we were crammed into a room with not enough seats. actually the room didn't even have enough room for the table and the chairs. we were asked 5-7 times if we completed a worksheet (you had to be there, people were asking if this was a joke). the room we eventually moved to was missing a ceiling. the old medical lady (rebecca is new) talked about grey's anatomy and scrubs like we all cared. granted, i assume she was trying to make a joke or put us at ease but in reality it just came across as unprofessional given the situation (you really had to be there to catch on to the awkwardness of it). the slides weren't up to date and the O-6 questioned the validity of several of the statements on the slides like she was seeing them for the first time. etc.. just sloppy.
i mean, once we were done with the admissions side of it, i started enjoying myself. the students at lunch were the best group i've met at any interview and the interviewers were superb. we were free to roam around the campus and many of the students were more than willing to give me the real scoop.
again, some of it was just run sloppy and took advantage of our situation. we all flew out there, some of us as far as the west coast. obviously, the admissions presentation would never change my desire to attend usuhs, but it's not like they're in a war-torn or operational environment struggling to keep their heads above water. in the end of the day, it is an academic institution. coming from another military academic institution, i was slightly aghast with their initial impression (probably the closest thing hundreds of future physicians come to military medicine). all they have to do is look 30 minutes away to the naval academy or any other service academy to see that you can run a military academic institution with as much class as an ivy league school.
do i sound snobbish? i don't mean to. i just see things i wish to fix.