Just finished first year and I'm not sure I want to return.
I hated first year.
I found the material boring and nothing here seems to require abstract thought. It's just taking in information and vomiting it back. Sometimes questions require knowing 2 or 3 facts, but reasoning skills aren't required to do well on tests. I was excited for medical school because I thought it would tax my reasoning and problem solving skills, but neither of these have yet come into play.
I feel like this is a job better suited for a computer. Studying is just populating a database. Tests are just random queries of that database to ensure you have a sufficient number of facts.
I never did well in my classes because there were no big ideas or concepts. Just facts. What is the virtue of learning the origin and insertion of the brachioradialis? Is knowing the Brodmann area for Broca's area really that important? Does knowing whether an organ is intraperitoneal or retroperitoneal ever mean the difference between life and death?
Is this all of medicine? Storage and recall? What skills does a human have that make them better suited for medicine than a computer?
If this is medicine, I will quit tomorrow. I have no interest in devoting my life to this nonsense.
I hated first year.
I found the material boring and nothing here seems to require abstract thought. It's just taking in information and vomiting it back. Sometimes questions require knowing 2 or 3 facts, but reasoning skills aren't required to do well on tests. I was excited for medical school because I thought it would tax my reasoning and problem solving skills, but neither of these have yet come into play.
I feel like this is a job better suited for a computer. Studying is just populating a database. Tests are just random queries of that database to ensure you have a sufficient number of facts.
I never did well in my classes because there were no big ideas or concepts. Just facts. What is the virtue of learning the origin and insertion of the brachioradialis? Is knowing the Brodmann area for Broca's area really that important? Does knowing whether an organ is intraperitoneal or retroperitoneal ever mean the difference between life and death?
Is this all of medicine? Storage and recall? What skills does a human have that make them better suited for medicine than a computer?
If this is medicine, I will quit tomorrow. I have no interest in devoting my life to this nonsense.