to choose schools to apply to in the coming weeks.
Columbia University, New York, NY
- urban
- 1.5 year preclinical
- P/F unranked pre-clinicals
- Can take 2 free classes per semester anywhere in Columbia
- required thesis
- high percentage of students later specialize in surgery (30%)
- offers merit aid scholarships
Duke University, Durham, NC
- not urban (pop. 229k)
- 1 year preclinical
- 3rd year 'off' to do research or dual-degree
- required thesis
- horrible secondary
- offers merit aid scholarships
Harvard University, Boston, MA
- urban
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- required scholarly project
- it's Harvard!
- low graduate indebtedness
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
- urban (less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required scholarly project during preclinical
- it's Hopkins!
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
- not urban (pop. 11k, but near Palo Alto)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
- Scholarly Concentrations program
- low graduate indebtedness
University of California, San Francisco
- urban
- state school (84% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- optional thesis
University of Chicago (Pritzker), Chicago, IL
- urban (less desirable part of Chicago)
- 2 years preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness
- offers merit aid scholarships
University of Michigan, Ann Harbor
- not urban (pop. 114k)
- state school (51% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- optional thesis
- high average indebtedness
University of Pennsylvania (Perelman), Philadelphia, PA
- urban
- 1.5 year preclinical
- first semester pass/fail, next year honors/pass/fail
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness
- recent 225 million dollar donation (20% increase in financial aid)
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
- urban
- state school (57% in-state)
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- required thesis
- high graduate indebtedness (140k avg., highest on this list)
Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO
- urban (less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- problem based learning
- first year pass/fail
- optional thesis
Yale University, New Haven, CT
- not urban (pop. 130k, less desirable)
- 2 year preclinical
- pass/fail (preclinical)
- required thesis
Disclaimer: if mentioned, average graduate indebtedness below 100k falls into the 'low' category while above 120k falls into the 'high' category. These valuations are relative to the average, which seems to be ~110k. One should take into account that even the highest value is relatively low compared to medical schools nationally. (Source: MSAR)
I know this list is far from informative in its current form, but hopefully you all can add some highlights to it. With any luck, this should become a great resource for everyone in their attempts to choose schools to apply to in the coming weeks.
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