So, I've been perusing the school-specific threads, and I have noticed over and over again people talking about choosing one school over another with grading schemes being one of the top reasons.
If you are choosing a school based on grading system, you are prioritizing wrong. This is for the first two years of medical school where everyone agrees that grades don't matter much anyway. Why in the world would you weigh that over factors like location, cost, curriculum, or clinical experience 3rd and 4th year? Heck, in the end, the prestige of your school is going to matter a lot more than what type of grading system you had in the pre-clinical years.
I get the appeal. The problem is that med school is stressful. It is a lot of work. Trying to minimize that stress with the grading system is the wrong way to go about it compared to other factors. Does it caused extra stress and make people competitive? I don't know for sure. I am convinced that the competitive people are that way based on personality or career interest as opposed to influenced by the grading system. Even at my school (where we have curved H/HP/P/F), people are friendly and they are collaborative. I have more study guides and notesets from people than I can possibly use to prepare for a test. I have found a group of people who are like-minded to myself, like you will at any school. At the P/F schools I went to, people complained that there were a few gunners! I am convinced that the students don't change much whereever you go. You will not hang out with everyone in your class, so it is easy to avoid people who stress you out. Do people work hard? Yes they do. But that doesn't make them a bunch of competitive jerks. It's medical school. You should all be working hard.
Again, pre-clinical grades don't matter much, so why are people so concerned about the grading system? People like P/F because you can focus on the boards instead of classes. Well, you can do the same thing at a non P/F school. I get that people don't want to add extra stress to their lives, but you are entering an intense, professional school: how you are graded for two years is the least stressful thing you will face.
If you are splitting hairs between two schools, I can see the grading system coming into play. But honestly, it should not be one of the major factors that you consider. There are so many more important things to focus on. And if you do run into some competitive gunners, just ignore them. I doubt it will be the only time it will happen in your medical career.
If you are choosing a school based on grading system, you are prioritizing wrong. This is for the first two years of medical school where everyone agrees that grades don't matter much anyway. Why in the world would you weigh that over factors like location, cost, curriculum, or clinical experience 3rd and 4th year? Heck, in the end, the prestige of your school is going to matter a lot more than what type of grading system you had in the pre-clinical years.
I get the appeal. The problem is that med school is stressful. It is a lot of work. Trying to minimize that stress with the grading system is the wrong way to go about it compared to other factors. Does it caused extra stress and make people competitive? I don't know for sure. I am convinced that the competitive people are that way based on personality or career interest as opposed to influenced by the grading system. Even at my school (where we have curved H/HP/P/F), people are friendly and they are collaborative. I have more study guides and notesets from people than I can possibly use to prepare for a test. I have found a group of people who are like-minded to myself, like you will at any school. At the P/F schools I went to, people complained that there were a few gunners! I am convinced that the students don't change much whereever you go. You will not hang out with everyone in your class, so it is easy to avoid people who stress you out. Do people work hard? Yes they do. But that doesn't make them a bunch of competitive jerks. It's medical school. You should all be working hard.
Again, pre-clinical grades don't matter much, so why are people so concerned about the grading system? People like P/F because you can focus on the boards instead of classes. Well, you can do the same thing at a non P/F school. I get that people don't want to add extra stress to their lives, but you are entering an intense, professional school: how you are graded for two years is the least stressful thing you will face.
If you are splitting hairs between two schools, I can see the grading system coming into play. But honestly, it should not be one of the major factors that you consider. There are so many more important things to focus on. And if you do run into some competitive gunners, just ignore them. I doubt it will be the only time it will happen in your medical career.