This is from a med student speaking for himself: I am not even concerned about learning from residents anymore. I pay my tuition to earn a degree, not to learn. If learning is actually a #1 priority, I wouldn't have paid my tuition for the 1st 2 yrs of med school because I learned almost nothing that was clinically useful.
That being said, when I am at the clinics (especially ob/gyn), I don't expect to learn from residents. I try not to ask questions unless I have to, or the time is completely appropriate (for example, when the resident says, "Do you have any questions?"). I don't believe I deserve special treatment, teaching, being part of a team, or whatever. I pay to get my degree, so I can someday legally take care of my own patients. I can learn by studying on my own.
So why are there still residents who make me go in the OR, hold some retractors and blades for them, and yell at me because I can't staple correctly? I didn't want to go into the OR or staple. I was forced to do it by you residents. And I don't want to go into surgery or anything with surgery. I am interested in primary care. Also, why do you frown upon me because I stayed up late to study for the shelf and came late to Grand Rounds?
I disagree with some other threads against residents. Yes, we pay tuition, but we don't deserve special tender treatment by residents who worked hard to hold the special title of M.D. behind their names. But ***don't yell at*** me for not doing some scutwork incorrectly, when I am doing it with a smile on my face with no complaint or contempt. I'll happily do the scutwork, and I'll pay my tuition to learn on my own and get the MD, but don't yell at me for doing a scutwork incorrectly for which I didn't volunteer and have no desire to learn for my future. Don't yell at me for holding a blade, retractor, staple, or blot incorrectly or at the wrong times.
That being said, when I am at the clinics (especially ob/gyn), I don't expect to learn from residents. I try not to ask questions unless I have to, or the time is completely appropriate (for example, when the resident says, "Do you have any questions?"). I don't believe I deserve special treatment, teaching, being part of a team, or whatever. I pay to get my degree, so I can someday legally take care of my own patients. I can learn by studying on my own.
So why are there still residents who make me go in the OR, hold some retractors and blades for them, and yell at me because I can't staple correctly? I didn't want to go into the OR or staple. I was forced to do it by you residents. And I don't want to go into surgery or anything with surgery. I am interested in primary care. Also, why do you frown upon me because I stayed up late to study for the shelf and came late to Grand Rounds?
I disagree with some other threads against residents. Yes, we pay tuition, but we don't deserve special tender treatment by residents who worked hard to hold the special title of M.D. behind their names. But ***don't yell at*** me for not doing some scutwork incorrectly, when I am doing it with a smile on my face with no complaint or contempt. I'll happily do the scutwork, and I'll pay my tuition to learn on my own and get the MD, but don't yell at me for doing a scutwork incorrectly for which I didn't volunteer and have no desire to learn for my future. Don't yell at me for holding a blade, retractor, staple, or blot incorrectly or at the wrong times.