LECOM - Bradenton Discussion thread 2008-2009

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Remember that you need to do everything in moderation, school included. Although it will and should consume your every thought, you should still find some time every week to go out and relax in order to prevent burnout.

As for the poster who asked about us 1st years hanging out with you interviewers, the answer is absolutely. Anatomy is over on Monday, so we will have a lot more "free" time to schedule around during PBL. Just let us know through here when you'll be in the area and we will try to meet up with you.

Good luck all future applicants!
 
Anyone interviewing on Nov 10th? I'm using the fact that I have to fly down for the interview as an excuse to spend the weekend at the Epcot Food & Wine Festival 😀

Reading this thread has me really excited to see the school! I love the idea of PBL and it's encouraging that people seem so happy at LECOM-B.
 
BUMP for all current and future LECOM-B applicants!

Gotta show our new MS-I's some love!
 
BUMP for all current and future LECOM-B applicants!

Gotta show our new MS-I's some love!

So, anatomy is over. We survived. Hopefully we'll be slightly more available to answer your questions now.

The offer to hang out if you're down here still stands, just PM us.
 
i was placed on the alternate list. does anyone have any insight into this? when they meet to take people off, how many people are on it, etc? This is a little dejecting 🙁
 
From what I've seen in years past, you still have pretty good odds if it is your top choice. I am leaning towards NSU for personal reasons, so you will at least move up one spot most likely. 😉
 
i was placed on the alternate list. does anyone have any insight into this? when they meet to take people off, how many people are on it, etc? This is a little dejecting 🙁

Don't know exactly how many for sure...maybe someone else does.

I do have many friends in class who were on the alternate list last year. What they do is rank everyone, then offer acceptances in that order. I know they at least made it into the 30's or so last year...if not more than that.

One word of caution from a Waiting List Expert: Every year is different. Last year was an exceptionally horrible year for waiting/alternate lists. The number of people accepted from a waitlist or a given school can vary greatly from year to year depending on many factors. Just keep that in mind throughout the process and don't "count" on any of your waitlists.

That being said, I would imagine you'll have a good chance at LECOM-B. Just stay in touch, follow up, and be patient.
 
i was placed on the alternate list. does anyone have any insight into this? when they meet to take people off, how many people are on it, etc? This is a little dejecting 🙁
They are giving spots on the alternate list already?? 😱 Is the class full already? :scared: If not, why just not reply yet? I'm totally confused. 😕
 
The class is not full yet. Not even close. I talked with one of the professors and he told me that they have sent out about 40 acceptance letters so far. Whether they all take it or not has yet to be seen, but that's what they have sent out.

Don't fret. Just keep on relaxing! Back to studying for PBL!
 
The class is not full yet. Not even close. I talked with one of the professors and he told me that they have sent out about 40 acceptance letters so far. Whether they all take it or not has yet to be seen, but that's what they have sent out.

Don't fret. Just keep on relaxing! Back to studying for PBL!

And I wonder how many out of those 40 will actually choose to go to this school, considering that some people get accepted to more than one. Seems like it's still really early in the application process, even though for some of us it seems as though it has lasted for ages :laugh:
 
This might come off sounding awkward, but does PBL feel like you are just paying somebody to home school yourself.
 
They are giving spots on the alternate list already?? 😱 Is the class full already? :scared: If not, why just not reply yet? I'm totally confused. 😕

They give out alternate spots from day one. There is a pretty good formula for how many acceptances they will have in any given month (and it's a closely guarded secret 🙂). If you are a good candidate, but not the best, you may get put on the alternate list for further review. Once you interview you will hear three things:

accepted = good
denied = bad
alternate list = not bad....but not good yet. IOW, you still have a chance.
 
This might come off sounding awkward, but does PBL feel like you are just paying somebody to home school yourself.

Actually...not at all. Have you gotten an interview invite yet? If/when you go on your interview, you will probably sit in on a PBL session and get to experience for yourself. Until then, it's a little difficult to describe, but I'll give it a shot...

Imagine that you are in BFD somewhere and there is this poor person with some medical condition that needs your help. You have no medical knowledge to speak of, but at least you're a pre-med (or med student)...and that is better than nothing.

Fortunately for you (and the patient), you have the same superpower as Hiro from the hit TV show Heroes, and you can make time move very slowly, or even stop.

