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Gotcha. Sounds largely like a change for the sake of change and something to spin as a “progressive curriculum” while being inconvenient at bestperhaps I wasn’t clear. We wouldn’t be having breaks every four weeks. We would have the first half of our internal medicine, ob/gyn, psychiatry, family medicine, surgery rotations, etc before winter break and the second half of each rotation after winter break.
Hi,
I am currently an M2, and my school recently announced that for our third year that they would be having us do "split" rotations. For example, for our Internal Medicine rotation, we will be doing 4 weeks before winter break and the remaining 4 weeks after winter break. We will be doing these "split" rotations for the majority of our rotations with the exception of Neurology and Emergency Medicine. As I have never heard of any other MD or DO schools having this kind of M3 curriculum, I had a few questions that could hopefully be answered here.
1. Are there any other schools in the US that have this kind of third year curriculum?
2. Are there advantages to having this curriculum?
3. Are there disadvantages to having this curriculum (And yes I'm already aware of a bunch but would like to know more from people who have already been on rotations and would hopefully have more insight)
4. Is splitting rotations "worth" it?
Edit:
perhaps I wasn’t clear. We wouldn’t be having breaks every four weeks. We would have the first half of our internal medicine, ob/gyn, psychiatry, family medicine, surgery rotations, etc before winter break and the second half of each rotation after winter break.
honestly why do you care so much about this? you can't change anything about it and you do not know what life would have been like had you done the traditional rotation, so why spend time worrying about this?
At a normal school that line of thinking would in fact be correct. Students have little power in making drastic changes to something such as clinical rotation schedules/framework. As the first class at a new school the student body does in fact have enough power to make major changes to something such as this if enough time and energy goes into it. We worry about it because it can critically impact our 3rd and 4th year. As the schedule stands here students will have to jam all their shelf exams into the latter portion of the clinical rotations all the while studying for STEP 2. So these things matter.honestly why do you care so much about this? you can't change anything about it and you do not know what life would have been like had you done the traditional rotation, so why spend time worrying about this?
damn dude, who **** in your coffee this morning
honestly why do you care so much that you had to comment? you can't change anything about this post and you do not know what life would have been like had you not read this post, so why spend time worrying about this?
Studying for shelves is studying for step 2. I see this style of rotations being beneficial since you've already seen the material once and you don't have to worry about the shelf the first time around, which means you can immerse yourself in actually focusing on getting good evals and learning from the rotation itself.At a normal school that line of thinking would in fact be correct. Students have little power in making drastic changes to something such as clinical rotation schedules/framework. As the first class at a new school the student body does in fact have enough power to make major changes to something such as this if enough time and energy goes into it. We worry about it because it can critically impact our 3rd and 4th year. As the schedule stands here students will have to jam all their shelf exams into the latter portion of the clinical rotations all the while studying for STEP 2. So these things matter.
Studying for shelves is studying for step 2. I see this style of rotations being beneficial since you've already seen the material once and you don't have to worry about the shelf the first time around, which means you can immerse yourself in actually focusing on getting good evals and learning from the rotation itself.
Thanks for the reply!
Do you have happen any insight on whether or not this set-up affected the quality of your or others students's LORs?