Step 1 Should Replace the MCAT

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DeadCactus

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Step 1 should be a public tests, open to anyone who wants to take it. Passing should be a requirement to entering medical school and the score could be used as the MCAT is now. Learning the material and studying for the exam could be done through whatever combination of college coursework, commercial review courses, and self-study the applicant wants. Medical school should then become a 3 year program of purely clinical rotations.

Agree or disagree?
 
While I agree that clinical training is gaining ground, preclinical knowledge is the foundation of everything. Entrusting it to thousands of college or, worse, Kaplan seems to be fairly risky.
 
Not to mention the poor saps who suffer through Step 1 and then *don't* get into med school? That's wayyyy worse than taking the MCAT and not getting in.
 
I agree with everything said this far both for and against this interesting proposition. I think though that step 2 and step 1 should be switched around and also have the MCAT questions integrated into both tests so that you dont have to sit for a separate MCAT exam and make it easier to book reservations.
 
I'd gladly trade the combined burden of first and second year for a single additional clinical year.

I hardly see how skipping two years of medical school lectures makes you a better clinician than tuition-free self-study or some other preparation when both pass Step 1. Frankly, not having to choke down the poorly written syllabus someone wrote as a distraction from the things they'd rather be doing would probably make the whole process more effective.

I also don't see how taking Step 1 and then not getting into medical school is any worse than wasting two years of your life to find out you didn't do well enough to enter the specialty you want or someone who failed a year or two of medical school.

But I guess we can't go changing the status quot. Gotta pay that tuition and jump through those hoops. We don't want to start selecting for physicians able maintain their own education...
 
Med school attendance would drop to approximately 0. I don't think anyone is motivated enough to self-study 2 years worth of med school. Frankly, I thought about dropping out in the first semester but I had already paid tuition, lol.
 
Then let those people sign up for formal courses at a university or commercial enterprise. Some people need formal and structured education. I'm all for that. Let them get it from people whose job revolves around providing that instead of leaving them in the hands of some PhD or MD who does it as a side job.

I don't know where this false dichotomy between the current two year formal curriculum and anarchistic chaos with the basic sciences completely abandoned keeps coming from. These people are supposedly physicians-to-be and they can't be trusted to find an educational format that works for them?

If you really got so much value out of your first two years, good for you. In the system I'm proposing you'd still have that. Meanwhile the other people who found the two years ridiculously inefficient and needlessly painful could find a better fit for them.
 
I'd gladly trade the combined burden of first and second year for a single additional clinical year.

I hardly see how skipping two years of medical school lectures makes you a better clinician than tuition-free self-study or some other preparation when both pass Step 1. Frankly, not having to choke down the poorly written syllabus someone wrote as a distraction from the things they'd rather be doing would probably make the whole process more effective.

I also don't see how taking Step 1 and then not getting into medical school is any worse than wasting two years of your life to find out you didn't do well enough to enter the specialty you want or someone who failed a year or two of medical school.

But I guess we can't go changing the status quot. Gotta pay that tuition and jump through those hoops. We don't want to start selecting for physicians able maintain their own education...

True, people are probably opposed to your idea due to slavish devotion to the status quo, and not because they perceive your proposal to be very stupid.
 
I see no other reason to oppose a proposal that has no impact on you if you feel two years of basic science hand holding was more valuable to you than an extra year of clinical practice. I'm not really seeing how a system that actually presents students with the freedom to choose the educational format that works best for them is "stupid".
 
"You dropped 150 grand on a f*ckin' education you could have got for a dollar fifty in late charges at the public library."

At some point mid first year school seemed to become more of an impediment to learning than it was helpful. The only thing positive I can say about it is having bright people around to study and hang out with, and the exceedingly rare quality-professor worth listening to or having as a mentor. Other than that it's been a nonstop barrage of garbage notes, garbage lectures and test questions..most of it just embarrassingly bad quality and unhelpful, given what we pay and the importance of the subject matter. It's almost like lectures and exams are a gesture to give the appearance of an effective educating system, while the actual learning is behind the scenes using different resources. Some people don't know what I'm talking about, and I feel sorry for them.

I've heard some schools cancelling lectures because so many people realize how pointless it is and stop showing up. Good, why bother? Why continue the charade, blowing more time and $$$? Oh yea, LCME....🙄

Kaplan, Goljan, gunnertraining, UWorld, etc...this stuff is a lot cheaper than our curriculum and a lot more effective. That's where I learned 95% of what I've retained. School just gets in the way.

