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This question is in regard to the information learned in your med school science classes. Do you actually think that youll remember most of it for a long time or the rest of your life?
This question is in regard to the information learned in your med school science classes. Do you actually think that youll remember most of it for a long time or the rest of your life?
This question is in regard to the information learned in your med school science classes. Do you actually think that youll remember most of it for a long time or the rest of your life?
i didn't remember any of my cell bio from college until i started biochem in med school. now i find that when i come across something familiar, it does kind of ring a bell somewhere in the back of my mind and that old knowledge i had forgotten about slowly comes back to me...
it's probably the same deal with med school. there's no way i'm going to remember the more minute details of anatomy, but it'll be that much easier to learn the clinical stuff with that background...
This question is in regard to the information learned in your med school science classes. Do you actually think that youll remember most of it for a long time or the rest of your life?
"How much you remember" from your medical school classes is not so much of an issue as "how much did you learn in the first place". Anything that you do not use regularly will become a part of distant memory as long as you learned it in the first place. Is this a problem? No, because if something is in your distant or long-term memory, you can recall it with review.
You are going to find that when you begin to review for USMLE Step I at the end of your second year, it is far easier to recall what you have LEARNED in the first place then to try to do a major learning feat at this time. This is why daily review and systematic mastery of your coursework makes REVIEW so much easier amd the last-minute "exam cram" is counter-productive and contributes more to test anxiety than actual mastery.
Things that you use daily, you tend to remember and recall easily. When you need to recall material from your first year coursework during second year, a brief review will help you accomplish this. When you need to recall the pathological principles of your patient's disease process, you may need to review some of your pathology notes or a pathology text during third year.
As a surgical intern reviewing for ABSITE (American Board of Surgery In-Training Exam), I found myself consulting some of my review books for Biochemistry and Pathology. The important thing was not so much that I could actually remember some of those little facts and factoids from my medical school classes but that I could reveiw, recall and enhance them with my knowledge acquired since taking those courses.
I had no difficulty walking into the Gross Anatomy lab on the day of my first lab practical and identifying the structures tagged by my instructors at the time. If I had to do the same thing today without a review, I would likely not do as well on that test. With a bit of review (would take less time than learning all of those structures in the first place), I would likely do better than my first lab practical because I now have the added experience of four years of surgical residency.
Bottom line: You will do something of a "data dump" at the end of each or your classes. This is not something to be too concerned about because you are going to get ample time to revisit your "dumped" subject matter when you review for boards. You are also going to continue to build upon your knowledge foundatation as you move through medical school, into residency and into practice. If you have diligently studied and learned your material in the first place, a review is all you are going to need for recall.
That's a great line, going on my facebook. Irks me actually--I ponder if this is the most efficient way of learning and training docs. I would be in favor of more specialization early on. As a college econ major, it seems silly to learn all of this and use so little ultimately. I'm attaching a naivete clause though.doesn't the quote go, "we'll forget more than most people will ever know"
"half of everything we learned in med school wrong. Problem is we don't know which half."
The stuff that's important you remember, the rest just sits in your head until you need it.
I use most of the stuff I learned in physiology, path and biochem almost every day. I have no idea what the blood supply to the shoulder is.
My collegues in ortho could probably tell me every tendon and muscle's name, origin and insertion. When they explain stuff to me, I tend to understand without too much trouble.
You'd be suprised how much is actually in your head when you need it.
I would be in favor of more specialization early on. As a college econ major, it seems silly to learn all of this and use so little ultimately. I'm attaching a naivete clause though.
Most ppl who choose what kind of docs to be based solely on 3rd yr end up regretting it anyway. It's one thing to do a rotation, it's another thing to make something a vocation. Even if your premise is true, they should provide an opt out clause for ppl who are willing to dive into something head first to avoid learning redundant things. At some point everyone has to make decisions on what to be, and that can be put off indefinitely even if there is a 3rd yr, 4th yr or whatever year during which ppl are supposed to be making that decision. Nothing eliminates the risk of regrets. Also, nothing is a one way street--ppl can always rewind and start down another path even if it does entail some short term loss
Ha...today my teacher forgot what LPS stood for in gram-negative bacteria...and for some reason, I remembered from sophmore-undergrad and blurted out "LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE"...my friend started laughing. So my remark was followed with "I love bacteria!"i didn't remember any of my cell bio from college until i started biochem in med school. now i find that when i come across something familiar, it does kind of ring a bell somewhere in the back of my mind and that old knowledge i had forgotten about slowly comes back to me...
it's probably the same deal with med school. there's no way i'm going to remember the more minute details of anatomy, but it'll be that much easier to learn the clinical stuff with that background...
Most ppl who choose what kind of docs to be based solely on 3rd yr end up regretting it anyway. It's one thing to do a rotation, it's another thing to make something a vocation. Even if your premise is true, they should provide an opt out clause for ppl who are willing to dive into something head first to avoid learning redundant things. At some point everyone has to make decisions on what to be, and that can be put off indefinitely even if there is a 3rd yr, 4th yr or whatever year during which ppl are supposed to be making that decision. Nothing eliminates the risk of regrets. Also, nothing is a one way street--ppl can always rewind and start down another path even if it does entail some short term loss
"half of everything we learned in med school wrong. Problem is we don't know which half."
You know, people say they forget most stuff and I think that is someone true. But you'd be suprised what a sort of global sense of physiology, anatomy, pathology, and pharmacology you can walk into 3rd year with. The best word is "gestalt."
Two examples:
Will you remember all of the histo and physio of the kidney? No.
But will you be suprise when someone with a high Creatinine also has high K+ and Phos? No.
Will you recall all the ins and outs of respiratory physiology and the diffusion of gases? No.
But will you be able to comprehend why inc FiO2 helps shrink a pneumothorax? Yep.
It's one of those things where you have to crawl before you can walk. If you don't believe me run a typical medicine or surgery morning rounds presentation by one of your non-medical friends.