do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?
Discussion about medicine applications and medicine.
-
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?Well, if you can't even get 50% after two attempts, you obviously don't know enough to put people's lives in your hands...(Original post by tpxvs)
Oh geeeee, so if you failed an exam and got told to resit, did better but still not quite passed it, you're forced to leave? What about if you've passed all the other exams, but there's one you're just finding really difficult, but if you fail it twice - you're out? now i'm worried!! even if this happens in the later years, so youve done 4 years but somehow really struggling at the last hurdle and they throw you out for failing twice?
But seriously don't worry, you'll be able to do it
-
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?Well, would you want a doctor that kept failing exams?(Original post by tpxvs)
Oh geeeee, so if you failed an exam and got told to resit, did better but still not quite passed it, you're forced to leave? What about if you've passed all the other exams, but there's one you're just finding really difficult, but if you fail it twice - you're out? now i'm worried!! even if this happens in the later years, so youve done 4 years but somehow really struggling at the last hurdle and they throw you out for failing twice?
The exams at medical school are not impossible - they are set so that an average student will pass with a reasonable amount of preparation - and most do, some with the odd resit here and there (unlike postgraduate exams where the pass rate is usually around 30-40%). If you are really struggling with a subject then the strategy should be to speak to your tutors about it and get extra teaching, rather than hope that they'll be lenient after you flunk your exams.
When it comes to finals, they really don't want you to fail, because a)it reflects badly on them and b)it screws up FY1 coverage for the next year if too many people fail. Different med schools have come up with different strategies, like doing the exams earlier in the year so there's time for a resit before August, or pulling out students before the exams and making them repeat the year (Cambridge do this). If you have got as far as finals without slipping up too much, and work sensibly and steadily, you will pass. If for whatever reason you haven't, and you fail, don't you agree that it wouldn't be fair on the general public to let through a doctor who hadn't passed all their exams? -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?(Original post by Booyah)
So just to ask what are the exams like for people who are in medical school? For example in anatomy do you have to write down each functioning muscle and what did does and things like that?
Would love to know
Its not only multiple choice everywhere, just to be clear.(Original post by GdotL)
It's multiple choice lolz.
Anatomy is also very, very easy here too though. Oxford is notorious for teaching the absolute minimum GMC allows
Last edited by nexttime; 18-05-2012 at 09:09. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?At least at Oxford you have the tutes and essays - imagine just having the bare syllabus(Original post by nexttime)
Its not multiple choice everywhere, just to be clear.
Its also very, very easy here too though. Oxford is notorious for teaching the absolute minimum GMC allows
!
-
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?I suspect that would have been my graduating year. It is all about to change but in my year for your finals you did 4 clinical exams. obs&gynae and paeds osce, surgical osce, intergrated clinical exam and the medical osce. You could fail and resit all of them bar the medical osce and if you passed then you would graduate that summer. If you failed the medical osce only you would have to resit it in November and there for wouldn't be able to start the foundation program until the following summer (most people locumed). If you failed the medical osce and one of the others than you had to resit the year.(Original post by InkyOne)
I have a friend that insists that a few years ago at BSMS loads of people in one year had to leave because they failed or something, but I don't know it there's any truth in it at all...
In my year a reasonably large number of people (I heard 9-10/120 but that could be wrong) failed something which meant that they didn't graduate with us. However most of them resat the component that they failed or the year and got through and started the foundation period a year later.
I wouldn't say that BSMS were particularly harder than any other medical school. They had the policy that is shared by many that if you fail the exam and then the resit then you either have to resit the year or potentially leave. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?(Original post by randdom)
They had the policy that is shared by many that if you fail the exam and then the resit then you either have to resit the year or potentially leave.
