Positively
3 out of 10
8 out of 10
9 out of 10
45 minutes
At the school
5
One-on-one
Open file
"Why MD/PhD?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Why Mayo?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Would you quit your PhD if your project didn't work out like you wanted it to?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Who is your hero?" Report Response | I was asked this question too
"Explain a failure in your life and how you dealt/deal with it." Report Response | I was asked this question too
"SDN, school's website, AMCAS application" Report Response
"The people are very nice. The facilities are BEAUTIFUL. There is a scholarship that anyone who wants it (in medical school) can get to go abroad to help underserved areas. The MD/PhD pays for your entire time in the program--even during your grad school years so the responsibility doesn't fall on your PI. Cost of living is INCREDIBLY cheap. Rochester is very safe. M1 and M2 are pass/fail." Report Response
"Rochester is, well, small. There wouldn't be a lot of opportunities for my fiance, although someone in the program said his wife was able to find a job at Mayo (because where else would you work in Rochester, beside IBM?). The medical school is very inflexible about re-entering into your M3 year--you have about a 2-month window during the fall before you have to wait until the next year to start your M3. There isn't an abundance of laboratories in the Virology and Immunology departments (my area of interest) but each lab does GREAT research. In your M1 year you don't do anatomy until the middle of the year. Also you only get 5 weeks off in the summer--only enough time to barely do one lab rotation, which only lasts one month (SHORT!)." Report Response
"M1/M2 are pass/fail. Also that Rochester is very small, and it basically consists of Mayo and IBM." Report Response
"You have 5 interviews during the day, and 2 faculty interviews whose labs you would like to work in. The interviews are a bit long (45 minutes) and they are particularly looking to see if you will quit the PhD portion of the program halfway through. You go out to dinner with students that night, then meet for lunch the next day. Then you go on a TWO AND A HALF HOUR tour (a bit long) that is actually very complete. You even get to see the helipad! That night you have dinner at the director's house with students and faculty, and basically they are looking to see if you are well-adjusted or not. They are great about answering questions and discussing the downfalls of the program." Report Response
Student
Enthusiastic
10 out of 10
Out of state
7+ hours
Airplane
< $100
RST
Hotel
10 out of 10
Marriott
yes
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