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Do medical schools have system where one has roommates and room together? How does it work?
NYU has (1-4 bedroom) apartments, not dorms. Columbia has both dorms (single room , but communal bathroom/kitchen) and apartments, although the apartments are harder to get into as an MS1. Most MS1S transfer to the apartments in their first year though. Harvard has dorms (single rooms, but communal bathrooms and kitchens). BU and Hopkins have apartments. I think Yale has dorms too.NYU and Columbia have dorms. They're pretty much what you'd expect from dorms, but they typically cost 800-1200 per month. NYU has two students to a dorm, Columbia has one I think. WashU also had dorms but most of the first year class doesn't live in them. The other schools I interviewed with didn't have them.
...which is usually more expensive than getting a place, especially with roommates. Find a roommate on your class's facebook or live alone first yearWho else going to reside in the apartment with one? Also wouldn't the living on dorm payment be covered with tuition? Also how does cafe and mean system work at med schools? That stuff all come with tuition?
Weill Cornell also has dorms. Sort of required for the upper east side.
Same with Mount Sinai. They're only a few blocks apart.
A few blocks? Cornell is at 69th and York (that's east of 1st Ave), Mount Sinai is on Fifth and north of 96th Street. Its a long distance. Both are considered UES (Upper East Side) although Mount Sinai borders Spanish Harlem. Rents on the UES, if you can find them, are very expensive and also have move in fees (called key money). For $1300/mo you are likely to get a room in an apartment you'll share with 1-3 roommates. Frankly, I think that it is much better to have an equivalent space in a building occupied solely (or almost solely) by medical students as they are more likely to be respectful of the need for quiet time to study.
Do medical schools have system where one has roommates and room together? How does it work?
A few blocks? Cornell is at 69th and York (that's east of 1st Ave), Mount Sinai is on Fifth and north of 96th Street. Its a long distance. Both are considered UES (Upper East Side) although Mount Sinai borders Spanish Harlem. Rents on the UES, if you can find them, are very expensive and also have move in fees (called key money). For $1300/mo you are likely to get a room in an apartment you'll share with 1-3 roommates. Frankly, I think that it is much better to have an equivalent space in a building occupied solely (or almost solely) by medical students as they are more likely to be respectful of the need for quiet time to study.
Many med schools have dorms that more expensive than rent in the area. I pay half of what they people in the dorm pay and I live one block over. So make sure to check.
I would also say to get an apt anyways. I slighty wish I had the built in friendships that come with the dorm, but you quickly meet a ton of people and the perks of being in an apt outweigh the benefits of the dorm. Esp if you plan on being sexually active cause you don't want the whole school to know your business and there is time where you need to move on from hooking up in a twin xl bed.
Exactly! Much better to live in subsidized housing at NYU, Cornell and Mt. Sinai than the alternative.Sinai has subsidized housing so it's much less than that and you get the benefit of living with other health professions students.