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It seems like the boards scores and grades in the 3rd year matter a lot in getting a residency. Other than passing, do the pre-clinical grades matter?
RaistlinMajere said:It seems like the boards scores and grades in the 3rd year matter a lot in getting a residency. Other than passing, do the pre-clinical grades matter?
brendang said:i love telling this story because it just goes to show how anal residency program directors can be, but at a relatively prestigious university program for an equally prestigious residency position, the PD actually pulled out my undergraduate grades and made me explain my far from exceptional grades in 1st and 2nd year of college!!! i was 16-17 years old and he's busting my proverbial chops over that!!! so, yes. everything counts... hope for the best but plan for the worst...
novacek88 said:How would he have access to your undergraduate grades since you don't submit your undergrad transcripts
Damn. General surgery too? 🙁novacek88 said:They matter only for derm, radiology, radiation oncology, surgery and surgical subspecialties
brendang said:sf match requires one's college transcript for ophtho.
kaos said:Damn. General surgery too? 🙁
I heard there's a roundabout way of getting into surg by doing Medicine. Is that true?
brendang said:i love telling this story because it just goes to show how anal residency program directors can be, but at a relatively prestigious university program for an equally prestigious residency position, the PD actually pulled out my undergraduate grades and made me explain my far from exceptional grades in 1st and 2nd year of college!!! i was 16-17 years old and he's busting my proverbial chops over that!!! so, yes. everything counts... hope for the best but plan for the worst...
I'm new to this forum, so pardon my ignorance if this has been asked a million times. Are you better off if you rank in the lower half of a VERY prestigious medschool or in the upper half of mid-twenties (US NEWS) ranked school ?(Step 1, lors, etc all being equal) I'm presently trying to decide where to go next august and this has been weighing heavily on my mindKimberli Cox said:We look at them when evaluating candidates, but in reality they only matter if you've done poorly and failed to rectify the situation/turn around your class rank by 4th year (most schools give us a class ranking of students during their first two and final two years). Your Step 1, LORs, etc. are more important if you are doing well.
FloridaMadame said:I'm new to this forum, so pardon my ignorance if this has been asked a million times. Are you better off if you rank in the lower half of a VERY prestigious medschool or in the upper half of mid-twenties (US NEWS) ranked school ?(Step 1, lors, etc all being equal) I'm presently trying to decide where to go next august and this has been weighing heavily on my mind
go to the more prestigious school. there are smart gunners everywhere. going to a lesser ranked school is no guarantee of class rank. i think this is more true in medical school than most other places.FloridaMadame said:I'm new to this forum, so pardon my ignorance if this has been asked a million times. Are you better off if you rank in the lower half of a VERY prestigious medschool or in the upper half of mid-twenties (US NEWS) ranked school ?(Step 1, lors, etc all being equal) I'm presently trying to decide where to go next august and this has been weighing heavily on my mind
automaton said:go to the more prestigious school. there are smart gunners everywhere. going to a lesser ranked school is no guarantee of class rank. i think this is more true in medical school than most other places.
to answer your question though, all else being equal it would probably be better to rank in the top half, as long as you're including clinical grades in the rank. but this is pure speculation and probably not too useful either.
My school has gone to a system where only 1-20 (out of 150) even get ranked. The rest of us will not have a class rank. Seems to be a pretty big disadvantage, especially if you are #21 (still top 15%, but not ranked).Kimberli Cox said:We look at them when evaluating candidates, but in reality they only matter if you've done poorly and failed to rectify the situation/turn around your class rank by 4th year (most schools give us a class ranking of students during their first two and final two years). Your Step 1, LORs, etc. are more important if you are doing well.
thackl said:My school has gone to a system where only 1-20 (out of 150) even get ranked. The rest of us will not have a class rank. Seems to be a pretty big disadvantage, especially if you are #21 (still top 15%, but not ranked).
Kimberli Cox said:Schools that do not have an official ranking system still tend to provide us with a sheet delineating which percentile/third/quarter of your class you are in, so we have some way of figuring out how you're doing. It is not unusual for schools without official rankings to still keep some sort of record of your performance and provide it to residency programs to which your've applied. Same goes for H/P/F courses.