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When nine Yale medical students wrote to alumni last winter about changes
in the curriculum, they triggered a flood of reminiscences about the experience
of becoming a doctor at Yale.
In February, a group of medical students sat down with a
copy of the alumni directory and addressed letters to some 5,000 men and
women who had studied medicine before them at Yale. The letters contained
a statement of concern about what the students perceived as a shift in
educational philosophy and a threat to the Yale System, along with a request
for support. The students asked alumni to contact administrators and urge
them to place limits on the number of required exams (See Everyone
Loves the Yale System).

One result of the letter-writing campaign has been the culling of a rich
assortment of memories of what it was like to study medicine at Yale in
recent years and as long ago as the mid-1930s. More than any other facet
of the medical school experience, the Yale System seems to touch an emotional
chord.

It has become clear from the events since February that the Yale System
is alive and well. When Deputy Dean for Education Herbert S. Chase Jr.,
M.D., spoke to alumni leaders about the issue in June, he detailed the
efforts to strengthen medical education and mentoring at Yale and ended
his presentation by affirming, Long live the Yale System!
It is a sentiment echoed in many of the letters sent to the student committee.
Here, with the permission of the authors, is a selection of those comments.


I agree completely that it would be a sad thing to change the Yale System.

Here is how it was during the years 1937 to 1941. At first, we students
did not quite understand the examination system. The professors said take
them if you want to, take them home if you want to, return them if you
want to. It was a nice surprise, and after taking a few, we learned to
use them in various ways to make sure we were learning how to be physicians.

How did the faculty find out whether we were learning what we were supposed
to?

Personal attention: All, or most, of the faculty knew us by name. Dr.
Winternitz greeted me by name at our first meeting, and most of the others
did the same.

Face-to-face conversations: Every afternoon those who were free to do
so gathered in the large salon at 333 Cedar Street. We were treated by
the faculty ladies to coffee, tea, cookies, cigarettes (!) and, in season,
fruits. Here we met the faculty, both senior and junior, in small groups,
one faculty member and four to six students. We had an hour to an hour
and a half of man-to-man talks, discussions, even arguments.
This happened with such people as Drs. Goodman, Gilman, Blake, Winternitz
and most of the others. These get-togethers were at the core of my Yale
education. There is no way I can exaggerate their importance in gathering
solid knowledge of and feeling for medicine.

Clinical rounds: On rounds in the clinical years, we were with the senior
faculty most of the time, again with free discussions of diagnosis and
treatments.

I still think of my four years at Yale with gratitude and amazement that
so many wonderful people were there to guide me. They were the best four
years of my life.

Bjorn Lih, M.D. 41


The Yale System is a good system that helps establish self-responsibility
early. Preceptorships and frequent counseling are probably much more useful
than exams, though I think exams should be offered, too. They are a good
learning experience and help to emphasize what the faculty feels is important.
Grading without counting the grade is tedious for faculty but useful for
students. Require taking the exam and grade it, but dont count the
grade.

Henry H. Jones, M.D. 43 December


As a member of the Class of 1943, I am shocked by the medical education
you have described at Yale since my day. Self-assessments, working at
your own pace, taking time off for community service
and spending quality time with family have no place in medical
education!

The schools responsibility is to teach you the scientific facts
you must know to diagnose and treat the sick. It has nothing to do with
community service unless you work in the ER and go out with
the interns to see sick people and bring them back to the hospital or
deliver babies, as we did.

In my day we had exams and took themno self-evaluations (they are
obviously prejudiced). We had to complete a research project approved
by the head of the department in which we did it, and have it published.

What you are taught, learn and retain in medical school will make the
difference between life and death for some patient of yours in the future.
Its a great responsibility, and one of which you will have to face
and bear the consequences.

There is no quality time for family while youre in med
school nor when you are out practicing. Your patient comes first.

If I were in charge, I would see to it that you graduate knowing what
you should, with periodic exams, class attendance taken, final exams and
a research project with published paper.

Thats the way it was and should be as far as Im concerned.

