MeningiomaAndCoffee
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Penn>BIDMC>Columbia.BIDMC/harvard vs. Penn vs. Columbia
I care most about the highest prestige with the best work life balance and the nicest faculty.
I hear all of these is super hard working so, it might fall to which has the highest prestige to nicest faculty ratio.
Also, while I care about nice faculty a lot, a part of my ego having gone to a low tier college and low tier DO school just wants to taste prestige for once in my life.
is this AI/bot generated?I’d say Columbia, UPenn, then BI. Although I’d probably rank BI over Penn due to location. You said prestige is a big factor. Everyone knows Columbia is IVY league. No doubts there. Most know UPenn is Ivy but for some reason many lay people don’t know. BI is affiliated with Harvard, but if you go anywhere besides the NE, many don’t know this and would assume it’s some community hospital.
It would have cost 60k a year or more to go to an IVY for undergrad. Instead they will pay you and you still get the Ivy diploma. So I totally understand the desire to get that pedigree now. That nationally recognized training will serve you well no matter where you chose to get a job after. Not that it will be some ticket to a great job, but anyone will assume your training was decent and that they can market you as a new IVY league trained hire to the hospital etc. The best time to be an IVY league guy is residency or fellowship. Don’t have to pay the crazy tuition, get to live in the same college town/area. You make almost nothing as a resident no matter where you go, so why not. Then, after training you can decide where you want to work. Most likely the areas of these Ivy League residencies will be lower paying. That’s when you go to greener pastures in private practice.
Yeah no one cares much just as long as you can do the job.In my group most of the younger cohort (<45) don't even hang their degrees on the wall.
Ha, true. All my diplomas are in a file cabinet in my office. No one cares.In my group most of the younger cohort (<45) don't even hang their degrees on the wall.