@mvenus929, that is what I was thinking...forcing yourself to be hands on, so you learn, especially in unopposed program...but I see everybody's point.
@rokshana, I agree, not everybody can teach
@Crayola227 how do you measure a program's success? Board pass rate?
The first way I measure a program's success is by what percent of people starting the program finish it. Resignations or transfers are less concerning than terminations, but either way, less is more here. Not getting into any questions of malignancy or fault with this. Just, it's a good sign if just about everyone who matches graduates. But that's me.
Board pass rate depends on so many things, I would just say it's more that I would be alarmed if it was exceedingly under what is considered average for more than what seems like a fluke year.
I think, at least in one specialty I might speak to, that it was something that had to be recorded and tracked and averaged over a certain number of years (I want to say 3 or 5 in this case) so a fluke year can bring it down. I think this was related to the program's standing as far as probation or accreditation. So this is all to say it's something that doesn't matter until it matters, if you get my meaning. Obviously the thing about averaging and tracking and accreditation is going to be looked at differently for a brand new program.
I interviewed at a few brand spanking new programs, so I'm not totally off my rocker here. And one PD during my interview discussed the issue with board pass rates I'm telling you here.
Do people finish the program, does the program have accreditation/good standing/ACGME violation type issues, and if people try hard will they pass the boards, if the pass rate is seriously sucky, is it because the program doesn't prepare you decently enough or do they pick idiots? Both are bad.
Well, so that addresses that the most basic definition of "success": will it make you a practicing attending.
People will say, well that is hardly a way to measure a program's success. But, well, hardly. Because those are precisely a few of the questions that can't be answered well if at all by newer programs, and yes, there are a small handful of outlier programs that you may fortunately exclude from your Match list as a result of asking these questions.