Mr.Worldwide
New Member
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2025
- Messages
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- Reaction score
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Hi All,
It's officially decision-time. These are the --greatly unexpected--final six: Columbia, Yale, Penn, Harvard, NYU, and WashU. "Rebound Bosh, Back Out To Allen..."
A little background to help with any advice (which I am truly grateful for in any capacity as I deserve none): I am heavily interested in orthopedics if procedural work wins out, but if not and my fine motor skills betray me, I am drawn to IM —> cardiology. Proximity to family does not matter to me nor social support in a way that drastically influences my decision (from IL)--don't worry I call my mom almost daily. I fall in line with the "doctor, and.." philosophy. I plan on dabbling in a second industry at some point in my career. Therefore, building and creating a strong network/foundation while in school will be important to me. I am upper-middle-class, which puts me in the no-mans-land of financial aid. I am going to be paying out of pocket and don't see need-based aid offering much alleviation. Loan forgiveness feels so uncertain I don't view it as a legitimate option currently. I would like to be in the northeast for medical school, but hope to eventually find my way to the Midwest long-term for my residency/career. Toxic competition intra-class is something I really have low-tolerance for--pass/fail matters to me a lot. NOTE: I haven't negotiated merit aid anywhere although I don't think most of these places will budge.
TLDR: The most important factors to me are: (1) keeping as many doors open as possible (in and outside of medicine), (2) (as comfortably as possible) matching into a respected, high-volume residency program--anywhere in the nation--that will train me well, (3) low intra-class competition, and (4) leaving school with principal debt that isn't insanely crippling. This feels like the great differentiator.
Now, without further ado, my perceived (potentially myopic) pros/cons of each school:
YALE
(+) Yale System -- See this as a structure mirroring real-life. Why not start learning the way that I'll be learning for the rest of my life after school?
(+) True P/F -- No competition, love this approach
(+) Match List -- gorgeous
(+) Students seem close and non-competitive
(-) New Haven -- seemingly rough for travel, food desert, smaller than I'd like, less available opportunities outside of medicine in city
(-) Cost -- haven't received financial package, but doubt it will be substantial and therefore I'll be paying full COA. Don't think Yale offers much merit aid.
PENN
(+) Wharton/Penn: great business exposure/proximity/network with Wharton students
(+) Penn HealthTech: good established structure for future interest of mine in MedTech
(+) Penn HealthX: good established structure for future interest of mine in MedTech
(+) Philly: diverse city, lot of opportunity, COL lower than many of the other cities on list
(+) Curriculum: Love the curricular structure, feels like great personal fit
(+) Match List-- beautiful
(-) Cost -- No merit aid at this point, therefore I'll probably be paying full COA
(-) Ranked Clerkships
(-) AOA
HARVARD
(+) Dream
(+) HBS and beyond: great business exposure/proximity/network with HBS students
(+) Student phenotype: seemingly everyone (the majority) here are a "doctor, and" moreso than other places
(+) True Pass/Fail -- lovely
(+) Required in-person -- good way to connect with class/remain motivated
(+) Match List -- royalty
(+) Innovation Lab at Harvard -- perfect for MedTech interests
(- - -) Cost -- actually absurd on all fronts. Don't think I'd consider myself sane to take out the amount of loans required at this point. Curious to hear from others what $ amount between schools would be acceptable for this opportunity. And any creative ways to cover costs lol. Already applying for private/external scholarships.
WASHU
(+) Cost will require no loans
(+) Great match list
(+) P/F curriculum -- with weird competencies that essentially make it H/P/F
(+) Very community-centered
(+) Midwestern culture -- friendly, nice, warm people
(-) Seemingly smaller footprint in medtech realm, disconnected from "hub" of medicine in northeast
(-) St Louis -- wouldn't love to be in this city for medical school when I have NY, Boston, Philly as options
NYU
(+) Cost will require no loans
(+) Concrete Jungle
(+) Limitless opportunities in other industries
(+) MD+ has a strong presence in NY and would be helpful for networking
(+) 1 full year of dedicated research can keep me from having to take a fifth year for ortho
(+) Match List -- a bit worried that it is so NY heavy, but think it might be a personal preference outcome -- I do not want to be in NY longterm necessarily
(-) Ranked Clerkships
(-) AOA
(-) Less robust mentorship -- as reported anecdotally from students
(-) NY-bias for residency placement (Although seemingly driven by student preference?)
COLUMBIA
(+) NY opportunities in MedTech
(+) Curricular structure --very in-line with my strengths/interests
(+) Class seems close/friendly/warm
(+) P/f pre-clerkship
(+) Ortho mentorship
(+) Match List
(-) Cost -- do not qualify for their need-based aid program
(-) ranked clerkships
(-) Recent news -- Seems Columbia is getting thrown around quite a bit in a negative way.
Reminder: haven't tried negotiating anywhere--feel uncomfortable/privileged. Would love thoughts and thank you already for your time spent reading.
