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Having seen how ugly the IM Fellowship application process was before there was a match, I remain convinced that although imperfect, the match is the best way to allocate residents into available spots. However, it's clearly less than perfect. There have been many people calling for changing or discarding the match. If you could change the match, what would you do instead?
In the recent article about the match discussed on another thread, several paragraphs caught my eye:
Any replacement for the match should address these issues.
I don't know anything about how L3's get their first job. Theoretically (I think), a student graduating from law school could pass the bar and simply set up their own law practice, although how realistic this is is unclear. All medical students must do some residency training to proceed in clinical medicine.
I also know nothing about the B-school system. This sounds ugly, though. I would take 10 med students for 6 months, and then keep the best 5?
So, if you don't think the match is the best way to do this, what should we do instead? Or if the match needs to be fixed, how to fix it?
In the recent article about the match discussed on another thread, several paragraphs caught my eye:
"The National Resident Matching Program was established in 1952 to make the residency application process less chaotic. Before that, top contenders might sit on offers from multiple programs while holding out for their first choices, leaving less-competitive applicants in limbo for months. For the latter group, this meant eleventh-hour moves across the country as the cards fell where they might. Like pro sports teams, hospitals would compete for prime students by extending offers as early as the sophomore year of medical school. Some sent "exploding" offers that would expire in 24 to 48 hours if the applicant did not reply."
Any replacement for the match should address these issues.
The system compels participants to accept a binding contract. Unlike, say, third-year law students, Match applicants must train at whatever program chooses them. Conversely, hospitals must accept the doctors they are assigned. But the house has the clear advantage: While a law student can negotiate salary and perks, would-be residents have no say regarding pay and working conditions. "It's not really a free market," Thierman says. "You don't get to negotiate job offers."
I don't know anything about how L3's get their first job. Theoretically (I think), a student graduating from law school could pass the bar and simply set up their own law practice, although how realistic this is is unclear. All medical students must do some residency training to proceed in clinical medicine.
David Goldenberg favors the MBA model: If the business school lets them, companies extend limited-time job offers to students. "It's not great, but it's better than the Match," he says.
I also know nothing about the B-school system. This sounds ugly, though. I would take 10 med students for 6 months, and then keep the best 5?
So, if you don't think the match is the best way to do this, what should we do instead? Or if the match needs to be fixed, how to fix it?