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Is LECOM a good DO School? how high is it ranked? Is there a website anywhere that ranks all the DO schools?
That said, my only problem with LECOM is its relative newness. My understanding is that LECOM was a splinter from PCOM. LECOM was founded in 1992, and it is relatively new.
I just found out today that I was accepted to LECOM- Erie!! Although I didn't love the Erie area, I did like the school and am very happy to be accepted🙂 I would really like to know more about the school. If possible, could a current student post about the pros and cons of this school? What impressions did other interviewees have? Thanks guys!!
I just found out today that I was accepted to LECOM- Erie!! Although I didn't love the Erie area, I did like the school and am very happy to be accepted🙂 I would really like to know more about the school. If possible, could a current student post about the pros and cons of this school? What impressions did other interviewees have? Thanks guys!!
hopefulkelliDO, when did you interview there? I interviewed on Oct. 2nd...I was really impressed by the school. Very professional feeling with the atmosphere, and the faculty seemed to be very nice. I thought the area was great and that it had sort of a large city feel, but mostly quiet for study. The PBL seemed to be the way to go for me
hi i am a current post-bac at lecom. as a new york transplant, i can definately say that erie is filled with the nicest and friendliest people you will ever meet. lecom will bend over backward to help you in any way that they can. the profs are extremely nice and accessible. erie is a small town and runs at a slower pace than i am used to. but, you must remember that you are going to med school to learn and get an education. lecom-erie is my #1 choice at this time. if you have any other questions pm me.
Oh man. You people would crap your pants where I live now. People actually go out of the way to hold doors for people, smile and say hello, talk to eachother in lines....I don't know if you new yorkers could handle it.😛
the people in Erie WERE nice. Get this...my taxi was super late so a random hotel/airport shuttle driver took me all the way across town to my interview. how cool is that? ( the shuttle, not that $#%#%^ taxi)
Oh man. You people would crap your pants where I live now. People actually go out of the way to hold doors for people, smile and say hello, talk to eachother in lines....I don't know if you new yorkers could handle it.😛
I like rural PA, but I just don't know if Erie would be a good place to actually get a medical education.
I'm a LECOM MS4, and I'm pretty satisfied. I am from Philadelphia, so I definitely thought Erie (and western PA) was filled with some weirdos. There is a restaurant called "George's REAL mashed potatoes." The town's (please don't call Erie a city) most famous denizens are the "ambiguously gay duo" who wearing matcing fez hats and African robes and ride a tandem bicycle between Starbucks and the Barnes and Noble. Obviously the "ambiguous" part of the name is a misnomer. My dentist was suprised when I said I get my teeth cleaned every 6 months. The Plymouth has 25 cent drafts on Monday nights. The mall is pitiful, but outlets are an hour away. I loved my apartment in Lovell Place. Oh yeah, and almost every physician is related to the Espers or the Ferrettis.
However, my education has prepared me for my career. The professors really try to help the students. The clinical education ladies will help you out if you are polite to them. I easily passed all my board exams, and I have plenty of interviews scheduled. Once you start rotations, you see how little differences there are among medical schools. I've rotated with PCOMers, DMU, NYCOM, VCOM, Drexel, Temple, UPenn, and Jeff students and we're all pretty similar.
So the difference comes down to location, rotation sites, and school "philosophy." Don't come to LECOM if the idea of living in Erie makes you want to kill yourself. Don't come if you don't plan on following LECOM's rules (which are clear when you interview). AND realize that most of LECOM's best rotation sites are in Erie, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Michigan. I did most of my rotations around Philadelphia and my choices were much more limited (because most hospitals have agreements with the Philly schools).
I love LECOM's cost of attendance is more than $10,000/yr cheaper than the Philly schools. My other warning is to never go above 80 mph on Rt80. I've gotten pulled over 3 times (at least I didn't get any points).
Good luck. I never want to be a pre-med EVER again.
Acceptance rate: 12.2%
In-state acceptance rate: 37.1% (wow)
Out-of-state acceptance rate: 9.1%
Minority acceptance rate: 8.1%
International Acceptance rate: 100% (wtf)