even though some schools give out honors/pass/fail which is equivalent to A/B/F, would this grading system help you or not if you compete for a spot with another school?
even though some schools give out honors/pass/fail which is equivalent to A/B/F, would this grading system help you or not if you compete for a spot with another school?
Yes, it is definitely an advantage. P/NP system makes dental education a lot less stressful. When students are not under a lot of stress, they can focus better on the more important things: NDBE I and Research.
If that's true, that P/F programs allow you to focus a good deal of attention on the boards by more or less marginalizing class grades, then it completely undermines the system with which specialties accept students.
It simultaneously takes away a good indicator of performance (rank) while potentially boosting the only decent indicator left (NBDE).
You are correct! This is really an "unfair" advantage (UCLA/Harvard people possibly will disagree w/ me on this). This is definitely a huge bonus for students who attend Pass/Fail schools and want to specialize. However, it is not easy to get accepted to these schools; you must have good undergrad GPA and DAT score.
Well, I'm not a fancy program director or anything but it seems to me in that case, when comparing otherwise identical students, one ranked marginally well and one unranked, you would almost always pick the ranked student.
I mean, the P/F guy had 2 years to study for boards and basically nothing else to worry about right?
Right! That's why there are so many "average" guys in P/F programs scoring 90+ on the NDBE.
Does this mean that the program director has mistakenly accepted the wrong candidate (the P/F guy)? Absolutely not! If there was such mistake, UCLA and Harvard wouldn't continue to maintain high percentage of students who get accepted to specialty programs every year.
I was under the impression just because your school is P/F does not indicate whether or not the school keeps track of your rank. Example: I've been told by Columbia students that even though the curriculum is P/F, they indicate on your transcript whether you are top 15% or not. I'd assume 99% of directors are aware of this, and if the top 15% mark is missing from the application, they will know that student is not in the top 15%. Seems there's no way to escape ranking.
Wouldn't the more impressive student still be the one who both got the score and maintained the rank?
Didn't you just say that going to a P/F school was an advantage because it let you spend your time focusing on the boards? Wouldn't the more impressive student still be the one who both got the score and maintained the rank?
Prob at schools like Columbia, the majority of your classmates are super intelligent and gunners and all have Part I in the 90's, so how do you rank someone at the bottom third of the class with >90s part I and would be a top candidate at another school. That is the whole point of standardized testing, only a percentage of students score well and should be an equalizer in theory. Rank means less because all schools are not equal.
Prob at schools like Columbia, the majority of your classmates are super intelligent and gunners and all have Part I in the 90's, so how do you rank someone at the bottom third of the class with >90s part I and would be a top candidate at another school. That is the whole point of standardized testing, only a percentage of students score well and should be an equalizer in theory. Rank means less because all schools are not equal.
If you are at a pass fail school then don't just try to get C's to pass. You obviously want to learn as much as you can so you have a strong foundation for your specialty.
I agree. Even at P/F program, you still want to learn as much as possible since most of the material that are taught during the first 2 years will be asked on the 1st board exam.
It really just depends on each specific program. I know our director prefers people who have an actual class rank. I guess it comes down to this: two applicants with similar board score, similar experience and extracurriculars and one with a class rank of top 15% and the other pass. How can you not take the ranked student? Same goes for gpa/no class rank vs class rank. With two similar applicants it's hard not to take the one with a high class rank. A gpa without rank is meaningless...what's a 3.9 at one school may be a 3.3 at another.
Much of this quality may come from the students themselves but it would be naive to not attribute some of this to the schools themselves.
I don't think naive is the right word to use their. It seems unsurprising that schools who only recruit the best of the best have high board averages.
I think the preponderance of a student's success is due to individual effort, but you don't think the school plays a role? Although it's impossible to quantify the exact magnitude of their effect, it seems to me the curriculum, the faculty, as well as peer-motivation can make a significant contribution to the aspirations of a student body.
I totally understand that, but it still provides for some weird situations. For example, imagine two imaginary candidates applying for ortho, Columbia Carl and Pacific Pete. Both are "ranked" 70th in their class (bottom of the class for Carl and ~50% for Pete). They both studied hard and got 96 on the boards. I think anyone here would tell you Pete doesn't have a snowball's chance in hell, where Carl has a pretty darn good shot, even though they've both shown through a impartial qualifying test that they're equal. (This is of course hypothetical, because if Pete can get a 96 he can probably do a lot better than 70th at Pacific)
I just can't wrap my head around why it's considered okay for some school to block part of the equation for determining a good candidate. If I didn't submit my GPA to AADSAS a year ago I'd be in the pre-dental forum still.
I'm not sure what effect a pass/no pass curriculum has on getting into a specialty program. While we don't do Exceptional Pass like UCLA, the UCSF faculty will write letters of commendation and place them in your file if you do well in a class.
I just can't wrap my head around why it's considered okay for some school to block part of the equation for determining a good candidate. If I didn't submit my GPA to AADSAS a year ago I'd be in the pre-dental forum still.