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- Sep 15, 2008
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Does anyone know?
I'm going into my P4 year and we are currently going through the lottery to pick all of our rotations. The person in charge of experiential education told us that we should be very thankful that none of our rotation sites were charging the school money. She said that our tuition would easily double if that was the case. If these sites aren't charging the school money then why is my P4 tuition the most expensive out of any year? 😡
I've been reading several threads where they say that new schools such as PCOM are offering triple the rate of other nearby schools to secure rotation sites. Is that how all these new schools and diploma mills are getting rotations? I know for a fact that our school has recently lost a couple hospital rotations because a new school that opened up in the state 3 years ago is offering those sites lots of money for guaranteed spots.
Do all these new schools present a serious problem? I've always wondered how everyone at the candidate schools and schools with large class sizes (120+) manages to find decent rotations. I go to an established state school and I've found it to be a very stressful experience trying to plan my P4 year-- not enough sites to go around.
Anyone else have any thoughts?
I'm going into my P4 year and we are currently going through the lottery to pick all of our rotations. The person in charge of experiential education told us that we should be very thankful that none of our rotation sites were charging the school money. She said that our tuition would easily double if that was the case. If these sites aren't charging the school money then why is my P4 tuition the most expensive out of any year? 😡
I've been reading several threads where they say that new schools such as PCOM are offering triple the rate of other nearby schools to secure rotation sites. Is that how all these new schools and diploma mills are getting rotations? I know for a fact that our school has recently lost a couple hospital rotations because a new school that opened up in the state 3 years ago is offering those sites lots of money for guaranteed spots.
Do all these new schools present a serious problem? I've always wondered how everyone at the candidate schools and schools with large class sizes (120+) manages to find decent rotations. I go to an established state school and I've found it to be a very stressful experience trying to plan my P4 year-- not enough sites to go around.
Anyone else have any thoughts?