fourthyearmed said:
As a fourth year medical student at a state school, I am curious why everyone on this site is so obsessed with getting into a "top tier" school like Harvard or Hopkins. How could it possibly be worth taking a year off after college to do research or post-bacc work to improve your application for Hopkins when you could easily get in your state school and get on with your life? We spend so much of our lives in school and everyone's going to be a physician in the end no matter where you went to school. We all take the same USMLE tests, all medical schools pass the same accredidation standards, and we will all get a residency spot somewhere. To all of you with average MCATs and GPAs, I wish you luck. You will be great doctors one day if you never give up!
I had several reasons for choosing a top tier school. In no particular order:
- I want to have classmates who will challenge me.
- I don't want to be confined to a particular geographical area.
- Yes, we will all get a residency spot
somewhere, but students from top tier schools have better chances at the most competitive residency spots.
- I'm interested in lots of things besides clinical practice - research, public health, writing, international health, etc., and I'd like to go to a place where I could explore these options.
- I would probably be happiest in an academic setting, and I'm more likely to end up in an academic setting if I go to a top tier school.
- I don't think I would be completely happy at either of my state schools. I am so excited about going to Yale, and I don't think I would feel this way if I were on my way to either of my state schools right now.
- If I had gone to a state school I could not have gone to school near my fiance. He's getting a Ph.D. and the best programs for him are out of state.
I didn't have to take a year off or do a post-bacc to get into any of the schools that accepted me, and if things had been different and my application hadn't been strong enough for the top tier schools, I would have attended one of my state schools, because like you say, we're all going to be physicians in the end. But when you have the opportunity to attend a top tier school and you feel the education there is worth the extra money, what's wrong with going for it?