- Joined
- Nov 3, 2007
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
I had my interview with PCOM on Thursday of this past week. I was looking forward to it ever since I received my notification that they wanted to interview me. Both of my parents are D.O.s one of which is a PCOM graduate so I have grown up with hearing about PCOM and pretty much dying to go here!
During the interview day, the school was great at providing information on their extensive clinical options, academic resources, etc. But I am sorely disappointed in the OMM department. I noticed that most of the interviewers were concise, but too brief on addressing this topic. It was as if they didn't want anyone to know the "dirty" secret that they teach OMM here. I also got the feeling that the OMM department was less than stellar on my student tour. The student tour guides seemed confused on how to describe their OMM department to the point that left me and many of the other interviewees wondering if they just didn't want to say something bad. One of the tour guides told me to drop into the OMM lab later that day because there would be lab lectures going on and I could get a feel for what the lab sessions were like. Big mistake!! Most of us (interviewees) spent our time holed up in this glass office that looked out into the main hallway in Evans. I got up to go to the restroom and I noticed that the OMM lab was in progress. I figured I would just stick my head in since the student guide told me to do just that. What I saw: students doing absolutely nothing, teachers treating students or other teachers (not quite sure here??) all over the room doing various techniques to the point where I didn't even know what part of the body they were focusing on, people in their regular clothes for lab (!), some professor who kept bashing another professor for either teaching something or not going over something and basically sounding like he didn't know what he was talking about... do I need to go further. It was a complete circus in there. There was no rhyme or reason to the class, the students looked visibly annoyed, lost and continually looking at their watches. I got the feeling that anything goes in there, the teacher running it was a complete ***** because he obviously didn't know enough about what he was talking about to the point of bashing another professor in front of the entire class to make himself look better for not knowing his stuff, the other teachers didn't seem to be paying attention to him or any of their students and gosh... how could you be anything but confused from this? It was terrible. I walked out and headed back to the interview room and ending up telling one of the other guys that I was interviewing with about what happened. Apparently, it is common knowledge that the OMM department stinks here. I wondered why I hadn't heard that from my parents or at least the one who graduated from the school and still has many ties to it. What I found out when I got home. My parents knew about it, but figured they wouldn't bias my thoughts by talking about it. They figured they would let me go and find out on my own. I mean, it is possible that all the hearsay that they hear is just that, hearsay. Well, supposedly the guy or I guess it is a brother team that have run the department for quite some time and they have numerous wonderful osteopathic physicians in their department such as Dr. Burns and Dr. Kuchera, but they themselves are rapidly approaching or possibly already past their expiration date. I am sad to say as much as I was impressed with PCOM in their clinical and academic areas, I want to be a DO as much for these reasons as for the OMM. I feel like it is one thing to hear bad news about a school, but to see the actual situation with your own eyes... well, I won't forget it.
During the interview day, the school was great at providing information on their extensive clinical options, academic resources, etc. But I am sorely disappointed in the OMM department. I noticed that most of the interviewers were concise, but too brief on addressing this topic. It was as if they didn't want anyone to know the "dirty" secret that they teach OMM here. I also got the feeling that the OMM department was less than stellar on my student tour. The student tour guides seemed confused on how to describe their OMM department to the point that left me and many of the other interviewees wondering if they just didn't want to say something bad. One of the tour guides told me to drop into the OMM lab later that day because there would be lab lectures going on and I could get a feel for what the lab sessions were like. Big mistake!! Most of us (interviewees) spent our time holed up in this glass office that looked out into the main hallway in Evans. I got up to go to the restroom and I noticed that the OMM lab was in progress. I figured I would just stick my head in since the student guide told me to do just that. What I saw: students doing absolutely nothing, teachers treating students or other teachers (not quite sure here??) all over the room doing various techniques to the point where I didn't even know what part of the body they were focusing on, people in their regular clothes for lab (!), some professor who kept bashing another professor for either teaching something or not going over something and basically sounding like he didn't know what he was talking about... do I need to go further. It was a complete circus in there. There was no rhyme or reason to the class, the students looked visibly annoyed, lost and continually looking at their watches. I got the feeling that anything goes in there, the teacher running it was a complete ***** because he obviously didn't know enough about what he was talking about to the point of bashing another professor in front of the entire class to make himself look better for not knowing his stuff, the other teachers didn't seem to be paying attention to him or any of their students and gosh... how could you be anything but confused from this? It was terrible. I walked out and headed back to the interview room and ending up telling one of the other guys that I was interviewing with about what happened. Apparently, it is common knowledge that the OMM department stinks here. I wondered why I hadn't heard that from my parents or at least the one who graduated from the school and still has many ties to it. What I found out when I got home. My parents knew about it, but figured they wouldn't bias my thoughts by talking about it. They figured they would let me go and find out on my own. I mean, it is possible that all the hearsay that they hear is just that, hearsay. Well, supposedly the guy or I guess it is a brother team that have run the department for quite some time and they have numerous wonderful osteopathic physicians in their department such as Dr. Burns and Dr. Kuchera, but they themselves are rapidly approaching or possibly already past their expiration date. I am sad to say as much as I was impressed with PCOM in their clinical and academic areas, I want to be a DO as much for these reasons as for the OMM. I feel like it is one thing to hear bad news about a school, but to see the actual situation with your own eyes... well, I won't forget it.