Why does everyone suggest skipping these schools?
Why does everyone suggest skipping these schools?
As above. The average DO poster here doesn't usually have the MCAT score they love. Nothing wrong with a 500-506 but the touros love 508+.
'Tis more like a guideline than an actual rules
Thanks, guys. I was thinking there were some admin problems, or situations similar to LUCOM.
The NY school has some issues bad enough that I can no longer recommend them. I have posted about this in other threads.
Goro, having read lots of your replies on the subject, can I assume you're referring to this cycle's admission issues? Maybe I'm just dumb but in general I consider you a relatively reliable source in a sea of misinformation. I ask because you typically refer to the admission issues when you say you don't recommend them, but is there another reason?
And to the OP: as a Touro NY student, I have never met a student here with an MCAT less than 30 (old scale). Touro CA is even higher.
That being said, the coastal Touros are one of the few medical schools where a low GPA/high MCAT student has a chance.
Why does everyone suggest skipping these schools?
So is NV the best one loljk
Well the surrounding area in TUCA is really nice. Love me some Norcal.
Harlem isn't even that bad btw. Go 5 blocks out of PCOM at night and you'll get mugged/shot/beaten within 30 minutes.
Touro NY is in harlem, but it's at 125th street. It's mostly a tourist area. Calling it "the hood" is a severe exaggeration. Central Harlem isn't that bad of a neighborhood. I've been to legitimately dangerous neighborhoods (Camden, Atlantic City, some Parts of the Bronx), and central harlem is just not comparable. Harlem in general is not the Harlem of the 90s crack epidemic. It's a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood with some areas that aren't great, but no truly dangerous areas.
Meanwhile, Mount Sinai/Icahn SOM is right on the border of east harlem, which is still an absolute sh*thole, and there's no real way to get to or from Albert Einstein SOM without going through the Bronx's delightful open air drug markets.
Well the surrounding area in TUCA is really nice. Love me some Norcal.
If you want to bomb your Step 2 and do horrible on your audition rounds during 4th yr, you should go to any of the Touros. Nobody cares about your MCAT score once you have entered medical school.
Are you a Touro student?
Thankfully no.
I am. So I'd kind of like to know where you're getting this stuff about 4th year audition rotations.
The step 2 thing is kind of an exaggeration, but I guess it's fair given the higher than average rate of step 2 failure. 78% pass isn't good.
One is in an abandoned naval shipyard in nor-cal.
The other is in frickin' Harlem. The hood.
That's why.
Step 2 is directly correlated to the quality of your clinical education. It's as simple as that. What's so funny about it? Bad clinical education = to bad 4th yr audition rotations.
I am. So I'd kind of like to know where you're getting this stuff about 4th year audition rotations.
The step 2 thing is kind of an exaggeration, but I guess it's fair given the higher than average rate of step 2 failure. 78% pass isn't good.
Thank you for helping us out here. Do you think it is wise if I get interviewed here to tell them that I'm really considering Emergency medicine?
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Stop getting on probation fam, I've lost too many of my favorite snarky noob posters this year and I'm not looking forward to losing another one.They like super high MCATs and the Touros are generally terrible schools
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Stop getting on probation fam, I've lost too many of my favorite snarky noob posters this year and I'm not looking forward to losing another one.
Your name's in blue on the sidebar, and it says "Probationary Status." You probs also got a PM from the mods.
Your name's in blue on the sidebar, and it says "Probationary Status." You probs also got a PM from the mods.
Most DO schools have primary care as a mission statement.
In my opinion it is unwise to say you're interested in a specialty during a DO interview. At LEAST say you "don't know what field you want to go into."
I've heard a few professors here (and at other DO schools) say that even if you're not interested in primary care, they kind of want to hear you say you're at least considering it, if only to show that you've read the website.
Vallejo has one of the highest crime rates in the nation...
Thankfully no.
ATPsynthase is one of the cheeky posters on here. Always love me a good meme or gif. Refreshing when ya gotta read so much negativity. especially from detectives.
Cheeky boi
Lol this guyyyy
The problem is med school is filled with a bunch of "kids" like yourself that are just very sensitive and oblivious to the truth.
But I can't really blame you since you aren't technically IN med school yet so you really don't have a horse in this race yet. Maybe your experience will be better than mine. Maybe it won't.
But please don't call my views on stuff negative if it doesn't suit your twisted fantasy that med school will be ponies and unicorns and rainbows.
I'm actually really happy in med school and thrive off of pressure.
Don't confuse negativity with honesty my friend.
It will save you a lot of butthurt in the long run.
I definitely agree with this, when I was asked what field I see myself in I said I wanted to enter medical school with an open mind and find what I'm truly good at and what I enjoy doing. Both interviewers said that they appreciated how I looked at that, and it led to acceptance. I would strongly suggest not going into the interview with a "I'm here to be a (insert specialist title)" you will come off as pretentious and naive in my opinion.Most DO schools have primary care as a mission statement.
In my opinion it is unwise to say you're interested in a specialty during a DO interview. At LEAST say you "don't know what field you want to go into."
I've heard a few professors here (and at other DO schools) say that even if you're not interested in primary care, they kind of want to hear you say you're at least considering it, if only to show that you've read the website.