The AMA Virtual Mentor web site has an interesting and helpful variety of
articles.  They don't seem to back away from the controversial.  You check
what they have to say once or twice a month  (new issue online each month.)


 

Virtual Mentor 

American Medical Association Journal of Ethics 

November 2009, Volume 11, Number 11: 859-863. 

MEDICAL EDUCATION 

The Winnowing Fork of Premedical Education: Are We Really Separating the
Wheat from the Chaff? 

Raymond G. De Vries, PhD, and Jeffrey Gross 

It is Welcome Week 2009 at the University of Michigan and we are sitting in
a large room where 400 bright-eyed, first-year university students are
nervously chatting with each other, waiting for advice on how to
successfully navigate their premedical years. These eager young men and
women are getting the chance to meet their colleagues (competitors?) and to
learn a few facts about the medical school admission process. 

Using an interactive PowerPoint presentation, the organizers of the
orientation offer information about life as premeds, including (1) who their
peers are (25.9 percent of students enrolled in the College of Literature,
Science, and Arts expressed an interest in a career in health), (2) their
likelihood of getting admitted to medical school (in 2008, 45 percent of the
42,231 applicants to medical schools in the United States were admitted, and
at the University of Michigan, 52 percent of those who applied were
admitted), (3) the co-curricular activities most desired by medical school
admission committees (shadowing, working in an emergency department, helping
disabled kids, doing research-although, if you must choose, patient care is
preferred over time in the lab), and (4) acceptable reasons for delaying
application to medical school past the junior or senior years. An auditorium
full of would-be doctors listens intently, scribbling notes on the handouts
provided at the door. 

And so the premedical experience begins. 

Flash back several months to the spring of 2009 and a meeting on a different
Midwestern campus. The attendees are medical school faculty and residents;
the topic is the use of narrative in the training of medical students. The
discussion centers on the sorry social skills of medical students and the
need to help the next generation of doctors remember that patients are
people with lives, emotions, and relationships-all of which influence their
health, the way they hear and interpret diagnoses and recommendations for
treatments, and their choice to comply or not comply with medical advice. At
one point, a faculty member asks: "What happened to these students? Surely
when they entered medical school, they were capable of carrying on a
conversation with other human beings." 

Well, maybe not. What happens to premeds? How do those eager,
high-achieving, gregarious first-year students, intent on careers in
medicine, become the drones that need corrective education in the humanities
during their medical school years? 

www.virtualmentor.org Virtual Mentor, November 2009-Vol 11 859

Premedical education has an important, but mostly unrecognized influence on
the attitudes, character, and moral lives of medical students. When medical
educators think about premedical education (which is not all that often)
they focus their attention on the substantive content of the premedical
curriculum. The "hidden premedical curriculum"-things learned indirectly
from professors, advisors, peers, relatives, books, the media, and
extracurricular activities-is ignored. If we wish to understand the
character of first-year medical students, we must first understand the many
ways the experience of being a premedical student influences not just
performance on the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT), but ideas about
success, relationships, and caring for others [1]. 

Although it is nearly 100 years old, Abraham Flexner's "Medical Education in
the United States and Canada" continues to exert a powerful influence on
premedical education. Before the Flexner Report, medical schools varied
greatly in their entrance requirements, curriculum, and quality of education
[2]. Flexner's desire to bring medical education into the 20th century led
him to promote a standardized curriculum that gives "formal analytic
reasoning, the kind of thinking integral to the natural sciences.pride of
place in the intellectual training of physicians" [3]. The science-oriented
premedical curriculum found in virtually all undergraduate institutions
today emerged as a response to the need for premeds to prepare themselves
for the new scientific education offered by post-Flexner medical schools. 

In the 10 decades since the publication of the Flexner Report, there have
been several efforts to reform premedical education to make the premedical
years more relevant to the work of doctoring. Not surprisingly, reformers
often disagreed about just what it was that premedical students needed to
learn. Some argued for eliminating a defined premedical curriculum
altogether, others called for a stronger emphasis on the humanities and
social sciences, and, recently, reformers have been making the case for
keeping the basic science focus of the curriculum, but with updated
requirements-including statistics, business management, and medical
ethics-required for the practice of 21st century medicine [4-8]. 