So...you ask the patient questions. They tell you things and you write them down. Once you've asked everything you can think of, you stop time and go grab some medical textbooks that happen to have been nearby and look up every single thing the patient told you, how it works, how it relates to their current condition, etc.

Then, you have some more info, so you start time again, and ask some more questions...or maybe do a blood test (which you learned how to do in your lab book...lol...just play along, its not a perfect analogy).

You get the results back, but you don't have a clue what the "Specific Gravity" of a "Urinalysis" is. So...you stop time again, and go look it all up all over again.

I find the facilitators to be VERY helpful. They don't "teach" you things, per se...(there's nothing you can't find in your books anyways) but they keep you on the right track and redirect you if you get too far gone or if you're wasting too much time. I imagine this activity will be less needed as we get better at the process and learn more basics.

Anyways, once you figure out what the patient has, how it works, what the treatment is, etc. you send them on their way and start the process all over again.

The cases/patients are VERY well designed to teach you ALL of the basic science you need to learn during the first 2 years of med school. Each case is VERY dense with tons of things to learn.

Aside from basic science "board" type stuff, you also get TONS of practice reviewing lab results, interviewing "patients", doing SOAP notes, and appplying what you're learning to real world situations...all of which are said to be helpful for real world rotations.

Anyways, that's my kinda messed up take on it. It's actually much more complex than that, but maybe that gives you an idea. If not, let me know and I'll give a less "metaphoric" take on it.
 
Digitlnoize, I like how you compared us to Hiro. awesome example!


waiting list isnt too bad it moved real fast towards the end of the year. so if ur on the top of the list u have a good chance of getting in.
 
They give out alternate spots from day one. There is a pretty good formula for how many acceptances they will have in any given month (and it's a closely guarded secret 🙂). If you are a good candidate, but not the best, you may get put on the alternate list for further review. Once you interview you will hear three things:

accepted = good
denied = bad
alternate list = not bad....but not good yet. IOW, you still have a chance.
How do they choose who is on the alternate list? Why haven't I heard from them yet? :scared:
 
Yeah I Interviewed and was accepted. I wasn't putting down PBL as this is how I learned all through college. My roommate and I just thought about it one day because we made about 10% of our lectures throughout the years and just studied from lecture notes, books, etc. So in a sense i was PBLing myself already if that makes any sense. I love skipping lecture
 
....I just thought about it one day because we made about 10% of our lectures throughout the years and just studied from lecture notes, books, etc. So in a sense i was PBLing myself already if that makes any sense. I love skipping lecture

Well....that's kind of stretching it a little. You studied a lot on your own, but you had notes and a syllabus. The key part of PBL is the "P", the "Problem". That's what goes on in the group sessions. PBL sessions are really "discovery" sessions where you work out what the best way is to understand the situation at hand. You identify the things you need to learn in order to solve the problem and then go out and learn them the best way you know how. In a way you could almost call it DBL-- discovery-based learning.

You start with a symptom, or group of symptoms, and attempt to discover all the things that could cause that to happen. You look at the possible scientific mechanisms that might just be behind it. Then you piece together the clues, relate them to the possible medical diagnoses, and eliminate those that can't be the cause. Finally, you study the mechanisms involved in treating the disease you've uncovered. Some groups get way too caught up in the diagnosis, but that should really be a very small part of your session. What you are really trying to do is learn the sciences behind the problem.

Yet, you will ultimately be tested on those concepts from a clinical aspect. So, PBL is very beneficial when it's time to take the boards because that's exactly the way you learned things in the first place.
 
Let me give you some background-- maybe more than you really wanted 🙂. You know that there is a physician shortage in FL. In fact, there are two new MD schools opening in the next couple of years because there are so many people here turning 65 that a crisis is in the making.

Several years ago there were plans for a new osteopathic school, the Florida College of Osteopathic Medicine (FCOM) that was slated to open in Tarpon Springs, FL. There was a lot of suport locally....but the money to do it just wasn't there in the end. A couple of years later, LECOM (who had plenty of money) was looking to expand and looked at property in Tarpon Springs. Instead, they ended up locating in a new planned community not too far away called Lakewood Ranch, between Bradenton and Sarasota. At the time there was a lot of planned development and even more empty land.

Lecom took a chance, got some breaks locally and a bit of money from the state of FL if they would agree to lower tuition for in-state students and Lecom-B was born. If you look at the pics on Google Earth you can see the campus being built-- before the pond was even filled.

