Weill Cornell Medical College: Acceptance Rate,Admissions, Yearly Tuition, GPA and MCAT scores

Recently renamed tor generous benefactor Sanford Weill, head of CitiGroup, the Weill Medical College of Cornell University celebrated its centennial in 1998. The school and its associated medical center enjoy a well earned reputation in New York and around the world for first class health care as well as academic prowess. Overlooking the East River, Cornell is located in one of New York's most exclusive neighborhoods, and patients at New York Hospital, the main teaching affiliate, tend to reflect this demographic.

Cornell Medical School requirements (GPA and MCAT scores)

GPA Ranges:

10th percentile: 3.58 science/3.63 total

25th percentile: 3.77 science/3.78 total

Median: 3.9 science/3.9 total

75th percentile: 3.98 science/3.97 total

90th percentile: 4.00 science/3.98 total

MCAT Ranges:


10th percentile: 513

25th percentile: 517

Median: 518

75th percentile: 522

90th percentile: 526

Weill Medical College of Cornell University Acceptance Rate

Over 6,000-7000 applicants apply to Cornell Medical School each year. 750-800 applicants are invited to interview, and approximately 100 are accepted for admission.

Of those matriculants, 38.7% were in-state applicants and 63.1% were out of state.

How much does Cornell Medical School usually cost?

Weill Medical College's yearly tuition is $58,000-$65,000 plus fees.

Preclinical Years 

Classes start most mornings at 8 a.m., and a student's absence will be noted, since many classes are small. The flip side is that with classes ending by 1 p.m., many students find enough time to pursue nonmedical activities during their afternoons. Except for gross anatomy, all basic science courses are taught in the state of the art Weill Education Center, which encompasses 20,000 square feet and was completed in 1996. The center is close to the Samuel J. Wood Library and the C. V, Starr Biomedical Information Center. Professors are universally dedicated and caring and promote as much of a stress free atmosphere as possible. 

Lesson plan

The first year consists of three months of Molecules to Cells, 3 months of Human Structure and Function, one month of Genetics, and a month and a half of Immunology. Molecules to Cells is a well integrated study of cell biology, biochemistry, and molecular biology, while Genetics is thought to be poorly organized. 

Human Structure and Function incorporates basic anatomy, physiology, histology, embryology, and radiology in one course. Although physiology is taught quite well, the kidney gets only one week. Anatomy labs, assisted by fourth year students, are taught sideby side with a well run radiology section, which allows students to better visualize anatomy much better and offers an edge later on clinical rotations. Some say histology is taught by the best professor of the year. There is no point, however, in going to embryology lectures. Overall, the ambitious Human Structure and Function course is felt to be stuffed into too short a time frame; many feel that anatomy could have been taught in more depth. 
Throughout the year, problem based sessions are scheduled on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings. Students enjoy the sessions and say that making presentations on the fictional cases allows a good understanding of disease mechanisms, clinical presentations, and differential diagnoses. Lectures, which are usually followed by half-hour question andanswer sessions, range from excellent and clear to obtuse and boring, but the majority are well organized and useful. The week is rounded out by up to three problem set work sessions, one multiple choice quiz, a student run journal club, and labs during the appropriate courses. A sometimes harrowing, but always educational, experience is the Triple Jump, in which a student receives a case and must determine which tests to order and hypothesize a diagnosis and mechanisms of disease all without any help from sources or other students. 

In the second year, courses include the popular Brain and Mind, which incorporates neurology, neuroanatomy, psychiatry, and pathology. Medicine, Patients and Society, which begins in the first year, continues. Each Thursday, students meet for one or two lectures, a discussion section, and several hours in a doctor's office. The material in this course changes with each unit, starting with ethics and empathy and then moving into examination skills, biostatistics, epidemiology, and then clinical diagnosis. 

Clinical Years 

Cornell students rotate through several hospitals, including the Upper East Side's New York Hospital, Queens- New York Hospital, Manhassett's North Shore University Hospital (shared with New York University) and the Westchester County psychiatry division. Noticeably, there are no public hospitals on this roster, which can at times limit the amount of independence and hands on training available to students. At the same time, New York Hospital (recently merged with Presbyterian Hospital, which does not affect medical students) is a renowned clinical facihty that draws patients with rare diseases from around the world. In addition, the medical school maintains major affiliations with Memorial Sloan- Kettering Cancer Center and the Hospital for Special Surgery. 
Grading in the clinical years is honors/high pass/pass. Students give mixed grades to the internal medicine rotation, which requires one month at New York Hospital, one month at an off campus site, and one month of outpatient medicine. Perennial complaints are that the didactic schedule lacks organization and lacks a steady curriculum. The subinternship in medicine, however, is an outstanding experience. 

Surgery varies from location to location. At New York Hospital, students have ample opportunity to get to know faculty members, which is especially useful for those interested in surgical residencies. North Shore's surgery rotation stands out for superior teaching, many conferences, and leniency in grading. 

Students say that pediatrics, because of its excellent structure, is a terrific rotation. Psychiatry at the Westchester campus also receives high marks. Obstetrics and gynecology, however, is known as a particularly malignant rotation. 
The clinical experience is rounded out by traditional electives, such as dermatology and anesthesiology, and the public health elective, which in recent years has sponsored unusual trips such as going out with New York City's rat patrol. 

Social Life 

Students at Cornell tend to be a tight knit group, socializing often together. Happy hours in Olin Hall, on campus, are popular. The New York metropolitan area is well represented. The school's location offers access not only to the Upper East Side, popular among young 20 and 30 somethings, but also to the entire city. 

About 90 percent of students opt to live in campus dorms. During the first year, rent is $350 per month. Starting in the second year, rent becomes a great deal, with students sharing two- and threebedroom apartments for $520 per student per month. 

Welcome to Weill Cornell Medical College


Staffed by professors who care deeply about teaching, research and clinical medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College is a top ten medical school from which students can go anywhere.
Web https://weill.cornell.edu/



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