drewskinator
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I appealed and asked for a second chance, was denied. Thank you for the kind response.Yeah, I think that's a typical response for 2 strikes. 1 strike might yield you a second chance for remediation, but 2 failures in a row often lead to dismissal. Now, you could try to appeal and ask for a second chance, but otherwise there's nothing else to do.
Appreciate the kind response.I think there’s likely nothing left to do unfortunately. Hopefully you look back on this experience as a blessing in disguise and can have a successful career in something else
Were you MD or DO? I heard DO has stricter policies. It’s confusing that they didn’t offer remediation after your first fail and let you continue onto the second block. I get 2 fails counting as dismissal but usually some type of remediation chance is given before a fail is recorded.Hi all. To keep things brief, I am an MS1 and I was recently dismissed from my school because I did not pass 2 of my first 3 blocks during my first year. I was really shocked to learn that my administration went straight to dismissing me and not offering remediation for the courses NOR the possibility of restarting MS1 next year. As far as my grades, I was within 5-10% of passing on my final grades, so I wasn't failing abysmally.
Despite my grades, I never had any issues regarding professionalism, attended class regularly, and got into NO trouble or issues outside of my academic performance.
Is a response like this from administration regarding 2 failed courses common? I have already appealed and was denied. I explained to my deans that I had some personal issues that were stopping me from performing my best, but it did not help my case.
Please help me guys, I am so lost.
Some schools don't do remediation until the summer after the academic year has ended. I'm guessing that was probably the plan after the first failure.Were you MD or DO? I heard DO has stricter policies. It’s confusing that they didn’t offer remediation after your first fail and let you continue onto the second block. I get 2 fails counting as dismissal but usually some type of remediation chance is given before a fail is recorded.
That makes sense. I guess their policy only allows for one remediation attempt. Crazy that OP wasn’t even told prior to 3rd block about dismissal.Some schools don't do remediation until the summer after the academic year has ended. I'm guessing that was probably the plan after the first failure.
Yea it kinda blows my mind. Idk why any MD school would operate like that. Kind of seems ridiculous. It can take awhile to adjust to med school and find your groove in the first year.Holy **** this is crazy. You school dismissed you for failing two courses? At my school you can remediate TWICE before being dismissed. They just scammed you out of 70k.
Yea I have to disagree with most of the comments here. Per OP’s school policy I wouldn’t even be in med school right now. I struggled in the beginning during my M1 year, successfully remediated and now I’m doing well in my 2nd year and one unit away from starting rotations.I can't believe how many MedEd simps are in this thread who are seriously trying to make us believe that this was "in the student's best interest".
And for the record, out of the 5 students who failed out of my first year, 4 students ended up graduating the year below me. How can you possibly think that its good policy toscrew overdismiss a student who fails twice at any point in this med school education?
Did they match?I can't believe how many MedEd simps are in this thread who are seriously trying to make us believe that this was "in the student's best interest".
And for the record, out of the 5 students who failed out of my first year, 4 students ended up graduating the year below me. How can you possibly think that its good policy toscrew overdismiss a student who fails twice at any point in this med school education?
Yes, all at traditionally "MD" programs.Did they match?
I met with admin committee following my second failure. Based on three possible options (remediation of second course, restarting the year the next year, and complete dismissal) I was given the third option: complete dismissal.Damn, that sucks - sorry to hear that. But it is crazy that they didn't warn you that you were in probation or something after the first fail. As for advice, I really don't know. Did you read the student manual to see if there was anything that could be done besides an appeal? In my manual it says something like people who are dismissed can apply for readmission in like 1 or 2 years, but I don't actually know anyone who tried that even though I know a few people who got dismissed for academic reasons.
As for your question about this being common, at least in my school it isn't. Here, if you fail 2 courses you have to remediate the entire year. But, if you fail any class on your remediation year you get dismissed.
Thank you for this. I definitely showed myself I am capable of doing something great, for sure.So sorry to hear. I guess I'm surprised at how varied some of these policies are across schools. My school would make you repeat a year after failing a remediation (so failing twice), before even bringing up dismissal.
I will say the further I go into medicine the more I regret it. Also I'm sure if you can make it to med school you have the intelligence and work ethic to succeed elsewhere.
No, didn't have legal cousel, didn't even think it was necessary. Was completely blindsided by the decision. As far as experience, it is a newer school. It has not graduated a class yet. I'll not try to disclose any more details, but feel free to PM me. II'd agree that usually after the appeal it may be best to move on. Did they allow you to have legal counsel at the appeal meeting?
I was curious and read through my school's handbook. It says legal counsel is allowed at the appeal meeting and is allowed to give counsel to the student, but is not allowed to otherwise actively participate in the proceedings.
I doubt if they'd grant you another appeal for some reason, but I'd look into it since you're pretty much at the end of the road with this school it seems. Nothing to lose. However, as Mad Jack said, they should have experience and in their experience, your failure might typically result in failure to be able to keep up or succeed in their curriculum in the future.