The sad thing is a lot of administrators and professors still think the pre-clinical curriculum works. What a joke. If we do well on Step I and don't look like total *****s on our rotations it'll be in spite of the curriculum not because of it.

here ends the rant
 
Let's back off a little on the condescension and examine your proposal a little more thoroughly.

You have found your preclinical years to be a waste of time. Your proposed solution is to recommend that the entirety of those two years be a self-study culminating in taking Step 1, presumably while you are either a college student or employed. You also want to add a year of clinical rotations.

How feasible do you find it to be to implement Step 1 this way from the perspective of the student?

What is that other year of clinical rotations going to be for?
 
It's almost like lectures and exams are a gesture to give the appearance of an effective educating system, while the actual learning is behind the scenes using different resources. Some people don't know what I'm talking about, and I feel sorry for them.

Are most of your lecturers PhDs? I really don't feel our lectures are useless at my school, there is just a lot to learn... dunno, sorry about your school.
 
Are most of your lecturers PhDs? I really don't feel our lectures are useless at my school, there is just a lot to learn... dunno, sorry about your school.

Same. I mean, don't get me wrong, some lectures are always useless. In general, though, they served as a good broad base and I self-studied by watching those lectures on double speed.
 
My proposed recommendation is that we stop mandating a 2 year basic science curriculum and leave physicians-to-be free to pursue the necessary pre-clinical material through whatever means best suite them. That could be a 2-year post-grad curriculum at a university, a 6-month intensive course by a company like Kaplan, 3-years of self-study, cramming it into during undergrad, etc. Who cares how they do it? Why do you need to pay for two years of basic sciences just to sit for an exam when all the material is just a foundation and a checkpoint before you move on to actually learning clinical medicine?

We're in an era where lectures by the world experts on any inane topic in medicine is readily available over the internet. We have professionals dedicated to writing books for medical education. Why is anyone required to pay thousands of dollars to get an education from the local faculty at a rate that doesn't match how quickly or slowly they learn?

And don't get me wrong. I learned a lot during the first two years. I had some lecturers great at their job. But there's no doubt in my mind that if I had been left to my own resources (let alone the kind of resources that would pop up if this system was in place), I would have learned more in a shorter period of time for far less money.

Let me pay for access to a pro-section while I study anatomy. Let someone else pay to do the dissection. Let someone else stick to Netter's. Let me buy some video lectures recorded by Goljian, let someone else read Robbins, and let a third person pay for a full path class at a local University.

We value certification more than education. Lecturers from MIT, Stanford, etc. are all readily available on the internet and streamed to you in the library or living room of your choice. But for some reason you have to go pay to sit in a lecture room so that your learning can be validated and you can get permission to take Step 1. Who is benefiting from that?

The extra clinical year is arbitrary. We could debate it, but it's a separate issue from the main complaint at hand. In short, I think with added flexibility in the basic science curriculum you'd see a net decrease in the time spent on basic sciences by the average medical student because you're cutting out ineffective resources and focusing on what the student doesn't know instead of trying to teach everyone at the level of the lowest common denominator. I think some of that time should be reinvested in extra clinical training in the interest of the quality, breadth, and status of medical education.

Anyway, I'm just ranting. Back to productive matters.
 
My proposed recommendation is that we stop mandating a 2 year basic science curriculum and leave physicians-to-be free to pursue the necessary pre-clinical material through whatever means best suite them. That could be a 2-year post-grad curriculum at a university, a 6-month intensive course by a company like Kaplan, 3-years of self-study, cramming it into during undergrad, etc. Who cares how they do it? Why do you need to pay for two years of basic sciences just to sit for an exam when all the material is just a foundation and a checkpoint before you move on to actually learning clinical medicine?

We're in an era where lectures by the world experts on any inane topic in medicine is readily available over the internet. We have professionals dedicated to writing books for medical education. Why is anyone required to pay thousands of dollars to get an education from the local faculty at a rate that doesn't match how quickly or slowly they learn?

And don't get me wrong. I learned a lot during the first two years. I had some lecturers great at their job. But there's no doubt in my mind that if I had been left to my own resources (let alone the kind of resources that would pop up if this system was in place), I would have learned more in a shorter period of time for far less money.