Sophie Trent Stevens, M.D. 43


The most important piece of information that I learned in medical school,
I learned on my first day when Dean Winternitz welcomed us and outlined
the next four years for us. He stated that if we were going to succeed
in medicine, we should not close our books upon graduation, but should
remain students for the rest of our lives. This advice made the practice
of medicine for 53 years very enjoyable for me.

A. Reese Matteson, M.D. 44


My father, John P. Peters, M.D., moved my mother, pregnant with me, to
take a position at Yale as professor of medicine in 1921. He was one of
the founders of the Yale System and an ardent supporter of it. I first
learned of it as a child. For a number of evenings each spring he would
close himself into his study to read the written exams given at the end
of the second year and read by the Yale faculty. The only marks were pass
and fail.

I entered medical school at Yale in June of 1942 under this system. In
June of 1943, all but 10 of the students in our class were inducted into
the armed services. The faculty stood firm in its protection of the Yale
System for the students, privates first class or midshipmen in the Navy.
We had the freedom, even under the military, to learn the fundamental
lesson that we were responsible for our own education and should continue
so for the rest of our lives. We did OKI got the highest mark in
the country in anatomy on the national boards but missed a significant
number of lectures and decided not to do any dissection below the knee.
We could make sensible judgments, as have now at least 80 classes of Yale
medical students.

I had the opportunity to serve on the faculty of two medical schools at
their inceptionsthe University of North Carolina in 1952 and the
University of California, San Diego, in 1969. In both of these schools,
a significant number of the early faculty were Yale graduates, and we
took segments of the Yale System with us. It is hard for faculty who have
not had the privilege of working the system to accept the fact that students
can take significant responsibility for their own education. More importantly,
if marks and silly tests are not imposed, they will work collegially to
educate one another.

Richard M. Peters, M.D. 45


Northwestern has a modified Yale System and it works well. However, I
strongly support the traditional Yale System established in 1921. It not
only sets Yale apartas a graduate schoolfrom other medical
schools that act like trade schools but affords freedom of expression
and development of lifetime learning habits that are essential to the
practice of good medicine.

B. Herold Griffith, M.D. 48


The Yale System is all right for some students, but there is a significant
number of poor students who slip through the cracks and make poor physicians.
I think the Yale System should be abandoned. I think that the mandatory
thesis requirement should also be abandoned, although I won the Keese
Prize for the best thesis in 1948. The sum of the worlds medical
knowledge is so great that the students should spend all their time on
their medical studies unless they are in the M.D./Ph.D. program.

David E. Morton, M.D. 48


I am voting for the Yale System as it was in 1950. It was good for me
and seemed to be for my classmates. Ive enjoyed a 36-year career
in academic medicinebeen the head of two departments, president
of my professional society, written a lot of papersso whats
to change?

Malcolm A. Bagshaw, M.D. 50


The Yale University School of Medicine formed a model for our development
of the new School of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego,
from 1964 to 1968. All educational systems need constant surveillance
and updating but maintenance of the outstanding and unique qualities is
equally important.

Robert N. Hamburger, M.D. 51 March


Your letter addressed to my late husband, Henry M. Williams, M.D., arrived
here today and I read its contents with great interest. One line in particular
piqued my attention and aroused a memory. The line is in the second paragraph:
Instead, students have been expected to make responsible decisions
about the best use of their own time.

In his very early days as a medical student at Yale, my husband found
that his poor eyesight caused him to take unconscionable amounts of time
getting through Grays Anatomy. He soon saw that if he were
ever to graduate, let alone finish reading the book, something drastic
would have to be done.

Here is what he came up with: he sat down and copiedin his own handwritingthe
entire Grays Anatomy. Then using his own copy, able to read
it swiftly and easily, looking back and forth between sections, he was
able to read and comprehend the whole thing. I dont believe he ever
forgot a word of it.

I would call this action responsible and self-driven, and
would place it above optional self-assessments throughout their
body system modules any time.

I believe my husband would have signed the petition.

