- Joined
- Sep 24, 2006
- Messages
- 916
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 4,571
- Medical Student
I'll start:
I'm from NY (Manhattan and Mt. Kisco), went to College in Maine, work in Boston at a Harvard hospital. I want to do surgery of some sort (I think...).
Can someone tell me more about the curriculum? I know it's pretty traditional. How often are exams? Is PBL a large portion (I don't really want it to be).
Also how is the area to live in? I'm trying to decide between MCW and here. MCW would feel more like home in the midwest but it would be really new and interesting to live out on the east coast.
when did you get your fin aid final packet? since we have to make a decision by may 15th......i'd like to know what each school will give me instead of taking one and rejecting the other that for all I know was actually going to help me out financially.
The curriculum is pretty standard, with basic science classes (anatomy, biochem...) first year, systems (cardio, resp) second year, clinical 3rd and 4th years. The clincal sites are good (Westchester Med is a level I trauma center, burn center, transplant center, and has a brand new pedes hospital; St. Vincent's sees some good "city medicine). Valhallah is far enough from NYC that you won't be tempted to go every weekend, but close enought that you can easily have a fully day in the city when you need to blow off steam. I'm from Mt. Kisco (~20 min north), feel free to ask any specific questions if you have them. Also, Universe Explorer (I think that is his name) has posted several quite long and detailed descriptions of the school, the sites, and all that stuff, so those will I'm sure be helpful.
yea, i definitely should just relax now.hey guys,
i'm planning my trip to valhalla from nyc for my interview. i'd like to take public transportation... any suggestions/tips? thanks in advance
Hey can any of you answer these questions?
1. What is the social life like? Do the students go to thirsty turtle or black bear or another white plains bar one night a week to relax, or is it more of study study study?
2. To change pace, does anyone once in a while take the train to the city on a saturday morning and study at the public library or say bryant park, then take a break doing nyc stuff, shopping etc, then study more, then take train back? Seems like something i would do once in a while to change up the study location.
3. Are there hot girls that matriculate, or will we have to put on a pair of "NYMC goggles"?
Hey congrats on your acceptance to SLU. I think it's really tough to compare these 2 schools, like many other NYMC vs. ____ decisions, it comes down to more than just the education in my opinion because they're probably similar.
As far as matchlists go, here's SLU's: http://medschool.slu.edu/matchlist/index.phtml?page=matchlist_2006
and here's NYMC's:
http://nymc.edu/admit/Medical/info/Match2006.asp
Sometime's it's good to compare how many people matched into competitive specialties (although this will depend on several factors, e.g. what students actually wanted to specialize in) But it's a good start...
Neurosurgery: 4-NYMC, 0-SLU
Dermatology: 1-NYMC, 0-SLU
Ophtalmology: 4-NYMC, 3-SLU
Orthopedic Surgery: 8-NYMC, 4-SLU
Rad-Onc: 0-NYMC, 2-SLU
Anesthesiology: 23-NYMC, 9-SLU
So NYMC's got SLU beat in most of these... but it's tough to say that that actually makes it a better program. It also depends on class size (I'm pretty sure NYMC's is bigger) and what people were actually more interested in.
Where did you feel most comfortable? What kind of city are you looking for? Are you more of a southern hospitality type person??

Has anyone gotten any scholarships to NYMC so far? Also... is anyone go to bring their car? I'm from MN and calculated 19 hours from my door to NYMC. It's a long way but I could do it if someone helped me. Also, does anyone know about NYMC's health insurance policy? I ask because I have Lupus and need access to a couple different specialists. I would assume that we would atleast get access to NYMC physicians but I might go down to Columbia. We'll see. (My current Rheumatologist was trained there and probably knows good rheumies there).
Weird question... I never saw the library. What kind of facilities does it have? Computer lab?
Has anyone gotten any scholarships to NYMC so far? Also... is anyone go to bring their car? I'm from MN and calculated 19 hours from my door to NYMC. It's a long way but I could do it if someone helped me. Also, does anyone know about NYMC's health insurance policy? I ask because I have Lupus and need access to a couple different specialists. I would assume that we would atleast get access to NYMC physicians but I might go down to Columbia. We'll see. (My current Rheumatologist was trained there and probably knows good rheumies there).
Weird question... I never saw the library. What kind of facilities does it have? Computer lab?
