Why I Made Answers.md
I did it becuase Med students deserve our support, and here’s why.
A brief outline of what it takes to become a doctor:
Take SATs Apply for College 4 years of Pre-Med (all those hard science classes) Take MCATs (maybe twice) Apply for Med School 2 years of lecture (8 hours of lecture + 6-8 hours of studying) Take Step 1 of the Board Exams 2 years of Rotations Take Step 2 of the Board Exams Apply for Residency 1 year of Residency Step 3 of the Board Exams 1-3 years more of Residency Specialist examinations Finally, If you passed everything and got accepted to Med School and Residency programs, You are now a Practicing Doctor. (Let’s not even get into the debt you’ve just accumulated).
The Life of an aspiring doctor is one of perpetual studying and test taking. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing considering the responsibilities a Doctor has.
For a profession that is so focused on learning and acquiring new skills, you would think there would be amazing tools to help make the life of a student a little easier.
Sadly, you’d be mistaken.
Between recycled lecture notes and $100+ textbooks, students have few resources for outside support. Wikipedia has become the defacto resource of Med Students across the country.
Answers.Md Is my attempt to make the painful process of becoming a doctor a little less excruciating. And, as a question and answer site, it may not be the best solution, but it’s a start.
Have any ideas on how to help Med Students?, or ideas on how to improve answers.md? Send me an email at help@answers.md, and let’s figure out how to make Med Students’ lives a little less hellish.
0 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 6.8 ms ] threadNo comments yet.