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Hey guys. My medical school. Touro-COM, is probably going to institute a mandatory attendance policy, in which students will be required to attend at least 70% of classes and 95% of labs. One reason that they give is that in medical malpractice lawyers are now also going after medical schools to see if the doc in question ever went to classes. If the school can't show records that they did, they are now being made to share in the liability for issuing a degree to a noncompetent physician. This is despite USMLE / COMLEX exams stating that a the physician is competent to the level of their training.
I am calling B.S. on this. Passing boards is the nationalized standard for demonstrating professional competency. Additionally, before anyone can practice, they have to go through residency and again prove a degree of competence.
I'd love to see some supporting evidence to support this wild eyed claim. As it stands, it sounds like your school just wants to mandate an attendance policy, knew it would be unpopular, and hid behind the typical "evil medical malpractice lawyer" boogyman.
If there isn't any truth to this, the larger question is, why would an institution fib to its students? Speaking of professionalism.......
Just as an aside, in order to be accredited by the American Bar Association, law schools are required to have an attendance policy and where students are required to be present in class at least 80% of the time.
That's because Law School utilizes the Socratic method to teach. Class attendance and participation is crucial to learning how to be a lawyer, just as clinical rotations are crucial to learning how to be a doctor.
As for lectures, different schools utilize different styles, be it PBL, didactic, etc.