Let me pay for access to a pro-section while I study anatomy. Let someone else pay to do the dissection. Let someone else stick to Netter's. Let me buy some video lectures recorded by Goljian, let someone else read Robbins, and let a third person pay for a full path class at a local University.

We value certification more than education. Lecturers from MIT, Stanford, etc. are all readily available on the internet and streamed to you in the library or living room of your choice. But for some reason you have to go pay to sit in a lecture room so that your learning can be validated and you can get permission to take Step 1. Who is benefiting from that?

The extra clinical year is arbitrary. We could debate it, but it's a separate issue from the main complaint at hand. In short, I think with added flexibility in the basic science curriculum you'd see a net decrease in the time spent on basic sciences by the average medical student because you're cutting out ineffective resources and focusing on what the student doesn't know instead of trying to teach everyone at the level of the lowest common denominator. I think some of that time should be reinvested in extra clinical training in the interest of the quality, breadth, and status of medical education.

Anyway, I'm just ranting. Back to productive matters.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hfYJsQAhl0
 
Step 1 should be a public tests, open to anyone who wants to take it. Passing should be a requirement to entering medical school and the score could be used as the MCAT is now. Learning the material and studying for the exam could be done through whatever combination of college coursework, commercial review courses, and self-study the applicant wants. Medical school should then become a 3 year program of purely clinical rotations.

Agree or disagree?

Agree but only if they also pass all the nbme subject tests with no exam below 80th percentile for examinees. Must also pass jurisprudence, background check, not be younger than 20, mandatory 6 mos of clinical experience prior to admission, bls cert/EMT cert, and maybe even a psych clearance. 1st 2 yrs if med school = college remedial course
 
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do you realize that you are suggesting that applicants should have a pre-established level of mastery of medical school curriculum before being allowed to enter medical school?

"awww dude.... I hope I get into medical school so i can pass my step 1 and get into medical school....."

:wtf:
 
do you realize that you are suggesting that applicants should have a pre-established level of mastery of medical school curriculum before being allowed to enter medical school?

"awww dude.... I hope I get into medical school so i can pass my step 1 and get into medical school....."

:wtf:

I think he is proposing that there is zero reason why we pay for the first 2 years of med school or even have it taught formally. Apart from gross and physical diagnosis everything I learn is on my own.

Most med students dont go to lecture and many study from review books. Why should it cost me $40,000 a year to sit in my apartment and read a review book?

Furthermore I think a handful of people could learn the first 2 years in less than 10 months if allowed to self study at their own pace. If I was given the option to buy a couple hundred dollars of review books and the ability to complete the first 2 years in 10 months I would choose that option.

Hell if it replaced it with the MCAT I could have just spent my senior year of college preparing for STEP 1 and then start third year right after college graduation.
 
do you realize that you are suggesting that applicants should have a pre-established level of mastery of medical school curriculum before being allowed to enter medical school?

"awww dude.... I hope I get into medical school so i can pass my step 1 and get into medical school....."

:wtf:

So we can expect students to master Chemistry and Calculus beforehand, but asking them to learn anatomy and physiology is just insane? Yea, ok. Glad we can arbitrarily draw the line between medical school and not medical school based on historic precedent and act like it's some inherent and obvious rule.

Medical education is the clinical component. Everything else is just foundations ; It's important stuff but I value learning the material over paying tuition.
 
I mean thousands have been educated at seaside, usmle-prep shacks overseas and then start actual medschool here during their clinical years so what's the difference?

I really just hate thinking that my bachelors was just for formalities

I'd also add a 6 mos basic science clinical correlations/physical diagnosis/EBM/ethics course at the start of school, after passing step 1. Also should have 6 mos of mandatory AI before graduation.

Starting to feel like I just described the European medschool curriculum (which makes sense)
 
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The flaw here is that you (OP) are extrapolating your own experience onto everyone. Just because your med school was a waste of time for you doesn't really mean that 99% of med schools out there don't provide more of an education than you apparently got or that 99% of med students don't take away more value. Maybe your med school did a crummy job. Sounds like it did. Maybe you are one of the fairly unique individuals who could do without the first to years of med school, and are a masterful self tarter who could just show up for Step 1 as an undergrad student and rock it. Im thinking you may not be recalling how you really were in undergrad, but maybe you were different than most. Maybe you are still early in your career and don't really appreciate yet what is going to stay with you in a few years. At any rate, I am not sure your own personal experience
makes much of an argument to do away with the current curriculum for the other 99%.

med schools have been in the business of training physician for a lot of years. The Steps are a minimum proficiency test, never meant to encompass the end all be all of what you learn in med school, and ultimately are going to be phased out in favor of some different test, later on in med school. If you aren't getting much value out of med school, I have to wonder either whether your school is doing a bad job, or you are doing it wrong.
 