Notice that all these wished-for changes in premedical education focus on
the content of the curriculum and not on the experience of being a premed.
While we do not deny the value of substantive preparation in the social and
natural sciences and in the humanities, we wish to point out that premedical
students learn many lessons as they prepare themselves, and their
applications, for medical school. The premedical experience-the strategies
learned for succeeding in difficult courses and for grooming one's image for
a medical school admission committee-gives students a moral education,
showing them what it takes to get ahead, what it takes to become a doctor. 

In our review of the guidance given to students on their college's
premedical advising web sites we noticed a subtle but important distinction
between developing and demonstrating character [1]. Premedical advisors are
aware that the premedical years should both build and reflect the character,
but they cannot help being strategic in their advice to students. We
discovered that there is a continuum of advice giving. 

Virtual Mentor, November 2009-Vol 11 www.virtualmentor.org 860 

On one end of this continuum is the strategic-"you must do this to satisfy
the admission committee"-and on the other end there is advice on creating
character-"do this to develop the kind of character that will make a good
physician." 

Fine gradations in language distinguish advice on "how to build one's
character" from the more instrumental "how to impress an admissions
committee." 

For example, the University of Virginia tells premeds that doing research
will "demonstrate in-depth, sustained scholarly exploration, as well as the
presence of lifelong learning skills that are essential in these
professions" (emphasis added) [9]. Notice that premeds are not told that
research will develop these qualities; rather, the advice is geared toward
the strategic goal of demonstrating character. Similarly, premeds at Iowa
State are told of the strategic value of extracurricular activities, 

Extracurricular activities that focus on leadership and community service
have become very important for admission, especially to medical school. Get
involved [10]. 

Advice about the value of volunteer work is much the same. At Wittenburg
College, advisors suggest that volunteering 2 to 3 hours each week during
the semester demonstrates to the schools your loyalty and commitment to the
profession. Premeds at Swarthmore are told: 

If you volunteer either during the school year or the summer in health care
related facilities, it shows you are motivated and committed to helping
people. It also demonstrates to medical school admissions committees that
you have seen firsthand what a medical setting is like [11]. 

The emphasis is on the strategic-medical school applicants must show or
demonstrate their character. 

Conversations with premedical students and premedical advisors reveal a
disconnect between the views of these two groups toward the premedical
years. In the eyes of the advisors, the path to medical school is best
described as a journey, the demands of which help students discover their
fit with a career in medicine or with the characteristics of different
medical schools. Students have a different view, seeing the experience more
as a competition than a journey. For them, the time is not a voyage of
self-discovery but a set of obstacles to overcome on the way to the elusive
goal of medical school admission. Taking their cue from the strategic advice
they have been given, they carefully plan their undergraduate years-avoiding
classes that might have been helpful to a future physician but might harm
their GPA, calculating which clinical and research experiences will look
good on their application, and cultivating relationships with professors
with the sole purpose of obtaining positive letters of reference. 

The American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC) has recognized that
something is amiss in premedical education. Their 2009 report, "Scientific
Foundations for Future Physicians," describes the need for change: 

www.virtualmentor.org Virtual Mentor, November 2009-Vol 11 861

This report stems largely from the concern that premedical course
requirements have been static for decades and may not accurately reflect the
essential competencies every entering medical student must have mastered,
today and in the future [8]. 

The report goes on to note the value of a broad, liberal arts education for
the nation's future doctors: 

The work of the committee is based on the premise that the undergraduate
years are not and should not be aimed at students preparing for professional
school. Instead, the undergraduate years should be devoted to creative
engagement in the elements of a broad, intellectually expansive liberal arts
education. Therefore, the time commitment for achieving required scientific
competencies should not be so burdensome that the medical school candidate
would be limited to the study of science with little time available to
pursue other academically challenging scholarly avenues that are also the
foundation of intellectual growth [8]. 

But, curiously, the report focuses exclusively on the natural sciences,
describing eight competencies, all in the natural and physical sciences,
that should be acquired in medical school, and eight competencies, again,
all in the natural and physical sciences, required of those who enter
medical school. 