Eileen M. Williams, widow of Henry M. Williams, M.D. 52


At the time I went to medical school, Yale was known as and truly was
the only adult medical school in the country. When a large number
of students failed Step I of the USMLE 15 years ago, I suspect the deficit
was in the faculty or curriculum, not the students or the system. Through
the years there have been initiatives to change the system, in many cases
coming from faculty members who were threatened by the failure of students
to come to their lectures. Instead of looking to themselves to make their
lectures worth going to, they blamed the system. In my day, the worthwhile
lectures were crowded; the poor lectures were met with near-empty halls,
the students choosing the library instead. I suspect the same is true
today.

In the real world Yale medical school graduates have always excelled.
Please preserve Yale as the truly adult medical school.

Edward J. Gerety, M.D. 54


Abandoning or even eroding the Yale System will result in Yale graduates
being as devoid of curiosity and as boring as most physicians.

Jack Peter Green, M.D. 57


American education has tended toward narrower, more nearly vocational
goals for decades, and that narrowing of focus has always characterized
most medical education. You have only to go onto the wards of any hospital
to hear discussions of disease management and treatment that seem wholly
ignorant of the underlying pathophysiology and unconcerned about the broader
context of the symptom under discussion.

Yale has been the blessed exception, and as residency programseven
Yales ownseek standardization around some national standard
that essentially commodifies physicians and their knowledge and services,
the tradition of medicine as broad and unending, self-directed learning
is all that promises a worthwhile future to an embattled profession.

David A. Carlson, M.D. 58


I credit the Yale System with molding the most crucial part of my medical
training and fostering the independence of spirit, curiosity and investigatory
instincts that are integral to my professional functioning as an academic
clinician, investigator, teacher, writer and thinker. Had I been forced
to take tests, I would never have graduated; I was too busy absorbing
and learning. Yale is a wonderful place to begin a medical career.

Robert N. Taub, M.D. 61, Ph.D.


I found the Yale System without exams to be more stressful than the pre-med
school at Johns Hopkins with frequent exams. There at least you knew where
you stood. I strongly favor the old Yale System with its emphasis on original
research and the need to write a paper on the topic.

Charles B. Anderson, M.D. 62


The traditional Yale System is an invaluable asset. Please protect it!

Richard L. Heppner, M.D. 67


Having mandatory exams will destroy our great traditions. I chose Yale
in 1968 over many cut-throat institutions, including Harvard
and Columbia P&S, because of educational freedom. I flourished in
this environment. Yale is at the top because of this educational freedom.
Please keep it going!

Joseph L. Renda, M.D. 68


The Yale System was made for me. I have been greatly influenced by the
learning patterns and intellectual disciplines I developed in my four
years at Yale, and I am the physician I am largely because of this system.
I felt I got a Swiss cheese education. It was full of holes
and there were many things I hadnt learned, but I spent most of
my days there actively learning, stimulated by whatever I encountered
on my serendipitous path that day.

I am a clinical cardiologist, in private practice in one town for my entire
27 years of practice. I follow my patients long term, because the biggest
impact I have on their lives is not in the procedures I do but in the
care of their chronic diseases. I have chosen to ignore the wishes of
our HMOs and of the current generation of family practitioners in this
regard, and I have an exceptionally large practice of patients, for whom
I often have been the only constant in their care. What I bring to them
is largely a product of this Yale System. I read all of the major cardiology
journals cover to cover each issue. I know I am the only practicing cardiologist
in my state who attends the national meetings in my field every year without
exception. I think about the puzzles of cardiac disease and its treatment,
I challenge presenters at meetings, I debate the issues with my peers
and I bring the days harvest of these endeavors to each of my patients
every day. I love what I do. I doubt all this would be so were it not
for my having attended Yale. I was a good student in college, but Yale
medical school, and particularly the trust and freedom of its system,
opened doors in my brain I never dreamed existed, and I have inhabited
them every day of my life since.

Michael Toren, M.D. 69


The Yale System worked very well for me. I am eternally grateful!

