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LoveBeingHuman:)
What's the point? It's not like any one med school produces better doctors. I feel like it does more harm than good.
We humans are very status-conscious. We order ourselves by education, money, race, gender, profession, and every other differentiator we can find. Makes sense that we'd rank our med schools as another way to stratify ourselves.
What's your top 10?I order all of my medical schools based on how stylish their logos are.
What's your top 10?
What's the point? It's not like any one med school produces better doctors. I feel like it does more harm than good.
This is especially noticeable in high caliber fields. Say neurosurgery for example. Take a med student from UCSF which has one of the best NSG programs in the nation. They see thousands of ultra-complex patients a year, and their doctors are nationally recognized. Then take a student from your local private med school. They have a teaching hospital, but the patients are generally run of the mill and their doctors (while excellent) are not leaders in the field.
I order all of my medical schools based on how stylish their logos are.
I've never understood the hate on US News for their lists for colleges or med schools. There was a demand they tapped, they didn't just decide to do it for fun.
efle said:And I think it's more useful than people realize. Say you're a highly competitive applicant interested in an academic career and you want to apply to places where the students will be similar to you and the research resources will be great. Without using reputations or research funding or lists built on those (like US News') how are you going to know where to apply?
The problem isn't the rankings per se. It's the fact that people assume there's a 1:1 correlation between the USNews research rank and the quality of education, which does a disservice to many aspiring physicians. I suspect some of the hate comes from those with inferiority complexes, too, but I have no data to back that up.I've never understood the hate on US News for their lists for colleges or med schools. There was a demand they tapped, they didn't just decide to do it for fun.
And I think it's more useful than people realize. Say you're a highly competitive applicant interested in an academic career and you want to apply to places where the students will be similar to you and the research resources will be great. Without using reputations or research funding or lists built on those (like US News') how are you going to know where to apply?
Gtown has a super fancy logo
At what rank does ranking not matter? Like if you go to a top 50 med school and then every rank after 50 is just relatively the same?
I think tiers do matter, but so do your preferences. If you had to choose between a rank 30 and a rank 50, and one is in-state and the other is halfway across the nation, then I'd think rank is not worth the great stride to achieve.
Rankings are of interest only to pre-meds and medical school deans.
Hmm I heard that residency programs care a great deal about rankings and prestige
They don't need USNWR to tell them who are the top schools.Hmm I heard that residency programs care a great deal about rankings and prestige
They don't need USNWR to tell them who are the top schools.
PDs have a better criteria to judge... they've seen their grads, and also know their Faculty
(Residency) Program DirectorWhats PD?
Do you not think it's a valid argument? I don't think anyone blames Anheuser Busch or grocery stores for alcoholism in St Louis. It's not like US News went out and invented the idea of ivy league prestige and selectivity when it started making college profiles.The exact same argument could be made for the world's heroin producers.
If you want an academic career, you typically have some inkling of the research field that you wish to target. Then you have to figure out the landscape of that field, and you do that by working in a lab, talking to people, going to meetings, finding out who's got R01's, who's got big labs, who's cranking out the hot papers in the field at that time, and who has a strong track record of mentoring. The labs one finds might be at Harvard or they might be at UT Memphis. You don't know until you actually do the work to find out, and things like the USNWR are of zero help in that process.
If you have no idea which field you want and simply want to hedge your bets by going to a place with maximum NIH funding, you can easily find that straight from the source.
Are you talking about the merit aid shaming piece from the deans of Harvard, Hopkins and Stanford?By the way, if you're interested in some of the negative effects of rankings, there is a nice piece in the current issue of the New England Journal about how a school's ranking affects who goes there and whether that has an impact on diversity in medicine.
Do you not think it's a valid argument? I don't think anyone blames Anheuser Busch or grocery stores for alcoholism in St Louis. It's not like US News went out and invented the idea of ivy league prestige and selectivity when it started making college profiles.
Maybe my class is an exception, but people that are dead set on a specific research area for their career as a junior/senior in undergrad are few and far between in my experience. General NIH funding values, reputation, and academic metrics are all valid things for an applicant to want to consider, and all US News does is put all that info into a table for you.