I'm sorry this happened to you. Just because you failed courses doesn't mean you're a failure as a person. Try to keep your head up and start thinking about your future directions. You'll likely look back at this later in life and think to yourself that it was meant to work out the way it did.
Remediation was offered after first failure, second failure prompted them to offer either remediation again, restart first year, or dismissal.Is this an MD school? I’ve never heard of one that doesn’t do remediation. Look at the handbook policy. Sorry to hear your situation
this kind of makes sense since they really want to make sure that their first classes have a high passage rate on the boards...No, didn't have legal cousel, didn't even think it was necessary. Was completely blindsided by the decision. As far as experience, it is a newer school. It has not graduated a class yet. I'll not try to disclose any more details, but feel free to PM me. I
No idea what MedEd is but some folks don't want to give OP false hope either. They've already argued their case and were denied. If it's in their policy that they can do this unfortunately not much OP can do.I can't believe how many MedEd simps are in this thread who are seriously trying to make us believe that this was "in the student's best interest".
Holy **** this is crazy. You school dismissed you for failing two courses? At my school you can remediate TWICE before being dismissed. They just scammed you out of 70k.
MedEd = office of medical educationNo idea what MedEd is but some folks don't want to give OP false hope either. They've already argued their case and were denied. If it's in their policy that they can do this unfortunately not much OP can do.
I'm glad you had friends who were able to come back from those circumstances, unfortunately that doesn't go well for everyone and costs the students even more.
Wouldnt by that logic theyd want to let them retake the year and grab another 70k
Ah then definitely no simp, I argued our tuition going up during our COVID year despite it clearly costing them far less to run, especially since pre-clinical is just Board & Beyond videos but with their professors recording it like 6 years ago. Was able to get $1500 back for everyone and was forever hated by administration🙃MedEd = office of medical education
This underscores the impossibility of ever devising a perfect dismissal policy for academic failures. No matter what you come up with you will inevitably make errors. More draconian policies have the drawback of prematurely evicting people from the profession. More lenient policies run the risk of stringing people on for years, wasting large chunks of their lives and saddling them with unconscionable debt. And depending on what happens with a given class you always end up making policy adjustments based on the last war.I went to an established US MD school which, starting with my class, changed its policy to 2 block failures MS1 = automatic dismissal that can only be appealed on grounds of a procedural error by the school. We lost 11% of my class first year as a result and the policy was revised the following year. That said, the one person who was dismissed but able to successfully appeal had to do a partial remediation of most blocks MS2 (if you only failed 1/3 block exams you could retake a different MCQ exam, sit for an oral exam, or retake the clinical skills depending on the exam failed and it didn’t count as a failed block if you passed), and was unable to pass Step 1 after three attempts. Two people that just barely missed the 2 strikes policy were unable to pass Step 1. And the one person who joined my class from the class above (due to failing multiple blocks under the previous more “lenient” policy) ultimately matched and graduated but struggled significantly the whole way through. I still think that perhaps the policy is a bit strict, however there certainly seems to be a correlation.
Well said. Can't give all the details of course, but I appreciate this response.This underscores impossibility of ever devising a perfect dismissal policy for academic failures. No matter what you come up with you will inevitably make errors. More draconian policies have the drawback of prematurely evicting people from the profession. More lenient policies run the risk of stringing people on for years, wasting large chunks of their lives and saddling them with unconscionable debt. And depending on what happens with a given class you always end up making policy adjustments based on the last war.
These threads usually have the same pattern. The first responders give the school the benefit of the doubt and encourage the OP to do their due diligence but prepare to move on. The second responders strike a more angry and combative tone. Unfortunately all we have to go on are fragments of one side of the story.
I would get an attorney to review your case (even if they charge for the initial consultation). Don't assume that everything the school is doing is 100% within their legal right. As others have said, read the handbook on the official policy and what the formal dismissal process at your school is to start off. Don't assume the school administration followed every bit of their process as written. Especially if this is a new med school that probably doesn't have much experience with dealing with cases like this in the past. Legal counsel can be helpful for recovering damages if the school didn't follow their own dismissal process, or their process violate any federal/state/local educational laws or have something that cannot be legally enforced. An attorney experienced in educational affairs should be able to look into the details (eg what was specifically documented when the school chose to deny your appeal). In many cases, even if the legal grounds for litigation are weak, the attorney can in many cases may be able to negotiate a settlement out of court with your school.Hi all. To keep things brief, I am an MS1 and I was recently dismissed from my school because I did not pass 2 of my first 3 blocks during my first year. I was really shocked to learn that my administration went straight to dismissing me and not offering remediation for the courses NOR the possibility of restarting MS1 next year. As far as my grades, I was within 5-10% of passing on my final grades, so I wasn't failing abysmally.
Despite my grades, I never had any issues regarding professionalism, attended class regularly, and got into NO trouble or issues outside of my academic performance.
Is a response like this from administration regarding 2 failed courses common? I have already appealed and was denied. I explained to my deans that I had some personal issues that were stopping me from performing my best, but it did not help my case.
Please help me guys, I am so lost.