Ah I see, so you're never forced to leave you always have the option of retaking the year is it? Or can you only do this once? -
This varies depending on the medical school. At sheffield, if you fail the exam, you can resit it 4 weeks later. Failing that, you will be asked to resit the year with full attendance. If you fail the exam a 3rd time, you will be advised to leave the course and the uni will discuss with you other options.(Original post by tpxvs)
Ah I see, so you're never forced to leave you always have the option of retaking the year is it? Or can you only do this once?
via TSR Mobile App. Excuse any typos. =] -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?It really depends what has happened prior to it how many thing you have failed etc. But it is the first time you have had this problem you will often get to resit the year if you fail the retake. Though not always.(Original post by tpxvs)
Ah I see, so you're never forced to leave you always have the option of retaking the year is it? Or can you only do this once? -
That's really not for me to say, but he's definitely doing what he loves now.(Original post by flopsy89)
Wanna hook me up?
I love Dry the River but I think living medical school for a career in music is a massive step! Did he hate the course or something? -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?The default position is often that if you fail a resit, you're out (or at least off the medicine course), but really it very much depends on the circumstances. The number of students failing resits is so small that in general they look at each case individually. If the student had extenuating circumstances, or if they're an otherwise decent student who had one bad exam (well, two, if they failed the exam and its resit) then they may be allowed another resit, or to repeat a year. If there are no extenuating circumstances, if they fail more than one thing, or if there's a feeling that this failure is part of a bigger picture, then they're more likely to have to leave. There are no hard and fast rules, and it will vary between universities and depending on which set of exams it is.(Original post by tpxvs)
Ah I see, so you're never forced to leave you always have the option of retaking the year is it? Or can you only do this once?
From my year, I can remember a few who were forced to change to natural sciences after first year, and a few more who were allowed to complete their pre-clinical degree but not allowed to apply to clinical school. Cambridge likes to keep its dropout rate low so other unis may be more likely just to kick someone out rather than let them change to another course. In clinical years swapping to another subject is not possible, so more people had to repeat a year, but I can't think of anyone who was actually kicked out.
You shouldn't let this panic you too much before you start though!Last edited by Helenia; 18-05-2012 at 22:08. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?(Original post by gozatron)
Cadaver tests in second year.
Think you just triggered some flashbacks. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?Absolutely no truth in that. People fail every year at every medical school, but theres never been an abnormally huge chunk of people in one go at bsms.(Original post by InkyOne)
I have a friend that insists that a few years ago at BSMS loads of people in one year had to leave because they failed or something, but I don't know it there's any truth in it at all... -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?The fact that they have dropped out of a medical degree may prove to be a burden.(Original post by AishaTara)
some will drop out, some may go into research, others into future study like PhD or study dentistry so they can do Maxillofacial surgery, and later on some go into lecturing. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?You won't be able to do any of these things unless you pass and graduate...(Original post by AishaTara)
some will drop out, some may go into research, others into future study like PhD or study dentistry so they can do Maxillofacial surgery, and later on some go into lecturing. -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?Most people tend to fail due to lack of effort. The exams are set so majority will pass if they put in the work needed. The school is not out there to fail students. These exams are designed to catch those who don't put enough effort into studying/revising. When the people who failed have an academic meeting, it is found that most if not all did not do enough reading/did not start early enough with revision/have no worked throughout the course and decided to cram. It is very rarely the exam's fault that people fail (the only time you know that there is a problem with the exam is when the pass mark for the year is 10% lower than the year before and that 20% of the year had failed).(Original post by MJHERBZ)
Do people tend to fail through lack of effort more so than exams being simply to difficult? Obviously you need to be clever to even get onto the course, is it then generally a case of just putting in the work? -
Re: do all medical students pass uni and graduate as a doctor?This is very reassuring to hear, thanks! I'll be starting in a few months and although I consider myself clever it's still a pretty daunting thought! All worth it though(Original post by magichearts)
Most people tend to fail due to lack of effort. The exams are set so majority will pass if they put in the work needed. The school is not out there to fail students. These exams are designed to catch those who don't put enough effort into studying/revising. When the people who failed have an academic meeting, it is found that most if not all did not do enough reading/did not start early enough with revision/have no worked throughout the course and decided to cram. It is very rarely the exam's fault that people fail (the only time you know that there is a problem with the exam is when the pass mark for the year is 10% lower than the year before and that 20% of the year had failed).