Lecom had experience with PBL. They'd been doing it a for a few years in Erie and the students had performed better on the boards than the regular students. They had a theory that just about anyone could do well in PBL. That was a lofty ideal... but it wasn't quite right.

As the "new kid on the block" who also had a whole different curriculum, PBL wasn't as easy a sell as they thought it would be. Not surprisingly, some of the first PBL students in Erie were virtually bribed to try PBL, i.e. they were offered spots in medical school only if they would agree to the PBL track. They went to some post-bacc students, who had no other offers and no other choice, and offered them spots if they would go PBL. It worked. Keep in mind, though, that it as still a small number of folks and they kept a pretty careful eye on them. A whole school of PBL students was a new thing entirely. So, they were forced to take some students that would not have gotten in otherwise and "bribed" a few Erie applicants to join the first class too.

Had everyone simply followed the directions and trusted in PBL from the outset, the first class probably would have done incredibly well. Unfortunately, there were a number of students who refused to embrace the concept. When time came for the boards, a number of folks in the first class had less than stellar scores.

By the time the second class, and the third class after that, matriculated the schoool had become a lot more picky. They zeroed in on those folks who really could excel in a PBL environment. The first class didn't do all that well on Step 1, but the second class absolutely rocked. They trusted in the system and exceded expectations.

Not to be outdone, most of the first class buckled down. Lecom-B identified 12 students in that first class that were in danger of failing Step 2. They offered them the chance to voluntarily miss a month of rotations and come to Bradenton for an intense Step 2 review. 8 of those 12 chose to do that. All 8 of them passed Step 2. The 4 who chose not to do so failed. Yet, 4 out of 152 failures meant that 97% passed-- well above the national average.

Each consecutive class has managed to do better at every step so far. Today, applicants with really good MCATs and GPAs are routinely turned away because they might not excel at PBL. It really takes a special, self-motivated person to do well. Yet, there is no better system for those who can handle it. Why? Because COMLEX is a test that measures how well you can clinically correlate the basic sciences. Likewise, PBL teaches you the basic sciences through clinical correlations.

Most people I've talked to will agree that COMLEX is actually quite a bit easier than our PBL tests. If you can do well on those... you can do well on the boards 🙂.

So we get to play Dr. House? 😱 I've always wanted that opportunity! 😀
 
So we get to play Dr. House? 😱 I've always wanted that opportunity! 😀

I wonder if that's where they got the name for the character???

Kids play "doctor".
Kids play "house".

What about "Doctor House?"

Anyways...PBL is kinda like House, but you don't have years of medical knowledge to draw from...so you have to look everything up in books.
 
I wonder if that's where they got the name for the character???

Kids play "doctor".
Kids play "house".

What about "Doctor House?"

Anyways...PBL is kinda like House, but you don't have years of medical knowledge to draw from...so you have to look everything up in books.

House was suppose to be a detective kinda like Sherlock Holmes ( House kinda means Holmes) then for reason they turned it into a medical based detective TV show.
 
as I am another person who was placed on the alternate list, I am just wondering if I'm alone in thinking that it is cruel and unusual punishment??
 
as I am another person who was placed on the alternate list, I am just wondering if I'm alone in thinking that it is cruel and unusual punishment??

I wouldnt think that. When LECOM-B pick their students they pick the ones they think that will work best with PBL. So you could be one the smartest but still not make it. Being on the alternate list is not a bad thing because the list moves fast and it should be fine.
 
...Honestly, the people in your class will be far more interesting than the townies anyways. You'll probably be too busy getting to know them the first couple months to worry about townies. Unless you're looking for a relationship...then you should probably check out the townies. Inter-class romances can spell trouble for PBL (but some people are making them work).

Random question, not that I am going to medical to start a relationship, but how hard is it to find a potential single student at LECOM-B?
 
Random question, not that I am going to medical to start a relationship, but how hard is it to find a potential single student at LECOM-B?

I'm a married guy, but quite a few of my classmates are single and available.

Some have even started dating each other already...and it appears to be working out ok in most cases.

There's also the entire pharmacy school who may be more single, but I'm not sure.

Although personally, if I were single, I wouldn't date anyone in my LECOM-B class unless they were really fraking awesome. If you break up and wind up in a PBL group with them your semester could be very awkward. Probably not worth the risk IMO...unless they were perfect...then all bets are off.

