QUOTE(csrulez @ Jun 24 2008, 12:15 PM)
Therefore the only thing a private medical school can do to increase the quality of doctors produced and to earn money at the same time, is to drop out students who can't cope with the curriculum itself. Drop up rates are higher if the entry requirement is lower, i presume. The curriculum should also be updated from time to time to follow the medical trend.
onelove89, ya can check out this site for more info on our present curriculum.
http://www.aimst.edu.my/facultiesn/faculti...ils/medprog.asp
Anyways, I believed i've learned alot from this forum regarding the medical profession.
Not that easy. One main problem faced by all local private medical schools: shortage of lecturers. Therefore, they tend to import lecturers from India and Myanmar. This is, however, a temporary solution as we need Msian doctors to teach us how to deal with patients following Malaysian Protocol, not Indian or Burmese Protocol. I believe there's a shortage of quality lecturers in public Us too.onelove89, ya can check out this site for more info on our present curriculum.
http://www.aimst.edu.my/facultiesn/faculti...ils/medprog.asp
Anyways, I believed i've learned alot from this forum regarding the medical profession.
Also, as i have stated before, meeting the minimum requirement doesn't necessarily guarantee a place. I am not sure about AIMST but in IMU and Manipal this is the case. Try applying IMU with SAM TER 85-90 and you'll definitely be rejected. For Manipal, it's very difficult to enter if you are not sponsored by JPA. In the latest batch, only less than 40 self funded students out of 120 students. The rest is all JPA sponsored.
This post has been edited by hypermax: Jun 24 2008, 12:34 PM
Jun 24 2008, 12:24 PM

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