I am lost.
Cheers!
It's officially decision-time. These are the --greatly unexpected--final six: Columbia, Yale, Penn, Harvard, NYU, and WashU. "Rebound Bosh, Back Out To Allen..."
A little background to help with any advice (which I am truly grateful for in any capacity as I deserve none): I am heavily interested in orthopedics if procedural work wins out, but if not and my fine motor skills betray me, I am drawn to IM —> cardiology. Proximity to family does not matter to me nor social support in a way that drastically influences my decision (from IL)--don't worry I call my mom almost daily. I fall in line with the "doctor, and.." philosophy. I plan on dabbling in a second industry at some point in my career. Therefore, building and creating a strong network/foundation while in school will be important to me. I am upper-middle-class, which puts me in the no-mans-land of financial aid. I am going to be paying out of pocket and don't see need-based aid offering much alleviation. Loan forgiveness feels so uncertain I don't view it as a legitimate option currently. I would like to be in the northeast for medical school, but hope to eventually find my way to the Midwest long-term for my residency/career. Toxic competition intra-class is something I really have low-tolerance for--pass/fail matters to me a lot. NOTE: I haven't negotiated merit aid anywhere although I don't think most of these places will budge.
TLDR: The most important factors to me are: (1) keeping as many doors open as possible (in and outside of medicine), (2) (as comfortably as possible) matching into a respected, high-volume residency program--anywhere in the nation--that will train me well, (3) low intra-class competition, and (4) leaving school with principal debt that isn't insanely crippling. This feels like the great differentiator.
Now, without further ado, my perceived (potentially myopic) pros/cons of each school:
YALE
(+) Yale System -- See this as a structure mirroring real-life. Why not start learning the way that I'll be learning for the rest of my life after school?
(+) True P/F -- No competition, love this approach
(+) Match List -- gorgeous
(+) Students seem close and non-competitive
(-) New Haven -- seemingly rough for travel, food desert, smaller than I'd like, less available opportunities outside of medicine in city
(-) Cost -- haven't received financial package, but doubt it will be substantial and therefore I'll be paying full COA. Don't think Yale offers much merit aid.
PENN
(+) Wharton/Penn: great business exposure/proximity/network with Wharton students
(+) Penn HealthTech: good established structure for future interest of mine in MedTech
(+) Penn HealthX: good established structure for future interest of mine in MedTech
(+) Philly: diverse city, lot of opportunity, COL lower than many of the other cities on list
(+) Curriculum: Love the curricular structure, feels like great personal fit
(+) Match List-- beautiful
(-) Cost -- No merit aid at this point, therefore I'll probably be paying full COA
(-) Ranked Clerkships
(-) AOA
HARVARD
(+) Dream
(+) HBS and beyond: great business exposure/proximity/network with HBS students
(+) Student phenotype: seemingly everyone (the majority) here are a "doctor, and" moreso than other places
(+) True Pass/Fail -- lovely
(+) Required in-person -- good way to connect with class/remain motivated
(+) Match List -- royalty
(+) Innovation Lab at Harvard -- perfect for MedTech interests
(- - -) Cost -- actually absurd on all fronts. Don't think I'd consider myself sane to take out the amount of loans required at this point. Curious to hear from others what $ amount between schools would be acceptable for this opportunity. And any creative ways to cover costs lol. Already applying for private/external scholarships.
WASHU
(+) Cost will require no loans
(+) Great match list
(+) P/F curriculum -- with weird competencies that essentially make it H/P/F
(+) Very community-centered
(+) Midwestern culture -- friendly, nice, warm people
(-) Seemingly smaller footprint in medtech realm, disconnected from "hub" of medicine in northeast
(-) St Louis -- wouldn't love to be in this city for medical school when I have NY, Boston, Philly as options
NYU
(+) Cost will require no loans
(+) Concrete Jungle
(+) Limitless opportunities in other industries
(+) MD+ has a strong presence in NY and would be helpful for networking
(+) 1 full year of dedicated research can keep me from having to take a fifth year for ortho
(+) Match List -- a bit worried that it is so NY heavy, but think it might be a personal preference outcome -- I do not want to be in NY longterm necessarily
(-) Ranked Clerkships
(-) AOA
(-) Less robust mentorship -- as reported anecdotally from students
(-) NY-bias for residency placement (Although seemingly driven by student preference?)
COLUMBIA
(+) NY opportunities in MedTech
(+) Curricular structure --very in-line with my strengths/interests
(+) Class seems close/friendly/warm
(+) P/f pre-clerkship
(+) Ortho mentorship
(+) Match List
(-) Cost -- do not qualify for their need-based aid program
(-) ranked clerkships
(-) Recent news -- Seems Columbia is getting thrown around quite a bit in a negative way.
Reminder: haven't tried negotiating anywhere--feel uncomfortable/privileged. Would love thoughts and thank you already for your time spent reading.
I am lost.
Cheers!
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