It sounds like the OP is proposing learning how to take the test, Step 1, and not actually learning the necessary foundational material. The first two years aren't about training you to take a single test. It's about being a doctor. An MD is a doctoral degree. Completely with that is a course of study that underlies the title "doctor". You give anyone who's bright enough time and access to UWorld, they can learn the knee jerk responses to almost any step one question, probably without ever really having to learn the material.

Besides, the MCAT which is a thinking test is completely different than Step 1 which is essentially a facts based, knowledge test. MCAT, or similar test, is necessary to assess wether you have the ability to think like a physician not if you're able to memorize a bunch of facts and game a test.

And this is largely why they need to get rid of the number score on step 1
 
I'd gladly trade the combined burden of first and second year for a single additional clinical year.

I hardly see how skipping two years of medical school lectures makes you a better clinician than tuition-free self-study or some other preparation when both pass Step 1. Frankly, not having to choke down the poorly written syllabus someone wrote as a distraction from the things they'd rather be doing would probably make the whole process more effective.

I also don't see how taking Step 1 and then not getting into medical school is any worse than wasting two years of your life to find out you didn't do well enough to enter the specialty you want or someone who failed a year or two of medical school.

But I guess we can't go changing the status quot. Gotta pay that tuition and jump through those hoops. We don't want to start selecting for physicians able maintain their own education...
👍👍
 
Caribbean students with comparable or higher Step 1 scores don't perform as well in the match as US MD students.

I think the argument people are making in this thread and others is: In the first 2 years, Step 1 is the only purpose, I can prepare for Step 1 alone with prep companies materials, why should there be pre-clinical years.

While it's possible to study for a top Step 1 score without ever stepping into a med school, it's a poor argument. Many individuals need the social environment medical school provides to motivate them to study so much. Also, at my school we have plenty of activities that are training me to be a better doctor and being around quality physicians, asking them questions, and shadowing in the hospital in the first 2 years is invaluable.

I find it funny that people are making these arguments. I have no idea how you stay motivated. Those without scholarships who pay tuition of 30-50k for 2 years for something you think is useless, that's amazing that you can go through that without going insane.
 
Caribbean students with comparable or higher Step 1 scores don't perform as well in the match as US MD students.

I think the argument people are making in this thread and others is: In the first 2 years, Step 1 is the only purpose, I can prepare for Step 1 alone with prep companies materials, why should there be pre-clinical years.

While it's possible to study for a top Step 1 score without ever stepping into a med school, it's a poor argument. Many individuals need the social environment medical school provides to motivate them to study so much. Also, at my school we have plenty of activities that are training me to be a better doctor and being around quality physicians, asking them questions, and shadowing in the hospital in the first 2 years is invaluable.

I find it funny that people are making these arguments. I have no idea how you stay motivated. Those without scholarships who pay tuition of 30-50k for 2 years for something you think is useless, that's amazing that you can go through that without going insane.

The flaw is the belief that Step 1 is the only purpose of the first 2 years when it's not.
 
The flaw is the belief that Step 1 is the only purpose of the first 2 years when it's not.

Agreed. This is part of the reason there has been movement to merge Step 1 with the later Steps and move it later into med school, to a date too late to be used by residencies. It was never meant as a proxy for what you need to learn, just some objective minimum.
 
The flaw is the belief that Step 1 is the only purpose of the first 2 years when it's not.