Also, you'll have very little time. I couldn't imagine trying to date during med school. You'll have plenty of time to find someone after you're done with school.

Just my 2 cents.
 
There are many single students, as well as non-single students. The hard part isn't finding a relationship, but finding the time to make it work.

By the way, if you guys are looking for some PBL friends, look for the LECOM-B 2012 facebook group and PM me. I'll add send you my name and you can add me. That way you will know some people should you ever wish to come down and relax before school starts or need help in other stuff (i.e., apartment search, etc).

Good luck.
 
Hey BCL...did you see that I made you an admin on the Facebook group? 'Cause I did. 'Cause I rock. And you rock. And Class of 2012 rocks. Even without a picture on our Facebook group.
 
ROFL. Yea, man! I keep forgetting to mention that to you. Thanks a lot. Now I'm even cooler!
 
Hey BCL...did you see that I made you an admin on the Facebook group? 'Cause I did. 'Cause I rock. And you rock. And Class of 2012 rocks. Even without a picture on our Facebook group.

Yah forgot to mention that myself, thanks for the add digit. Though I was expecting something more creative than "First Name". Nevertheless it is appreciated.
 
I applied to this school and it is one of the places I'm hoping to get in. However, I'm still waiting to be verified! It's been about 3 1/2 weeks.....This whole process is so annoying/nerve-wrecking/etc.
 
Yah forgot to mention that myself, thanks for the add digit. Though I was expecting something more creative than "First Name". Nevertheless it is appreciated.

Sorry about the lack of creativity. I was brain fried from anatomy at the time. I think I did it during the "gauntlet" of tests, so...yeah.
 
This is for the group that interviewed on Friday, October 17, 2008. I am that guy that Heather had you speak to in the cafeteria. If you have any questions, send me a PM or post here. I can guarantee that the regulars to this board will give you solid, sound advice regarding LECOM-B. Be weary of the other threads, and don't freak out when you see all sorts of other people's freaking-out posts. Just keep your head up.

It was great to meet you all and I hope that your experience today was a great one. I know that I love this school to death and I'm thankful that I chose to come here. Overall, make sure you come here because you feel this is the best place to have your education and that you will be given the best opportunity to grow and flourish as a student at LECOM-B.

I hope everything went well! Good luck to you all in the coming weeks!
 
I can guarantee that the regulars to this board will give you solid, sound advice regarding LECOM-B. Be weary of the other threads, and don't freak out when you see all sorts of other people's freaking-out posts. Just keep your head up.

I agree!

BCL what were u doing at school so early in the morning???
 
This is for the group that interviewed on Friday, October 17, 2008. I am that guy that Heather had you speak to in the cafeteria. If you have any questions, send me a PM or post here. I can guarantee that the regulars to this board will give you solid, sound advice regarding LECOM-B. Be weary of the other threads, and don't freak out when you see all sorts of other people's freaking-out posts. Just keep your head up.

It was great to meet you all and I hope that your experience today was a great one. I know that I love this school to death and I'm thankful that I chose to come here. Overall, make sure you come here because you feel this is the best place to have your education and that you will be given the best opportunity to grow and flourish as a student at LECOM-B.

I hope everything went well! Good luck to you all in the coming weeks!


Thanks!! I was there today, I was the girl that said you're SDN name looked familiar, lol. Anyway, PBL WAS AWESOME!! Definitely better than I could have ever imagined. Letters are going to be mailed by next Friday!! I'm actually going to be on campus next Friday so I'm hoping to get my decision then, ahh! Keep me in your thoughts! :luck:
 
PCLUMAS...how would you suggest finding a roommate at LECOM-B...are there any threads on here or anywhere else for people looking for roomates or that sort of thing?

thanks....darren.
 
PCLUMAS...how would you suggest finding a roommate at LECOM-B...are there any threads on here or anywhere else for people looking for roomates or that sort of thing?

thanks....darren.

Well...you can try the LECOM-B SGA website: http://lecomsgabradenton.com/index.php?option=com_smf&Itemid=159#1

I created a Facebook group for the class of 2012. You (or someone) could go do the same for 2013, but be warned:

You are not allowed to use LECOM-B pictures, logos, etc until you get permission, which can't occur until you elect class officers halfway through your OMS-1 year.

Look at our group if you want an idea of what you can do. We got a little bit of flak from Erie over the summer about the Facebook page...just be careful, and proceed at your own risk.