Those who are concerned about the character of our nation's physicians-about
their ability to reason morally, to diagnose by listening to patient
stories, and to care about patient's lives and not just their cells and
organs-must think deeply about the way students land on the doorstep of
medical school. When we use the winnowing fork of GPA and MCAT scores, are
we separating the wheat from the chaff? Does the premedical experience
create medical students with the skills to become healers? 

On the basis of our research and observations, we suggest a new approach to
premedical education-an approach that not only provides the nuts and bolts
of recommended coursework and necessary preparation for the MCAT, but that
also gives students the opportunity to step back and reflect on the path to
a career in health care. Students must realize that the undergraduate
premedical experience is not just a means to enter medical school; it is
also an experience that is shaping character. The best way to help premeds
understand the influence of the hidden curriculum is not another class on
ethics or professionalism. What is needed is a course that encourages
students, early in their premedical careers, to reflect on their motives for
choosing to become a physician, to recognize the influence of the premedical
culture on their behavior, and to understand the difference between the
demonstration and the development of character [1]. 

References 

 

1. Gross JP, Mommaerts CD, Earl D, De Vries RG. After a century of
criticizing premedical education, are we missing the point? Acad Med.
2008:83(5):516-520. 

 

Virtual Mentor, November 2009-Vol 11 www.virtualmentor.org 862 

 

2. Flexner A. Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A Report to
the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Bulletin No. 4.
Boston, MA: Updyke; 1910. 

 

3. Cooke M, Irby DM, Sullivan W, Ludmerer KM. American medical education 100
years after the Flexner Report. N Engl J Med. 2006:355(13):1339-1344. 

 

4. Thomas L. The medusa and the snail. N Engl J Med. 1977:296(19):1104. 

 

5. Wold SG. I can't afford a B. N Engl J Med. 1978:299(17):949-950. 

 

6. Gellhorn A. Letter: premedical curriculum. J Med Educ. 1976:51(7 Pt
1):616-617. 

 

7. Emanuel EJ. Changing premed requirements and the medical curriculum.
JAMA. 2006:296(9):1128-1131. 

 

8. Association of American Medical Colleges. Scientific foundations for
future physicians. 2009.
https://services.aamc.org/publications/showfile.cfm?file=version132.pdf&prd_
id=262&prv_id=321&pdf_id=132. Accessed October 8, 2009. 

 

9. University of Virginia. University career services. 2009.
http://www.career.virginia.edu/students/preprof/prehealth/extra.php.
Accessed October 8, 2009. 

 

10. Iowa State University. Preparation for pre-health professions. 2009.
http://www.las.iastate.edu/academics/prehealth/preparing.shtml. Accessed
October 9, 2009. 

 

11. Swarthmore College. Pre-med advising.
http://www.swarthmore.edu/x8886.xml. Accessed October 8, 2009. 

 

Raymond G. De Vries, PhD, is a professor in the bioethics program in the
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the Department of Medical
Education at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor. He is
the author of A Pleasing Birth: Midwifery and Maternity Care in the
Netherlands and coeditor of The View from Here: Bioethics and the Social
Sciences. In addition to his research on premedical education, Dr. De Vries
is writing a critical social history of bioethics and is studying the
regulation of science; international research ethics; the difficulties of
informed consent; bioethics and the problem of suffering; and the social,
ethical, and policy issues associated with non-medically indicated surgical
birth. 

Jeffrey Gross is a first-year medical student at the Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. 

The viewpoints expressed on this site are those of the authors and do not
necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AMA. 

Copyright 2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. 

www.virtualmentor.org Virtual Mentor, November 2009-Vol 11 863

 

Please see our website
http://www.hunter.cuny.edu/studentservices/prehealth/postba   for further
information.  We would be happy to answer other questions via email.
Information sessions regarding the postbaccalaureate certificate program are
offered through Hunter's Office of Admissions in their Welcome Center.
Please see our website for upcoming sessions.



Mrs.Wood-Hill
Director, Prehealth Professions Advising Programs
Hunter College of CUNY
695 Park Ave, E812
NY, NY 10065
212-772-5121
FAX: 212-772-5138
http://studentservices.hunter.cuny.edu/prehealth.htm

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