Has anyone gotten any scholarships to NYMC so far? Also... is anyone go to bring their car? I'm from MN and calculated 19 hours from my door to NYMC. It's a long way but I could do it if someone helped me. Also, does anyone know about NYMC's health insurance policy? I ask because I have Lupus and need access to a couple different specialists. I would assume that we would atleast get access to NYMC physicians but I might go down to Columbia. We'll see. (My current Rheumatologist was trained there and probably knows good rheumies there).
Weird question... I never saw the library. What kind of facilities does it have? Computer lab?
Is the children's hospital good even though it's only a few years old?
How many of you are going to stay in the apartments? This was a big thing for me when I saw the school. At my undergrad school you were required to live on campus and it created an awesome community enviroment. From what I saw during my interview, there was a pretty friendly community enviroment among the 1st and 2nd years. Can you have pets in the apartments? Particularly cats?
From last years NYMC thread:
"on-campus housing does not allow ANY pets (other than fish or birds)."
Its one of the things I don't like about it either as I really want to get a kitten.
Could I do rotations and Westchester Children's hospital and do an elective away rotation at another children's hospital? Second, how did people match this year? I was just looking through 2006 last night and saw that 28 matched to Peds which interests me. However, they had other competitive matches like radiology, derm, path and quite a few ortho. Finally, what is the average debt for a student attending NYMC?
🙄
If a kitten is your major deciding factor on which medical school you're going to...we need to have a serious talk. We aren't technically "allowed" to have animals on campus, but there are a few folks in married housing that have cats anyway. Or you can live off campus.
will wearing my red sox shirt ensure that 80 percent of the class will no longer talk to me? i'll do it anyway 😀
Wow.
Well NYMC just dropped down another notch as not going to a school with jerks or people who can't read is also a major deciding factor for me.
I said its one of the things I don't like about ON-CAMPUS HOUSING. Yes, I want a kitten, and yes that wouldn't be possible if I lived in on-campus housing at NYMC. So it becomes a factor along with a million other things.
Geez.
OMG! I WANT ONE!speaking of kitties, have you seen the "toyger"? if you haven't, look it up. It's bred to look like a tiger, and i always wanted a cat that looked like this, but no breeds were ever really close. Closest was always just an Amer. Shorthair.
OMG! I WANT ONE!
Wow.
Well NYMC just dropped down another notch as not going to a school with jerks or people who can't read is also a major deciding factor for me.
I said its one of the things I don't like about ON-CAMPUS HOUSING. Yes, I want a kitten, and yes that wouldn't be possible if I lived in on-campus housing at NYMC. So it becomes a factor along with a million other things. And actually yes, since its one of the few differences between my three choices - it is fairly major.
Geez.
There's a three tiered lottery system. The first two lotteries determine the order of your rotations (Block and sequence respectively), the second one determines where you're going for them. Right after the lottery is finished, most people switch their assigments around to their liking, so there's alot of wiggle room for you to get down to Manhattan if you want, but you're most likely going to have to move once or twice. The better clinical sites tend to be in Westchester, especially for surgery and peds/ We also have clinical sites in Danbury, CT and on Statton Island that have housing and food provided (Ob/Gyn, IM and a couple others).how does the rotation lottery system work? If i really want to go to NYC, what are my real chances of that happening?
will wearing my red sox shirt ensure that 80 percent of the class will no longer talk to me?
I was kidding around, I guess my sarcastic wit didn't come across well on SDN. Sorry about that. There are jerks at every medical school who cant read very well...
Like I said, there are folks that do have kitties on campus despite the "housing policy" and to my knowledge they only do
"pest check" in apartments on the first tuesday of the month.
how many of your classmates got in with a march/april interview?
^ while we're on the topic of technology, anybody have any recommendations for a palm pilot? I understand many have suggested to wait until after 2nd year since it will be outdated by then, but I also have heard that it's good to get familiar with it for a while so I know all the cool features by heart come 3rd yr. Any thoughts? I just want AIM, e-mail, and facebook in the palm of my hands already damnit.
i priced a dell to be around 1250 w/ about the same specs as the 2.16 ghz macbook, and it's 1250 compared to 1650...and that's the dell WITH office, which i already have, so it would be 1100 w/o office. so basically 550 extra to make it an apple instead of dell.....hmmmmmm....and i do want the mac (rob, get the palm so that i'll go buy the mac 😀 )