Are you talking about the merit aid shaming piece from the deans of Harvard, Hopkins and Stanford?
Idk I don't think going to Stanford or MIT loses you out on any prestige points. US News captures via survey the way institutions view each other, not the other way around.Nowadays, US News is even quite different from Ivy League prestige. Many non-Ivies are at the top of the list, including Stanford, Cal Tech, MIT, UChicago, etc. But I think people still care more about the Ivy League prestige than US News rankings.
If you're going full academic like MD/PhD, most people will have an idea of what field they want to do their PhD in, just as with any PhD program. You're super naive if you come into med school as an MD/PhD candidate without having any inkling of what field you want to pursue (assuming you even get into an MD/PhD program with that outlook).
Yeah so same article. I find it funny the criticism is coming from three schools who don't need merit aid at all - Harvard is never going to struggle to matriculate best-and-brightest students, even with a need-only policy. Put them in the position of WashU and let's see if they hold fastI'm talking about the "benefits packages" used to entice top applicants who tend to be disproportionately from SES advantaged backgrounds.
Yeah so same article. I find it funny the criticism is coming from three schools who don't need merit aid at all - Harvard is never going to struggle to matriculate best-and-brightest students, even with a need-only policy. Put them in the position of WashU and let's see if they hold fast
I don't think they struggle nearly as much as places like WashU or Feinberg or Vandy, despite already being need-only. I totally agree with their point, no doubt a need-only policy would shift the class composition a little away from the wealthiest at a place like WashU. I just don't think they'd really be cool with a 20% yield rate and big drop in numbers if they were facing that tradeoff themselves.Okay, but do you say the same about Stanford and Hopkins? Stanford has only recently been on the level they are on and they definitely lose students to other top schools (and a lot of that is probably due to East vs. West coast preferences). While the source of the criticism might itself be a valid point for criticism, I think the point holds very well.
I don't think they struggle nearly as much as places like WashU or Feinberg or Vandy. I totally agree with their point, no doubt a need-only policy would shift the class composition a little away from the wealthiest at a place like WashU. I just don't think they'd really be cool with a 20% yield rate and big drop in numbers if they were facing that tradeoff themselves.
Do you not think it's a valid argument? I don't think anyone blames Anheuser Busch or grocery stores for alcoholism in St Louis. It's not like US News went out and invented the idea of ivy league prestige and selectivity when it started making college profiles.
efle said:Maybe my class is an exception, but people that are dead set on a specific research area for their career as a junior/senior in undergrad are few and far between in my experience. General NIH funding values, reputation, and academic metrics are all valid things for an applicant to want to consider, and all US News does is put all that info into a table for you.
From personal experience I disagree about the world being better off for applicants without these lists. When I was in high school I knew I'd love to go somewhere with an Ivy-like student body, but I wasn't interested in living in the far northeast or the heart of some of the major cities. Pulling up US News gave me a bunch of names like Northwestern, Vandy, WashU and Rice that I had never heard of before but ended up liking a lot and being some of my top choices.No, I was just pointing out that the existence of demand for something does not make it inherently good. The rankings were created to sell copy and get attention, but the unintended consequences are now grossly apparent (particularly in admissions). If the magazine went under and the rankings ceased tomorrow the world would be a better place. People and institutions would still be obsessed with comparisons, but they wouldn't be getting led by the nose to do whatever USNWR tells them to do.
This critique would be more meaningful if NIH funding and academic metrics were not available (in more detail) from other sources. On its face, letting a news magazine tell you where you should apply to college, graduate, or professional school is an absurd proposition. The data gathered are superficial and the weighting is arbitrary. Saying Wisconsin is #28 and OHSU is #29 doesn't mean anything, and it doesn't help anyone make a decision about their future.
Same thing for med school, if you had me guess which schools had the most funding and best reputations early in college, I would never have guessed names like Pitt or Michigan were up there. I could have gotten a similar idea using the NIH tables, MSAR and asking around with the academic docs at work, but I don't think any damage was done to me by looking at that same data in US News tables instead.