I agree. Plus idk about u guys but without tests I wouldn't be memorizing all these minor details and prob assume I know things and move on and not rlly know them. Some lectures and notes suck, others are ok. I don't go to class and I also dont always watch some of the lectures. I think the bigger issue here is why the F does tuition cost a life savings and how can that be fixed along with these ridiculous interest rates we hafta pay to borrow from the government. Well thats a topic that could prob be talked to death and one I don't want to get into.. but its unfortunate that Step1 does matter so much and that doing poorly leads to less options, which leads to less money you can earn to pay back those loans.. besides who wants to live in a decently nice house and have a nice car after so many years of school when u have this great opportunity to help ppl that don't give a **** about u
 
I agree. Plus idk about u guys but without tests I wouldn't be memorizing all these minor details and prob assume I know things and move on and not rlly know them. Some lectures and notes suck, others are ok. I don't go to class and I also dont always watch some of the lectures. I think the bigger issue here is why the F does tuition cost a life savings and how can that be fixed along with these ridiculous interest rates we hafta pay to borrow from the government. Well thats a topic that could prob be talked to death and one I don't want to get into.. but its unfortunate that Step1 does matter so much and that doing poorly leads to less options, which leads to less money you can earn to pay back those loans.. besides who wants to live in a decently nice house and have a nice car after so many years of school when u have this great opportunity to help ppl that don't give a **** about u

High tuition is a result of the moral hazard that whenever (generally) a student in professional school asks for loan money they can get it. There is simply no incentive from the schools not to have high tuitions. Plus, it takes an act of congress to make federal student loans go away, so it's a much safer loan option to lenders.
 
It sounds like the OP is proposing learning how to take the test, Step 1, and not actually learning the necessary foundational material. The first two years aren't about training you to take a single test. It's about being a doctor. An MD is a doctoral degree. Completely with that is a course of study that underlies the title "doctor". You give anyone who's bright enough time and access to UWorld, they can learn the knee jerk responses to almost any step one question, probably without ever really having to learn the material.

Besides, the MCAT which is a thinking test is completely different than Step 1 which is essentially a facts based, knowledge test. MCAT, or similar test, is necessary to assess wether you have the ability to think like a physician not if you're able to memorize a bunch of facts and game a test.

And this is largely why they need to get rid of the number score on step 1

+1
👍👍👍
 
The flaw is the belief that Step 1 is the only purpose of the first 2 years when it's not.

👍

This is like the other thread(s) that ask why our lectures need to go into more detail than first aid does when that's all we need to know for step 1.

It's not just about step 1.
 
Agreed. This is part of the reason there has been movement to merge Step 1 with the later Steps and move it later into med school, to a date too late to be used by residencies. It was never meant as a proxy for what you need to learn, just some objective minimum.

You say this in every thread but really dude, when is this change supposed to happen? 2 years from now? 5 years from now? 10 years from now? The last proposed change from the USMLE was to stop reporting the 2 digit score and only report the 3 digit score. Sounds like they're going all in on the 3 digit score if anything. Why bother with such pointless deck chair rearranging if the Titanic is going to be sinking pretty soon?
 
👍

This is like the other thread(s) that ask why our lectures need to go into more detail than first aid does when that's all we need to know for step 1.

It's not just about step 1.

What else is it about?
 
What else is it about?

It's about learning the science of medicine while third and fourth year focus more on the art of medicine. Step 1 (and all other steps for that matter), as it has been pointed out on this thread, was/were designed to ensure "minimal competence" to practice medicine. Also, one can have very high step 1 scores with very little understanding of what's going on as it is seen on daily basis on the wards.
 
Let's back off a little on the condescension and examine your proposal a little more thoroughly.

You have found your preclinical years to be a waste of time. Your proposed solution is to recommend that the entirety of those two years be a self-study culminating in taking Step 1, presumably while you are either a college student or employed. You also want to add a year of clinical rotations.

How feasible do you find it to be to implement Step 1 this way from the perspective of the student?

What is that other year of clinical rotations going to be for?

An alternative to your proposal would be that students could take a completely online and standardized preclinical curriculum and give tests at prometric. However,the biggest problem with all of these proposals (vs simply making preclinicals one year) is time. Pre clinical education does not fit well with college majors and college scale ecs needed to get into medical school. We would either have to force everyone to be a premed major (and thus cause many people to graduate with a useless degree), or they would have to do preclinical education afterwards. Assuming it takes the average student two years, that's another year to become a doctor. It Lsovmeans that all of the failures will waste 2plus more years of their lives than if simply applying out of college.
 
I think too highly of this profession and my training to believe that a Kaplan course could replace 2 years of preclincal education. Maybe some of your schools aren't very good or you're not using their resources.
 
It's about learning the science of medicine while third and fourth year focus more on the art of medicine. Step 1 (and all other steps for that matter), as it has been pointed out on this thread, was/were designed to ensure "minimal competence" to practice medicine. Also, one can have very high step 1 scores with very little understanding of what's going on as it is seen on daily basis on the wards.

