My Academic Experience at CDU with Yomi
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
So I'm just gonna talk a bit about what a perspective medical student or resident can expect as far as the rigors and day to day expectations. I'll start from the medical school perspective because I think it's a it's a perspective that you'll take through into residency. What I've always described med school for people who were in the application process is you can expect it to feel like you're drinking from a firehose. Right? So just imagine a massive amount of information coming your way and you being expected to absorb as much of it as possible. It's going to feel somewhat impossible at first. What you'll do to be successful in medical school is develop a system that allows you to assimilate information in a structured manner and the most efficient way possible. It takes very diligent study To get through the four years of medical school. If you're like a fish and you just keep swimming, you'll eventually get through. Once you get to the second half of medical school, you transition away from sort of purely classroom based learning to actual essentially internship type learning on the job type training. This is the part of medical school that's called your medical rotations, rotations are done at hospitals and clinics. You work underneath residents or attending physicians and you start to see patients going through physical examination getting a history of course and then formulating your idea for, you know, what may be going wrong with the patient with a diagnosis maybe and developing a plan and the assessment and planned portion is sort of what you become stronger and stronger at toward the end of medical school and then going into residency.