From personal experience I disagree about the world being better off for applicants without these lists. When I was in high school I knew I'd love to go somewhere with an Ivy-like student body, but I wasn't interested in living in the far northeast or the heart of some of the major cities. Pulling up US News gave me a bunch of names like Northwestern, Vandy, WashU and Rice that I had never heard of before but ended up liking a lot and being some of my top choices.
efle said:Same thing for med school, if you had me guess which schools had the most funding and best reputations early in college, I would never have guessed names like Pitt or Michigan were up there. I could have gotten a similar idea using the NIH tables, MSAR and asking around with the academic docs at work, but I don't think any damage was done to me by looking at that same data in US News tables instead.
efle said:Agree about choosing #28 vs #29 being meaningless. That would be stupid and I don't think anyone actually uses rankings like this.
Re bold: Like I said, I don't buy the cart-before-horse theory. US news didn't go out and convince everyone ivy league schools (or stanford, MIT etc) were the best. They just went out and documented the high SAT scores and high regard. Schools like WashU and Duke and Rice had always been selective too (same admit rates circa 2000 as places like Penn and Dartmouth) but are not names you would come across as a coastal applicant, in my opinion, until the lists became popular. It's a useful way to get a more complete picture than the names everyone knows/expects to see.The problem isn't that US News can be a source of consolidated data. The problem is that incidental to this is the fact that US News has become a textbook situation of where the cart is driving the horse. Which schools have the best reputation? The ones that are ranked highly by US News? You and I both know that PD rankings differ significantly from US News rankings. The concept of reputation and US News ranking has become melded into one and the same and is now viewed by many many people as equivalent concepts.
I actually used the Fiske guide too! It did score colleges on a 5-point scale in different areas though, and going through it picking out the highest rated academics gives you the same names that are the top of US news ranks.For me it was the old Fiske Guide to Colleges, which offered a wealth of both subjective and objective data but never ranked anything. Imagine that.
The rankings don't damage individuals who use them casually in the course of a more extensive process of gathering data and weighing it according to personal priorities. That's not to say the rankings aren't damaging.
How U.S. News College Rankings Promote Economic Inequality on Campus
Why College Rankings Are a Joke
Your Annual Reminder to Ignore the U.S. News & World Report College Rankings14 Reasons Why US News College Rankings are Meaningless
Why US News College Rankings Shouldn't Matter to Anyone
The Big College Ranking Sham
Why U.S. News' College Rankings Hurt Students
From the perspective of medical school admissions, the rankings reward schools with the highest metrics and lowest percent accepted. How is that good?
Tell that to #29.
NYU as an example has shot up a ton in the last decade in ranking, yet sits a lot lower down in reputation. That looks like US news rank doesn't determine how other institutions score NYU?
My understanding of the ranking methodology is that it uses the yearly NIH grants to the institution. Did Sandy somehow cause them to still be winning tens of millions more in annual biomed grants 5 years later?My understanding is that NYU shot up the rankings because of how the funds to rebuild after Sandy were counted. If true, the idea that an institution's rank can be manipulated by natural disaster aid should cause some concern.
Re bold: Like I said, I don't buy the cart-before-horse theory. US news didn't go out and convince everyone ivy league schools (or stanford, MIT etc) were the best. They just went out and documented the high SAT scores and high regard. Schools like WashU and Duke and Rice had always been selective too (same admit rates circa 2000 as places like Penn and Dartmouth) but are not names you would come across as a coastal applicant, in my opinion, until the lists became popular. It's a useful way to get a more complete picture than the names everyone knows/expects to see.
Re red: This supports my point, I think, more than yours? NYU as an example has shot up a ton in the last decade in ranking, yet sits a lot lower down in reputation. That looks like US news rank doesn't determine how other institutions score NYU? And regardless these are rare cases. The top 20 by funding and by reputation are the same except for like 2 names
After interviewing at NYU earlier this cycle alongside a whole bunch of other T20 schools, I don't understand how anyone could get the impression that NYU is a mid-tier school masquerading as a top-tier school through rank manipulation. Bellevue (one of four hospitals associated with the school) has to be one of the most amazing hospitals associated with a medical school, and NYU's MD program alongside the opportunities there definitely seemed on par or better than every other T20 school I visited. Its not like students there have any difficulty matching into top tier residency programs either, and their Step 1 scores are absolutely ridiculous and have to be one of the highest in the country (243 average this year).
