Haha Kidsfeet, where did you attend? What were your experiences each year? What good/bad/interesting things should future podiatry students be on the lookout for? I've only had 1 interview and was exposed to a small student panel for approximately 30 minutes, but because they are representatives of the school, they won't always highlight the negatives.
All very good questions.
I attended TUSPM and was in it's first graduating class. I've seen a lot of changes there, and I don't want to offend anyone, but looking from the outside in, there are issues. When I was there, I would consider it the golden period the school had. My surgical mentors were the likes of Downey, Mlodzienski, Malay, Muscarella, Pontious, Bauer, and the medicine department had Walters, LaMont, McGuire (who is still there)...etc. Once Temple took over, many were forced to leave due to their affiliation with non Temple institutions, and that has been the struggle ever since. Academia is a difficult life. The pay is low, there is a lot of pressure to produce, both clnically and research wise, so it's not easy or attractive. There was a recent article in the New York Times or Washington Post about the struggles of any academic institutions to attract the best and brightest of the young crop, and most of them are going to adjunct staff who work independently in the community. This affords a much lower cost to the institutions (no benefits, tenure...etc), and also assures that the professors are the real deal, as they are practicing what they preach daily and need to keep up on things to feed their families, not to just relay information. TUSPM should take a hard look at that model. They also need a changing of the guard with their administration in my eyes. The young bring in the new and fresh. Still a great school, mostly because of the location. Philly is a Mecca for our profession. No question about that!
The first two years of school were really a blur for me (not like that, silly). It was the first time I was away from home and was apart from my girlfriend (now wife and mother of our three kids) so life was a little rough. I studied all the time, so the days really flew by. I also found a really solid group of friends to study with, and you could always find us in the little study room/carels in the student apartment complex. I ate more Lorenzo's pizza than I could care to remember that first year. After the 1st year, I found it easier to study as I really found a good method that worked for me really well, and also found that it took less session time to retain large amounts of information, so life settled a little. By my third year, my finacee moved to Philly to go to graduate school, we were together and I really started to settle into a solid study routine and clinic work. I can honestly say that my time at TUSPM was really a whirlwind. Lots of stress, lots of fun (Blizzard of the Century!), and exhausting. Little did I know, that the REAL work was yet to come. Mike Downey once told me that school was the easy part. Damn if he wasn't right on target.
As far as what students should focus on, students today are making the same mistake they did when I was coming up. Get the training. That is key. Doesn't matter where. Most talk about that they HAVE to go here, or they HAVE to go there. Your training will define your career. Get it anywhere you can. Also, forget about the big fancy cases. They are nightmares to deal with pre and post operatives and the financial return is no where near worth the headaches. Many do these big fancy cases and the patient ends up with Home Depot in their foot, then these docs lecture and every resident/student in the audience ohhhhs and ahhhs. Honestly, I'll pass. Show me a perfectly done bunion...now THAT gets me. It's intricate, it's small and if you start succeeding with those procedures, you won't want to do anything else. Patients are happy, they recover quickly, and best of all, they come back! There are a couple programs nationwide that teach their residents all about CORA and fancy tibial transpositions, blah, blah, blah, but you know what the residents complain about? They graduate and can't do a simple bunion. They didn't see enough. They aren't comfortable doing the bread and butter surgery. Get the basics down. Seriously. You do one, maybe two, Charcot Recons, I'm SURE you can figure it out on your own. You screw up one Austin badly, you are in deep doodoo.
Students also get so up in arms about school loyalty. No one is really questioning YOU about your choice to attend. School spirit is good. But bring to your wallet when you graduate if you can. The bickering that goes on this site about which school this and which school that is really senseless. Professional school is about teaching you what you need to know to make you a professional. That's it. ALL the schools give you the tools. It's up to YOU and only you. Once you get out of school and into residency, no one will care where you went. This is especially true once you get into practice. No one cares where you went to school. If you are an ethical practicioner, that will speak volumes more than where you went to school.
My own personal opinion about practice is that the solo practice is all but gone. I was in a two doc practice and life was HARD. Pod supergroups is where it's at. It's very rare for a DPM to be hired by an Ortho group and spend their whole career with that group and become an owner/partner. It happens, but it's rare. Are you that one that will get that opportunity? Maybe, and if you smell it, go for it, but my view is we have to stick together. That's the only way we'll progress. I've changed my song about this recently as some very close colleagues have shown me the light in this regard. It's got nothing to do with riding coattails and everything to do with longevity.