I'm also a current UCSF M1 who would like to provide an alternative perspective:
- I don't think having NBME based exams is a good thing; I didn't come to medical school to only score well on my boards and I don't think Step 1 averages are necessarily indicative of a school's quality. Many students at UCSF are also interested in primary care specialties which have a lower step average, so there is confound here.
- I think you will agree with me as a current student that UCSF's curriculum prepares you well to be a clinician, and arguably with Step 1 moving to P/F and Step 2CK taking its place, this will be an advantage for UCSF students on the boards/in the match.
- No sessions are required except for small groups. Especially with zoom classes, you can skip most lectures and watch later on x2 speed if that's your preference.
- Virtual school sucks--I'm with you on that. But that's definitely not unique to UCSF. Most medical schools are either entirely online or largely virtual right now.
Personally, I think UCSF is well positioned to adapt to coming changes (Step 1 P/F, pandemic) due to its clinically strong curriculum and name brand. The resources here, as you alluded to, are endless with faculty who are leaders in their fields. Most importantly, I do genuinely believe that the culture of medicine is less hierarchical/malignant here relative to other top programs on the opposite coast, and my hypothesis is that this largely stems from the more progressive leaning leadership/environment. This more easy-going attitude translates to the faculty, administration, and even the student body, and that's a huge boon for wellness.
The original criticism from this thread was regarding the high debt burden from attending UCSF, which is relatively less resourceful when compared to its private school competitors. Honestly this is 100% valid—COL here is really high and there are few if any full tuition/cost of attendance scholarships available to students due to UCSF being a public school. With that being said, I do think the in state tuition helps a ton to bring down costs, which makes UCSF actually cheaper than wealthier private schools assuming full tuition/COA scholarships don't come into the equation.