The STEP 1 hasn't been used as a minimal competency exam since the day it was created. Why do you guys insist on staying in denial on its purpose? It evaluates your comprehension of basic science instruction from the first two years of medical school. It is the most important thing you do in four years of medical school and it is the single most important purpose of the first two years.
 
If our preclinical years was 1 instead of 2 what would be the difference between us and PAs? I mean besides the fact we do residencies.. they do 1 year of class and 1 year of clinicals.. and the general consensus seems to be fourth year is a vacation/allots time for residency applications... I wonder if the average PA student could do well on Step1 and Step 2 with the 2 years of school that they have as compared to our 4, any thoughts?
 
I think too highly of this profession and my training to believe that a Kaplan course could replace 2 years of preclincal education. Maybe some of your schools aren't very good or you're not using their resources.
I'm glad your school has good instructors. Ours for god damn sure does not. You guys claiming that there's more to the first two years than sitting in a lecture hall 4-8 hours a day must have had amazing teachers because I feel it's a huge waste of time. Kaplan has better quality instructors, has better quality presentations, and leaves less holes in my medical knowledge than my school's lectures.
 
The STEP 1 hasn't been used as a minimal competency exam since the day it was created. Why do you guys insist on staying in denial on its purpose? It evaluates your comprehension of basic science instruction from the first two years of medical school. It is the most important thing you do in four years of medical school and it is the single most important purpose of the first two years.

Because that's why the Steps were designed/instituted for... To assess minimum competence to practice medicine.

"successful completion of the three Steps of USMLE certifies that the individual has the minimum knowledge and clinical skills for the unsupervised, general practice of medicine" http://www.usmle.org/cru/updates/2007-08.html

Also, as far as becoming a good physician is concerned, probably the least important factor is performance on the boards. In my opinion scholarly work/teaching/volunteer work (real stuff like 30hrs/wk for 4yrs not just 1 day/yr) is much more important. However, unfortunately due to dramatic increase in number of applications, Step 1 is used as a filter. Therefore, if Step 1 was not scored and was just P/F, then residency programs would actually have to assess and look at the entire applicant as opposed to the score of 1 test which means nothing... I think everyone has seen enough number of individuals with high step 1 scores and lack of basic medical knowledge/application on the wards to agree that Step 1 is a poor test for anything BUT ensuring minimum competence.

I'm glad your school has good instructors. Ours for god damn sure does not. You guys claiming that there's more to the first two years than sitting in a lecture hall 4-8 hours a day must have had amazing teachers because I feel it's a huge waste of time. Kaplan has better quality instructors, has better quality presentations, and leaves less holes in my medical knowledge than my school's lectures.

Well, this is definitely something you should tell prospective students at your school so they can choose another school.

Lectures are not meant for teaching you everything (this is not middle school). Actually lectures should only complement your independent reading/studying and answer questions and clear up concepts that you can't get from independent study.... That is roughly 75% through independent studying and 25% from lectures (which can not be substituted by anything else because they are just concepts that need to be taught in person)... Technically speaking, for every hour of lecture you should study 3 hours independently.
 
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So it's a bad idea because paying tuition magically makes you learn more and some people are incapable of learning without someone holding their? That's the argument? Remind's me of a comment on churches and garages by C.S. Lewis.

The first two years are about building a strong foundation in the material needed to learn clinical medicine. Step 1 is a test of competence and readiness to move on to the clinical part of our education, the part that actually makes the M.D. There's no reason that can't be done well through other channels than a classroom.

For many people, being freed from the constant inane multiple choice tests and memorizing the useless facts you'll forget 6 months later would leave them free to focus on the larger concepts and come out of the process more prepared. This isn't about a school being good or bad, it's about being free to individualize to your own rate and style of learning.

I'm sorry if some of you take your professional pride from how long you paid tuition for instead of by what you learned and what you were required to master...
 
here's your answer:

GO TO PA SCHOOL



it's that simple. Being a doctor is knowing the background and why you do things. If you only want to be a "clinician" go to PA school and work for a doctor. Year 1 can probably be cut in half but year 2 is absolutely required BEFORE rotations.

how many times does this have to keep coming up...

this
 
I think he is proposing that there is zero reason why we pay for the first 2 years of med school or even have it taught formally. Apart from gross and physical diagnosis everything I learn is on my own.

