cc debt from applying to medical schools.
Ummmm. this first.
Then study.
cc debt from applying to medical schools.
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Sheesh… I didn’t get that vibe at all visiting schools, but one thing I’ve learned is that a lot of times, when a bunch of smart people with experience say the same thing, it is usually right.
Not too concerned about these loans anymore. Deferment while in school, and prioritizing academics/minimizing additional loans.
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You have one and only job, focus on doing well in school. Even giving it 100% will keep you barely above water.
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I hear this sentiment a lot but I’m not sure how true it is. At most of the pass fail schools I interviewed, there were many students who said the most serious grind was only around step 1 and 2. Yale is P/F for even clerkship shelf exams; students raved about all the netflix they were watching. Non-sequitur to original post and my $0.02 but thought it was worth mentioning.
@dmfa thank you, I didn’t know I could go into deferment in graduate school. Both loans are already in repayment because I am a non-traditional applicant (2 years out of college), but I think I can request to return to deferment once school begins again. You’re right; I’ll have a higher financial return on energy spent minimizing additional debt and living within means (while staying sane).
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i vividly remember the first day of medical school. i guess they were trying to rein in competitive behaviors from previous years. students would hide books in the library and stuff like that. they wanted to encourage collaboration. they announced over and over again it is totally pass fail. no advantage to doing well. at the start of every class. work with classmates, not against them. i was stupid and raised by wolves so i naively believed them. somewhere around third year there was this aoa thing announced.
i’m like, what’s that?
honor society. recognition for the advanced students.
well how do they know who is advanced, i asked.
from your grades.
thought it was pass fail.
it is, but still keep track.
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i was really offended. i mean if you are going to do pass fail, then do it. no need for honor society. of course, those things help them get students into selective training programs so i get the need, but then don’t lie to my face about it.
people can do whatever they want with their time. if they want to watch netflix, they are the ones who will pay the price later. it’s a wonderful time to learn things, but someday reality comes crashing hard. there is a ton of material to learn, more than there ever was. if they have so much free time and they can learn all the material, then medical school is either doing something really right or really wrong.
i can’t tell how many times i watched fellow students cry and scream and break down from the stress of trying to learn all the material when i was a student. admittedly i was an economics major so i had a harder road perhaps than a phd biochem student the first two years. i don’t recall anyone bragging about how much free time they had. people were still trying to get a leg up through research or volunteering or whatever. maybe they fixed medical school now though and it’s easier. for sure there’s a ton of stuff that’s not practical for most practicing physicians. but it’s the kind of thing where you don’t know what you don’t know, until you need it.
if everyone’s watching a lot of netflix, then i take back any concerns i had over student loans. they can work and cut back the loan burden.
for the OP, i agree with what’s already been well stated.
the doors to the future are based on step 1 scores. save the money for boards prep material, interview expenses. if possible, a vacation of some form during summer between first and second years. trying to reduce loan burden that you have is really losing sight of the big picture. jmo, ymmv
Click to expand...
You have one and only job, focus on doing well in school. Even giving it 100% will keep you barely above water.
Click to expand…
I hear this sentiment a lot but I’m not sure how true it is. At most of the pass fail schools I interviewed, there were many students who said the most serious grind was only around step 1 and 2. Yale is P/F for even clerkship shelf exams; students raved about all the netflix they were watching. Non-sequitur to original post and my $0.02 but thought it was worth mentioning.
@dmfa thank you, I didn’t know I could go into deferment in graduate school. Both loans are already in repayment because I am a non-traditional applicant (2 years out of college), but I think I can request to return to deferment once school begins again. You’re right; I’ll have a higher financial return on energy spent minimizing additional debt and living within means (while staying sane).
Click to expand...
You have one and only job, focus on doing well in school. Even giving it 100% will keep you barely above water.
Click to expand...
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