Jerome H. Meyer, M.D. 72


Medical education is not winning the battle for humanism, intellectual
curiosity and honesty in its medical students, and the medical profession
is suffering for it. Preserving student enthusiasm and encouraging self-education
are the strengths of a system which has allowed me the ability to think
better than most of the colleagues I have worked with since I left
Yale in 1977. Ruining it in the name of conformity and standards will
land Yale in the middle of the deplorable medical educational system that
widely exists today and will ensure that its graduates will be indistinguishable
from everyone else.

Robert A Sirota, M.D. 73


When I was in medical school, I studied constantly; never having the assurance
of a passing grade on a test caused a lot of anxiety because I would look
at the textbook and see only how much I hadnt learned. It was impossible
to learn all, or even half, of the information in most textbooks. The
anxiety was productive and led to actual learning and not cramming before
an exam. I dont think I would have studied as hard if there had
been exams. Even now, I find I often study, regardless of whether CME
credits are available.

Marie Kelly, M.D. 74


The Yale System comes with a heavy responsibility for the admissions committee
and the teaching faculty.

Not everyone belongs at Yale. It takes a highly self-directed, self-motivated,
organized person to be successful there. Thus, the admissions interview
is more important than MCAT scores. It is far easier for the faculty to
hand out a written test than to truly assess a student through first-hand
discussion. I do not believe the Yale System excludes student assessment
just because there are no tests or grades. I think the faculty knew very
well how we students were doing because they made teaching their priority.
Teaching was an end in itself; it was not a part-time inconvenience for
the teacher. Many students appreciated optional tests, and self-assessment
was quite honest.

Medical students are by nature very competitive. The Yale System tempers
the negative aspect of that kind of competitiveness, and fosters a camaraderie
which grows into the collegial relationships that doctors maintain throughout
their stressful careers. The Yale System prepares students in a manner
which more directly relates to the realities, the rigors, the values inherent
in the practice of medicine. When I see a patient in my office or in the
hospital, it is not a written test that I am takingI must adhere
to the high standard that I set for myself when I am entrusted with the
heath care of another human being. This is what the Yale System has taught
me.

I am proud to be a graduate of Yale, and I know I could not have gotten
the same quality medical education anywhere else.

Alan B. Silken, M.D. 74


I recommend anonymous, coded, periodic self-assessments to help students
assess their progress in learning the minimum. Additional independent
study should be encouraged and mentoring should begin early. Not all exams
need to be mandatorybut the final, anonymous one should be.

Pamela Zeitlin, M.D. 83


To this day it has served me well. Dont kill the system!

Alan M. Reznik, M.D. 83


Dean Berliner called me into his office in my first year at Yale medical
school. He told me that if I had merely wanted to become a doctor, I should
have gone to school elsewhere. Yale was interested in producing leaders
in medicine, not just good doctors. The 15 minutes he spent with me explaining
his rationale for the Yale System were among the most influential in my
career and life.

Emphasis at Yale has been on self-directed learning, driven by
excitement and love of medicine. The de-emphasis of competition allowed
the blossoming of personal social skills and a personal sense of mission
separate from ones personal success. Now middle-aged, I realize
that these lessons were the most important in building successful, happy
health care delivery teams. Dean Berliner was right. The place of Yale
medical school is to produce leaders, not merely doctors.

Calixto Dimas, M.D. 85


Becoming a physician means making a commitment to lifelong learning. The
dates of graduation from medical school or residency are arbitrary points
in a career, useful in marking passage from one stage of training to another.
However, they in no way represent the completion of an education. Even
if you were able to absorb all of the worlds accumulated knowledge
in any one field, your knowledge would be shortly out-of-date as our understanding
of human physiology and disease rapidly advances.

The Yale System acknowledges the fact that Yale medical students are intelligent,
intellectually curious and self-motivated. I have no examiner sitting
above me now, making sure that I achieve a passing grade, but I owe it
to every patient to continue to learn and to be the best physician that
I can be. I feel that the Yale System helped me to incorporate learning
into my everyday clinical activities, as a lifelong process and not just
as a means to the end of passing a test.

Please do not let one anomalous year bring down a tradition that has been
proven worthy over the decades.

Michael Rothschild, M.D. 88

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