I see people talk endlessly about the difference between "reputation" and USNews ranking for NYU on SDN, but the data/tables to back this up that's repeatedly been cited in every thread on SDN that i've found refer to rankings based on "residency director rating score" from USNews' Compass subscription service, which is something that's performed by USNews themselves using a questionable methodology that isn't even fully disclosed, and is already incorporated (20% weight) into USNews rankings as it is. If you put any stock into this score, that score still puts NYU at #20 instead of their USNews rank of #12, which isn't anything close to the type of gulf that's portrayed on SDN.
Match lists, step scores, etc. =/= reputation. Reputation is what the medical community as a whole thinks about the school and you can't honestly believe that NYU has a name anywhere near as big as Harvard's or Hopkins'. Take a look at their match list as well (https://nyulangone.org/files/2017-match-list.pdf) and compare that to other schools in the top 10. If you don't have experience reading match lists, you might see that they match to a lot of top places. But take a look at match lists from, other top ten programs and look for detail.
I'm pretty sure that the PD score is quite straightforward. Straight from the US News website:
"Survey recipients were asked to rate programs on a scale from 1 (marginal) to 5 (outstanding). Those individuals who did not know enough about a program to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know."
A school's score is the average rating of all the respondents who rated it in the three most recent years of survey results. Responses of "don't know" counted neither for nor against a school."
The point of the matter is, if you want a specific metric on a school, go look it up for yourself. If you want to know what PDs think about a school, that information is there in raw form. If you want NIH funding data for a program, you can also see that data easily. Why do you feel the need to use a system that assigns arbitrary weights to many factors to arrive at a composite score that is actually meaningless?
My understanding of the ranking methodology is that it uses the yearly NIH grants to the institution. Did Sandy somehow cause them to still be winning tens of millions more in annual biomed grants 5 years later?
How many residency directors were surveyed? No one knows. How was the sample constructed? No one knows. What specific fields? No one knows. How was the decision to assign residency programs to the "primary care" survey that's excluded from the score, rather than the "research" survey made? No one knows. The "residency director score" tables/rankings that get repeatedly linked on SDN represent the results of their "research" survey, and so excludes any residency program that was deemed by USNews to fall into "primary care" (family practice, pediatrics, internal medicine, and an unknown number of others) - how wouldn't this alone heavily influence the results, given that all you get in terms of "raw data" is a single number per school?
I agree with you about USNews as a ranking system - I don't think USNews rankings is a great metric, and the decisions made by them for what contributes to the score and what doesn't is extremely arbitrary. However, I disagree that data about how PDs feel about a school really is that readily available in raw form - all that's available in terms of data is a single number from USNews per school, with a lot of essential information about how this number was generated kept shrouded in mystery, and not exactly immune from USNews tendency to make arbitrary decisions either due to things like their decision to separate "research" fields from "primary care" fields. Unless you want to blindly trust random graphs linked on SDN that are varying number of years out of date, this information isn't even that easily available as it is since its locked behind USNews Compass' paid subscription that very few people are willing to shell out for.
More than that, I just wanted to dispute this perception SDN has of NYU as a mid-tier school that manipulated USNews rankings to give the false illusion of being a top 20 school due to an apparent giant gulf between their reputation and USNews ranking, since this is something that has become so pervasive I've had it repeated to me more than once by fellow applicants on several of my interview days this cycle as a reason why they're not seriously considering NYU (you would think everyone capable of getting interview invites to top 20 schools would know better, but nope). If we take USNews' residency director score as the benchmark for "reputation", NYU's residency director score has increased almost in tandem with their USNews ranking over the last decade (+18 vs. +15), and while it's absolutely lower, its not as huge of a difference as people make it out to be - they still would be top 20 and nowhere close to a "mid-tier" school even if all you looked at was this residency director "reputation" score alone.