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Anyone know where to find statistics on schools that produce the highest board scores? Been struggling to find a comprehensive resource besides going to each school's website. Thanks!
Anyone know where to find statistics on schools that produce the highest board scores? Been struggling to find a comprehensive resource besides going to each school's website. Thanks!
This is like a flawed scientific study... while there may be a correlation between board score and subsequent specialty/location, you need to look at ACTUAL match lists. Your desired endpoint is a CAREER, not a COMLEX/USMLE transcript.
Match lists are also a bad endpoint, because that is also determined by the student effort rather than the school. Also, how would you even know where to begin with them as a pre-medical student? LECOM and AZCOM each had a student match into MGH for anesthesia, but would anyone go to these schools when they have acceptance to KCU or DMU?
The only endpoint worth noting no matter the school is attrition, even with those who willing drop out.
No they aren't. I would say that ONE matchlist is a poor indicator, not multiple.
You might not be able to see it yet, but scores are only a small component of what goes into the process of securing a residency.
I agree with you on the point of board scores. However, the match list cannot be used either. The largest reason being that a pre-medical student has no idea how to interpret one. Program qualities can change and a lot of it is word of mouth. Yet there are students who come from schools that are not highly regarded and yet they match extremely well. What students should be looking for is what schools give the greatest opportunities for success: ex. mandatory vs. non-mandatory attendance, school in a big city, rotations with residencies, rotations with many flexible electives, schools with a large alumni base. Unfortunately these are also more subjective points than objective, in the end this is why SDN exists.
If it happens recurrently where applicants are matching to major programs in subspecialties, it indicates that the program may have a good reputation
I'm a faculty member and I have no idea how to interpret a match list either! They're like studying tea leaves. The only people who can have a say on the matter are the specialist in each field. Just an an example, a surgeon will have a good idea as to what places have good surgical residency program, but be clueless about Derm programs. We have been warned multiple times by the wise residents and attendings on SDN that even Ivy League med schools have some poor residencies!
In the very, very near future, COCA will require DO schools to post Level I pass rates and median scores. Can't remember if Level II is in the mix or not.
What? No it doesn't.....
Great contribution.
Ultimately I think it match lists are somewhere in between useful and useless. Depending on what info you are mining. Consistent matches whether local or not do count for something. One match one time at a high ranked place? No.
It doesn't as you mention point out the quality of a program.
Agreed!
Also, I hope it didn't seem like I was suggesting that it should be the lone criteria. I am just suggesting it is important to review.
"A faculty member" is rather nonspecific.
So it takes some cross referencing... you're telling me if an applicant is interested in, I don't know, General Surgery, they're not capable of googling/SDN searching which are the strong programs and then comparing that list of "strong" programs to a school's match list?
Give me a break. I won't perpetuate this dogma.
How to pick DO schoolsI guess my point in creating this thread is to get a general sense as to how to pick DO schools. I want to go to the best school that I can but it seems as though there isn't a solid measure of determining that. Residency seems to be the biggest factor in determining your career so getting into a school that gives you the best chance at a great residency is important. I know a lot of it is on the student but the consideration of how well the school teaches and produces doctors should be a main player.
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My cgpa is 3.72 and sgpa is 3.6 for aacomas. Is this average? I don't have an mcat yet.
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How could match lists mean nothing? They represent the ceiling of what people from that program achieve on an annual basis. Just bc someone matches Ophtho at Hopkins doesn't mean that it can be reliably reproduced, but it does indicate that there is a precedent for someone being positively received from that school at the target institution. If it happens recurrently where applicants are matching to major programs in subspecialties, it indicates that the program may have a good reputation. At an interview for an MD anesthesia program, I specifically recall being complimented on PCOM. Seriously.
Residency is the goal of medical school. How can you judge a school without viewing which residencies are represented? It is unfathomable.
Not completely accurate. There are programs that only consider students from certain DO programs. I know my family member, either current or recently removed faculty member at an MD university program, only considers DOs from the original 5 and the state schools when looking at residency apps.If you want to get into an ACGME residency in a specific geographical are, pick the DO school around there because the program will be more familiar with the students. Otherwise pick the school with halfway decent clinical rotations and is cheapest. Unlike the MD world where you can compare Harvard vs. new york medical college, a DO is a DO. The rest doesn't matter and highly depends on the effort you put in.
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I don't believe in handouts. Figure it out.@ChiTownBHawks What are the original 5?
?CCOM, PCOM, ATSU, NYCOM, UNE vs western?
I always lol when pre meds try to argue with attendings and residents about things they know 0 about, in this case match lists. Seems like a lost cause @MaximusD
I hear you, man. And I'm not necessarily disagreeing but the facts of the matter are this concerning my comment: between those two only homeboy maximus the gladiator has been through medical school, served as an attending in the Air Force, and is now on the tail end of residency. That gives him clout. The one who hasn't even started medical school has no clout on the subject.He's stating pre-med should be able to interpret a match list. This has been hounded by both residents and attendings that unless you talk with PDs of a certain speciality you cannot gain a true understanding of how good a match is. I've seen tons of pre-meds & med students shut down by residents and attendings for doing such an act.
It's really as black and white as that. Whether his idea of how to pick a school is practical is another story but the idea propagated on here that "it doesn't matter what DO school you attend" doesn't reflect reality in some situations.
I hear you, man. And I'm not necessarily disagreeing but the facts of the matter are this concerning my comment: between those two only homeboy maximus the gladiator has been through medical school, served as an attending in the Air Force, and is now on the tail end of residency. That gives him clout. The one who hasn't even started medical school has no clout on the subject.
It's really as black and white as that. Whether his idea of how to pick a school is practical is another story but the idea propagated on here that "it doesn't matter what DO school you attend" doesn't reflect reality in some situations.
You cannot judge a match list unless you have specific knowledge from someone in that field on the programs that were matched, this is knowledge outside the scope of 99% of pre-meds. .
First, being the only attending/resident on here that tells you to pick a school by match list does not give him "clout." Second, he is wrong because almost every single DO school has the same match list: a handful of AOA gen surg, a handful of AOA ortho, maybe a few other surgical subs, a handful of OB, more EM and Gas, a lot of FM, lots of Community IM, a few university level IM, with a decent amount of community peds with a few university level mixed in. And then there are the one or two super matches. A match list is largely just the desires of the student body. Go pick any DO school at random and look up their match list and you will start to see the same names and types of places on every one. The only match lists that tend to be noticeably different are the brand new ones who just matched their first class or two, after a while they are all the same.
I don't need to have been through medical school and residency yet to know what actual residents and attendings have told me, and when to recognize the outlier. Your school matters exceptionally little to programs outside of the immediate geographical area. The schools that have an "impressive" match list (which on SDN just means the number of competitive specialties) tend to accept the types of students who will pursue these types of places. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that the student population and their desires are different at RVU/KCU than say SOMA or WCU.
You cannot judge a match list unless you have specific knowledge from someone in that field on the programs that were matched, this is knowledge outside the scope of 99% of pre-meds. Otherwise it's just a fun way to pass the time.
You and @IslandStyle808 are focusing on the match list crap and I'm focusing on if it matters where you attend school at. We aren't even talking about the same topics.
I am feeling nice.@ChiTownBHawks What are the original 5?
I am feeling nice.
KCOM (1892), DMU (1898), PCOM (1899), CCOM (1900), KCU (1916)
?
I can't tell if you are being serious.