Most med students dont go to lecture and many study from review books. Why should it cost me $40,000 a year to sit in my apartment and read a review book?

Furthermore I think a handful of people could learn the first 2 years in less than 10 months if allowed to self study at their own pace. If I was given the option to buy a couple hundred dollars of review books and the ability to complete the first 2 years in 10 months I would choose that option.

Hell if it replaced it with the MCAT I could have just spent my senior year of college preparing for STEP 1 and then start third year right after college graduation.

I find it highly unlikely that true self directed study will get you what you need. The level of non-linear thinking required in the first two years is simply absent in undergraduate courses. We basically are left with two options - make a true "pre med major" which is significantly more difficult than normal majors. For example, I have a BS in chemistry. The people I graduated with who wanted to go work for a production lab for some random company like budweiser or some cosmetic or ag company did not need nor was it very likely that they would have succeeded in a curriculum oriented around 3rd and 4th order questions. If we left undergrad the way it is the physician deficit will explode. Most text books do not put the material together in a clinically useful way. Without having heard it from a professor in medical school, what is the likelihood that you would have thought to consider, for example, splenic artery bleeds with pyloric ulcers? Its a simple example and MAYBE you would get it. but if you just go through a gross anatomy book and arent constantly tested and reminded of 3d relationships you will fail as a physician. many mid-level practitioners do this. They have extensive "name that thing" tests, and then like to talk about how they go into further detail than the med students with their anatomy curriculum. This isnt true. I dont care if you can name the 5th order branches of CNV3. That is trivial but not really useful.

The ability to name every note on every fret of every string of a guitar does not grant you the ability to make music.

So we can expect students to master Chemistry and Calculus beforehand, but asking them to learn anatomy and physiology is just insane? Yea, ok. Glad we can arbitrarily draw the line between medical school and not medical school based on historic precedent and act like it's some inherent and obvious rule.

Medical education is the clinical component. Everything else is just foundations ; It's important stuff but I value learning the material over paying tuition.
as I alluded to in a previous post, we dont expect mastery of these things in undergrad. Most bachelors require a C average to pass, and most med students have a lower sGPA than cGPA. aside from the higher degree of weeding out due to using clinical basic knowledge (and it is.... USMLE will have a large amount of clinical vignettes and clinical correlations) as the entry exam we also lose roundedness which is something we look for in US medical students. Whether that is right or wrong is debatable (usually only to med students and even more by pre meds :laugh:) but if we want a step1 level knowledge at graduation then we are asking undergrads to provide a curriculum which can achieve that. I dont see this as practical


It's about learning the science of medicine while third and fourth year focus more on the art of medicine. Step 1 (and all other steps for that matter), as it has been pointed out on this thread, was/were designed to ensure "minimal competence" to practice medicine. Also, one can have very high step 1 scores with very little understanding of what's going on as it is seen on daily basis on the wards.
Stop it. I feel dirty whenever we agree 😀


The STEP 1 hasn't been used as a minimal competency exam since the day it was created. Why do you guys insist on staying in denial on its purpose? It evaluates your comprehension of basic science instruction from the first two years of medical school. It is the most important thing you do in four years of medical school and it is the single most important purpose of the first two years.

I have to be honest with you - I would highly distrust a doctor who didn't have a good understanding of the basic medical sciences. This is my major beef with mid level practitioners entering into solo primary care. What you are suggesting is that health care providers need only memorize a string of symptoms and basically turn into diagnostic machines. Input symptoms.... calculating... calculating.... output diagnosis. This is fine for most cases, but if we lost basic sciences we would be harming the patients that don't present normally or who dont' have enough primary literature describing them to land us in the proper diagnosis. As absurd as "House" is (and with as much flak as I stand to get for using this as an exampl lol) I DO ascribe to a technique that relies more on an understanding of the anatomy, phys, and pathology, than on a memorized list of mnemonics: SMART - Shuffling gaint, Mask-like face, Akinesia, Rigidity, Tremor. Cool, parkinsons. But if this is your primary go-to for diagnosis over the basic sciences and some clinical exam tools I think you stand to miss diseases until they are obvious and late. Clinical knowledge IMO should supplement the basic sciences. EBM, IMO is an example of how our clinical knowledge falls short of basic science. By that I mean that every time EBM shows we have been doing something stupid, had we possessed the basic science knowledge it would have been avoided all together. as basic scientific understanding expands we can do our job better by being on top of it and applying what we see in the clinic

So it's a bad idea because paying tuition magically makes you learn more and some people are incapable of learning without someone holding their? That's the argument? Remind's me of a comment on churches and garages by C.S. Lewis.