I do know that quite a few people did find roomies that way though.

Also, I highly recommend a house. Isn't that right everyone who's been to my awesome place?
 
Got a letter in the mail yesterday. It was good news. 👍

I have a question for the current students. Who can I talk to about doing core rotations out of the tampa/orlando area? I have a particular area in mind and I want to know how much is already established.
 
Got a letter in the mail yesterday. It was good news. 👍

I have a question for the current students. Who can I talk to about doing core rotations out of the tampa/orlando area? I have a particular area in mind and I want to know how much is already established.

You might try to contact the clinical education office. I'd take any info you get from other sources with a grain of salt, since rotations change every year. There has been talk for a while about keeping core rotations closer to the school, or at least in fewer locations, to enable better quality control. What exactly that means is open to conjecture, but my point is that if rotation location is a big deal for you, you should not just assume that the locations available now are what you will have available in 3 years.
 
I'm going to be interviewing at Bradenton this coming monday and my fiance wont be able to pick me up until 3:30-4pm... so I was just wondering if there's anything I would be able to do from 2:30 until then?? I'm open to any suggestions! Thanks in advance.
 
First of all, sorry to anyone who posted specifically mentioning me. I had a long weekend of studying/watching Penn State/watching Texas and then I went back to studying, so.. yeah. I'm glad that those of you who I met had a great experience. Hopefully you'll hear back soon with good news and you can get on your way to getting ready for medical school. Just remember to relax and have fun with your life. That's my best advice.

As for "fun stuff to do" in the Bradenton area, I cannot mention much you could do for an hour. I mean, you could always just drive around and get accustomed to the area, although it sounds like your fiancee has a solid grasp on that for you (since she's from the area). Otherwise, I would just sit outside and relax, enjoy the weather, and take in some fresh air. I know that I would love to do that, but... regardless. Sorry I could not be of more help.

Good luck on everyone's upcoming interviews and letters and if there's anyone's response I missed in the shuffle, just PM me or repost. I'll be better about this!

Good luck!
 
You did the important thing in watching PSU play anyway. I didn't get to, but I was getting constant text updates from my dad while driving.
 
Can any current LECOM-B students talk about rotation availability, placement, misc. issues, etc? I have heard some conflicting reports about the ease and availability of rotation sites. On hand I see the extremely impressive first year match list, which implies good 3rd and 4th year rotations, but on the other I hear about the difficulty and general apathy of the school in assisting students in their search for spots. I am strongly considering attending this school, and this issue is the one thing that makes me hesitate.
 
Can any current LECOM-B students talk about rotation availability, placement, misc. issues, etc? I have heard some conflicting reports about the ease and availability of rotation sites. On hand I see the extremely impressive first year match list, which implies good 3rd and 4th year rotations, but on the other I hear about the difficulty and general apathy of the school in assisting students in their search for spots. I am strongly considering attending this school, and this issue is the one thing that makes me hesitate.

I'm sure a couple of the more seasoned 3rd years will chime in, but I'm not sure how much emphasis you can put on any correlation between the subjective quality of rotations and strength of a match list.

So many other factors play a probably much more important role.... individual "effort", Step scores, clinical evals, letters of rec, work ethic, etc.... So I don't think you can imply a whole lot just from rotation sites, good or bad.

That said, I'm just getting started in the process but can share my experiences so far. I think a lot of people are frustrated and feel like that we haven't had a lot of instruction regarding this "process" and the logistics of it. Since it's not a huge academic university with an attached hospital it's not the place to go if you expect them to hand you a preplanned and completely finalized 3rd/4th year schedule where you just show up to that hospital all year, won't happen.

What there IS though, is a lot of flexibility. Everyone is put into groups of around 11 or so and you are given a schedule of what field you will be in each month. You are also given a list of hospitals and doctors that already have some sort of agreement with the school to take students. And in your group you work out who is going where because at a lot of the locations there are limitations on how many they can take at once.

I want to stay generally in the St. Pete/Tampa area (definitely staying in FL) so I can't really speak to what's currently available in other areas, but it changes a little each year so it's really of no practical use for you to figure out if there's a specific rotation spot in some random city.

