Hi, I'm beginning my third year at a state MD school. I scored a 207 on the STEP 1. I'm happy to pass, but I was really beat down by the score that I received. I was expecting something in the Mid 220's per my NBME's.
I have decent extracurriculars, leadership experiences, prior employment experiences, and 2 publication by the time I apply.
I would love to be in the NYC (or surrounding area), Boston, New England, Minneapolis, Madison, or Chicago areas.
What are my chances at Low-tier academic programs and non-sweatshop community programs in the Northeast or the Midwest?
My desire is to stop after IM, and not fellowship.
Any specific program recommendations would be extremely helpful as well. Thank you.
Hey, I was in almost the same position as you a few years ago and freaking out. My step 1 was essentially the same as yours. I just graduated from a mid-tier academic residency program, so it's totally doable, but you'll have to do the following things:
1) take CK early, and kill it (aim for at least 30 point increase, 40-50 even better)
2) try to honor your medicine clerkship
3) you absolutely have to do your medicine sub-i early, and try to get a letter from your sub-i attending by the time of applications.
If you do all of the above, these are some specific feasible programs:
NYC - almost all places other than the "top 4" - unfortunately, you are mostly out of running for the Manhattan top 4, but the other academics (Northwell, RWJ, Montefiore, Downstate, Stony Brook (ok, NYC might be a stretch lol)) would still love to have you. You don't need to dip below to community programs in NYC.
Boston - coin toss - Tufts and BU maybe, but my experience was they were still very scores-driven. Mount Auburn (Harvard's "community program") yes. No chance at Harvard programs.
Chicago - Rush, Loyola, and UIC. Again, you don't need to dip into the community programs, but U Chicago and Northwestern won't look at your application.
I know nothing about the Midwest outside of Chicago as I didn't apply there.
The difficulty with a low Step 1 is that your app gets filtered out at the elite ultra-competitive programs, so people don't really review your application in depth essentially. However, if you have a strong supporting application, then the lower academics who actually read your application would still invite you for interviews. My experience was that the only place in the country where you would need to dip into community programs with this Step 1 is California. If you were going on to fellowship, I would still say that there is an edge to an academic program, regardless of tier, and you should aim for that. However, if you are planning on stopping after residency, then it doesn't matter as much. I would personally then balance the local reputation with the amount of scut they have you do. There are some really terrible community programs in NYC, so be careful.