The first two years are about building a strong foundation in the material needed to learn clinical medicine. Step 1 is a test of competence and readiness to move on to the clinical part of our education, the part that actually makes the M.D. There's no reason that can't be done well through other channels than a classroom.

For many people, being freed from the constant inane multiple choice tests and memorizing the useless facts you'll forget 6 months later would leave them free to focus on the larger concepts and come out of the process more prepared. This isn't about a school being good or bad, it's about being free to individualize to your own rate and style of learning.

I'm sorry if some of you take your professional pride from how long you paid tuition for instead of by what you learned and what you were required to master...

Maybe it is my own experience.... but I think the "self study" people across the board are underestimating the amount of information they get from professors either through notes provided, recorded lectures, in-person lectures, or out of class question help. In addition there is a peer teaching component that most medical students take advantage of. To say your entire basic science medical training was done solo is highly unlikely. And if you happen to be an outlier or a prodigy of sorts, you forget that many people, myself included, thrive in an environment with shorter milestones. I don't think most people would do well handling all of the material of the first 2 years with the only goal being test day. If I'm right about this then your proposed plan would only serve to slash the number of graduating doctors by an unreasonable number.
 
Maybe it is my own experience.... but I think the "self study" people across the board are underestimating the amount of information they get from professors either through notes provided, recorded lectures, in-person lectures, or out of class question help. In addition there is a peer teaching component that most medical students take advantage of. To say your entire basic science medical training was done solo is highly unlikely. And if you happen to be an outlier or a prodigy of sorts, you forget that many people, myself included, thrive in an environment with shorter milestones. I don't think most people would do well handling all of the material of the first 2 years with the only goal being test day. If I'm right about this then your proposed plan would only serve to slash the number of graduating doctors by an unreasonable number.

This is probably the biggest reason why self-learning (not self-studying or self-reviewing) Step 1 would not work for the vast majority of students. This is coming from someone who watches all lectures recorded at 2x and learns most of the material outside of formal coursework. I don't think I could motivate myself to truly learn all of the material for Step 1 by myself before burning out. Classmates and structured curricula are a huge help.

And no, I don't trust Kaplan to take over the pre-clinical education of our nation's physicians. 🙄
 
Man, whiny threads about step 1 and pre-clinical years are spreading like wild fire.
 
This is probably the biggest reason why self-learning (not self-studying or self-reviewing) Step 1 would not work for the vast majority of students. This is coming from someone who watches all lectures recorded at 2x and learns most of the material outside of formal coursework. I don't think I could motivate myself to truly learn all of the material for Step 1 by myself before burning out. Classmates and structured curricula are a huge help.

And no, I don't trust Kaplan to take over the pre-clinical education of our nation's physicians. 🙄

This comes up in the pre-med forums. Some kids want to spend their preM1 summer studying up. just.... just dont... I don't care what you look at, the material you learn will not be organized in a way that is useful for med school. I don't care if you can tell me what nerve innervates the thenar muscles of the hand. That i the LEAST of your worries lol.
 
here's your answer:

GO TO PA SCHOOL



it's that simple. Being a doctor is knowing the background and why you do things. If you only want to be a "clinician" go to PA school and work for a doctor. Year 1 can probably be cut in half but year 2 is absolutely required BEFORE rotations.

how many times does this have to keep coming up...

I don't think I could have said it any better.

OP, you are operating under the complete logical fallacy that everything taught in MS I and MS II years is there to provide you with enough knowledge to pass your USMLE exams. That's completely wrong. A good chunk of MS II (and some of MS I) exists to provide you with minimum competency to perform well in your third and fourth year as well. I busted my *** in second year to learn the pathophys of everything and study hard for step 1 by integrating everything, but all those doctors who lectured us as it turned out had a LOT of good information for when we enter the clinical realm. And that competency is what has allowed me to get honors in most of my clinical clerkships.

I think one of the Kaplan lecturers put it well... the difference between us and PAs is that as physicians, we are SCIENTISTS as much as we are health care providers. We may spend our days treating people, but we go far far more in depth to understanding the knowledge instead of merely memorizing protocols. That is why we have progressed so far in this field.
 
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