Isn't that a lie? How do residences compare you with the rest of your class?
Isn't that a lie? How do residences compare you with the rest of your class?
Many schools have an internal ranking system that will be mentioned in your Dean's letter. Students just aren't aware of it.
The University of Rochester is truly pass/fail for the preclinical years. The only grades that are used for the coded rankings in deans letters are the clinical grades. The school does take note of the top 10% of students in preclinical classes for AOA, but this is not reflected on your transcript or in your deans letter.
Isn't that a lie? How do residences compare you with the rest of your class?
Isn't that a lie? How do residences compare you with the rest of your class?
Tufts is straight p/f with no internal rankings. Honors, etc start 3rd year..
Still confused as to why kids care about preclinical grades, there is so little weight put on them. Classes before us at Tufts had honors/p/f and they were told to not even worry about getting honors. Also check the residency threads, clinical grades are clearly 10x more important...
Yes. I have friends who go to "strictly pass/fail" schools but they definitely keep tabs in order to stratify their students into different tiers, which eventually is included in the deans letter (i.e. top quarter, top half, bottom quarter, etc). What I'd like to know is how these different schools go about 'tiering' their students--is based mostly on 3rd yr grades, or are 1st two years given equal weight? This is why Im not so quick to drink the pass/fail kool-aid.
Maybe not, but AOA certainly is.
I just think it's stupid that medical schools have these half-assed grading "innovations" like pass/fail. I respect the schools that really are Pass/Fail, strictly, and have no ranking (though I don't like it). But the schools that switched from A/B/C/F to H/HP/P/F are just utterly *****ic. What the hell was wrong with the letters? People were too sensitive to get a B? C? I don't get it. And why have all these little caveats..."oh, we're just pass/fail....except we have a ranking system that's a big secret and uses an arbitrary unknown system for ranking and you have no idea what factors go into it", or some other such nonsense. If you really want to produce a "non-competitive environment" (though frankly, I really don't think the existence of grades necessarily makes a medical school competitive), do strictly P/F with no ranking and base AOA on something other than grades. But again, personally, I think grades are fine and actually help us all in the long-run, because grades are something over which you have a LOT of control.
Mayo is P/F with no internal ranking the first two years. Our dean's letter says "Doctor DeMan passed all of his classes during the first two years."
No ranking and no AOA. It's nice.
Yes. I have friends who go to "strictly pass/fail" schools but they definitely keep tabs in order to stratify their students into different tiers, which eventually is included in the deans letter (i.e. top quarter, top half, bottom quarter, etc). What I'd like to know is how these different schools go about 'tiering' their students--is based mostly on 3rd yr grades, or are 1st two years given equal weight? This is why Im not so quick to drink the pass/fail kool-aid.
Pretty much what this person said:Isn't that a lie? How do residences compare you with the rest of your class?
USMLE Step 1, Third year performance, advisor recommendations, interview, and every other source of information they have.
Even for schools that are graded or have honors, first two years preclinical grades are pretty low importance for residency. Third year grades matter more and most preclinical pass/fail schools tend to have gradations of pass then. There are a few exceptions like Yale and Cleveland Clinic; residencies just have less information for those students and have to deal with it.
I don't know what UCLA or Yale does, but CCLCM has no AOA since we have no grades or rank.Can you be invited to AOA after the first two years at a "true" pass/fail school, if such a thing exists? It is the top x% of a class I thought.
I r cunfoozed.
He's at Mayo. They do have third year grades and as far as I know, senior AOA as well.Let us know how you feel when it comes time to apply for residency.
The University of Rochester is truly pass/fail for the preclinical years. The only grades that are used for the coded rankings in deans letters are the clinical grades. The school does take note of the top 10% of students in preclinical classes for AOA, but this is not reflected on your transcript or in your deans letter.
even if that is someone's philosophy, i think they will find that the "bare minimum" amount of work needed to pass is a f*ckload and you dont really know if you know enough to pass or not so you just study and study and study until you cant study anymore...If your school has AOA, they rank, somehow. Granted, some schools don't do junior AOA and only use third year grades and USMLE 1 for senior AOA, but if your school has junior AOA, they will use your preclinical grades somehow.
At our school we are H/P/F first two years, but they do track the final numerical score for all our courses, averaged for number of credits, and divide us into quartiles. That's why, though I doubt I'm even in the top half of this point, I'm trying not to fall into the trap of 'I only need a 40% on the final in these classes to 'pass' this semester' because I want to be somewhat over pass level in all my classes (shooting for at least 10% over MPL in most, though for biochem I'll never get there).
I think another thread discussed this, but DO NOT come to med school thinking you're only going to do the amount of work needed to pass. Even if you don't care about class rank, that philosophy will shoot you in the foot, fast.