But, the flexibility comes into play in that you can pretty much do your rotations wherever you'd like if you put a little work into it. Electives are electives and work pretty much the same wherever you go, in that you usually set them up yourself in whatever field you'd like. But even for your "core" rotations, if there's a specific hospital and/or physician you'd like to work with you can set that up through the school. There are a few criteria that the location has to meet (varies), but in general you provide the school with some basic info of where you are setting the rotation up at, and then the school signs whatever paperwork they need between that hospital or physician to form some sort of "agreement".

That's the over-simplified version but there it is. Will the school just hand you a completed schedule, no. You still have to decide where you'd like to rotate at and if it's not on the list then stay on top of the school with regards to making sure that the correct paperwork gets done on time, but that's pretty much what's going to happen in real life.
 
Interesting, thanks for the info, nlax30.

I wasn't implying that good rotations automatically equal good residencies, but that, most likely, people landing excellent residencies weren't pissing around in worthless rotations during their 3rd and 4th years.

So my take-away message from your post is that while the rotations aren't served up on a silver platter they are solid, and do a good job of preparing you for and connecting you to residency programs. Does that sounds right?

I have no problem taking the initiative and setting up my own programs, I just don't want to be burned and only have the option of rotating in sub-par, hastily assembled sites. I guess the attitude of the school is telling too. Does LECOM-B actively search for community connections for their students, or do they have an "oh well, them's the brakes" mentality?
 
Interesting, thanks for the info, nlax30.

I wasn't implying that good rotations automatically equal good residencies, but that, most likely, people landing excellent residencies weren't pissing around in worthless rotations during their 3rd and 4th years.

So my take-away message from your post is that while the rotations aren't served up on a silver platter they are solid, and do a good job of preparing you for and connecting you to residency programs. Does that sounds right?

I have no problem taking the initiative and setting up my own programs, I just don't want to be burned and only have the option of rotating in sub-par, hastily assembled sites. I guess the attitude of the school is telling too. Does LECOM-B actively search for community connections for their students, or do they have an "oh well, them's the brakes" mentality?


While I don't have any direct experience being a first year, I have been talking with many of the 3rd and 4th year students. I think that it is really key to communicate with your upperclassmen. There are good sites and bad sites, as there are at any school I am sure. If you talk to people who have been there, and read the site reviews that are on our student website, you will be fine.

The nice thing about LECOM is that they really take our feedback to heart. They want to find the best clerkships for us, and if we are having bad experiences somewhere now, that site won't be there when you are here. That's the nice thing about coming into LECOM now, all (ok, most) of the kinks will be ironed out by the time that you get to them.
 
Can any current LECOM-B students talk about rotation availability, placement, misc. issues, etc? I have heard some conflicting reports about the ease and availability of rotation sites. On hand I see the extremely impressive first year match list, which implies good 3rd and 4th year rotations, but on the other I hear about the difficulty and general apathy of the school in assisting students in their search for spots. I am strongly considering attending this school, and this issue is the one thing that makes me hesitate.

This is just stuff I've heard from upperclassmen, so take with a grain of salt, but they've been trustworthy so far...right nlax?

There are alot of rotation sites in Florida if you want to stay here.

There are also tons of sites available in other states (mostly PA).

Tons of flexibility, like nlax said.

LECOM-B has each student that completes a rotation fill out a form reviewing that rotation. Before you arrange your rotations, you can look at these reviews and see what things people did or didn't like about particular sites or doctors. There are also seperate reviews on the LECOM-B SGA website.

***Something Important to Remember about LECOM-B***

Everything at this school is designed to teach you to be a self-sufficient learner. While you are expected to do things on your own, DO NOT mistake this freedom for apathy on the part of LECOM administration.

I have never gotten the impression that they don't care about where we end up, or our futures...in fact, quite the opposite.

You CAN expect to do things on your own here. You will have to find your own answers...or at least try really hard before asking for help. You will have to do some leg work to set up the rotations you want.

I feel this is preferable to the other type of school. The school where you are handed everything and told where to go for rotations. Just my 2 cents.
 
So I just sent in my $1500 matriculation fee yesterday. I guess that means I will be official in a week or so. Anyone else officially accept their acceptance so far?
 
So I just sent in my $1500 matriculation fee yesterday. I guess that means I will be official in a week or so. Anyone else officially accept their acceptance so far?


I officially accepted my acceptance Today!! Just put the check in the mail 🙂 Looks like we will be seeing eachother in July
 
Just wanted to thank all of the current students and even the pre-meds for all of the helpful info. Thanks!
 
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