Episodi

  • Prop S Update #1 - April 23, 2026
    7 min
  • 2025-2026 cSurvey Results
    10 min
  • Early Acceptance To Med School
    Apr 3 2026

    A guaranteed seat to medical school can sound like a shortcut, but the real story is what you do with the breathing room. We talk with Son of Zolfakar about his early acceptance journey to LECOM, from growing up around medicine to confronting the quiet fear a lot of premed students carry: “What if I’m not smart enough?” He breaks down how he found the program, why he trusted it, and what changed once the path felt real.

    We also get practical about the undergraduate game plan. Son shares how Cal State Fullerton’s Finish in 4 structure and a LECOM-affiliated advisor helped him map each semester, register for the right classes on time, and adjust when prerequisites like physics threatened the timeline. He explains why taking anatomy and physiology before starting medical school “honestly saved” him, and how that kind of course sequencing can make the first year less brutal.

    Then we zoom out to the bigger tradeoff: what happens when you are not living under MCAT and application stress. Son talks about using that time for leadership and community, including starting a Pakistani Student Association, staying involved with the Muslim Student Association, and volunteering, while still preparing for the reality of boards. He also shares how LECOM’s lecture-based pathway and systems-based curriculum helped him retain information and build confidence heading into exams.

    If you are exploring an early assurance program, a premed pathway, or just trying to decide how to make the road to becoming a physician more sustainable, this conversation offers both perspective and real tactics. Subscribe for more student stories, share this with a premed who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest question about early acceptance to medical school.

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    7 min
  • You Can Train Like An Athlete And Still Become A Doctor
    Apr 3 2026

    You can chase medical school without shrinking your life down to nothing. We sit down with Adidi Ayer, a competitive college swimmer who found the LECOM pathway in high school, said yes to an affiliated undergrad, and proved that a demanding sport and a serious pre-med track can coexist when your systems are solid. If you’ve been told you must quit everything to become a doctor, her story offers a smarter, more sustainable blueprint.

    We get specific about what the grind actually looks like: early wake-ups, two practices a day, long labs, weekend travel, and still keeping academics on track. Adidi explains why structure is the real advantage, from scheduling homework to protecting sleep to building MCAT study habits that do not collapse under stress. Along the way, we talk about osteopathic medicine, the DO route, and how early acceptance style programs can reduce the anxiety of the traditional medical school application cycle.

    Then we shift into LECOM Erie and clinical training, where the lesson gets even more practical. Adidi shares how being quizzed in class helped her handle pressure, and why learning to calmly say “I don’t know” is essential for medical students on rotations, including in fast-paced settings like surgery. If you want better time management, a healthier pre-med lifestyle, and a clearer picture of how athletes can thrive on the path to medicine, this one will land. Subscribe, share with a pre-med friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    9 min
  • Choosing LECOM’s Directed Study Pathway Let Me Learn My Way
    Apr 3 2026

    You can be smart, motivated, and genuinely called to medicine and still feel crushed by standardized testing. That tension sits at the center of our conversation with Anuya Akala, a LECOM student who found a path that finally matched how she learns. From South Brunswick, New Jersey to training in Missouri, Anuya walks us through how she discovered LECOM early, why an early acceptance medical program felt safer than the traditional pre-med grind, and how test anxiety shaped her decisions long before medical school started.

    We get specific about LECOM learning pathways, including the Directed Study Pathway (DSP) for students who don’t thrive in a lecture hall. Anuya explains what it’s like to learn by reading textbooks, meeting with professors to troubleshoot questions, and proving mastery through regular quizzes. We also touch on problem-based learning and lecture-based formats, and why the ability to choose a medical school learning style can be a game-changer for confidence, consistency, and mental health.

    Anuya also shares the practical side of the journey: how Thomas Jefferson University kept expectations crystal clear with course maps and check-ins, and what she did with the time she didn’t spend studying for the MCAT. Finally, she breaks down third-year clinical rotations at Mercy Jefferson, including typical hours, studying after shifts, and the surprising benefit of having some weekends to explore and reset.

    If you’re researching LECOM, BS/DO programs, early acceptance medical school options, or you’re a student trying to figure out whether medicine is “doable,” this conversation offers an honest, grounded look at what the pathway can feel like. Subscribe for more student stories, share this with a future doctor, and leave a review with the biggest question you still have about getting into medical school.

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    6 min
  • A Non-Traditional Path To Medical School At LECOM
    Apr 3 2026

    She didn’t grow up assuming college was possible. She didn’t start out aiming at medicine. And she definitely didn’t feel confident walking into medical school. Katie Raymer, a third-year LECOM medical student training at Mercy Jefferson in Festus, Missouri, joins us to share the real story behind a non-traditional path into osteopathic medicine.

    We talk about growing up in an underserved, low-income community in Arizona, becoming a parent young, and finding the support to go back to school even when the roadmap wasn’t obvious. Katie explains how she discovered what a DO (Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine) actually is, why DO programs can feel more welcoming to non-traditional students, and how she landed at LECOM after a lot of searching and second-guessing. She also breaks down what the LECOM structure looks like from the first two years in Pennsylvania to clinical rotations, plus what problem-based learning at the Seton Hill campus demands from you week to week.

    The most honest part of our conversation is about imposter syndrome in medical school: waiting for the “wrong person” phone call, comparing yourself to brilliant classmates, and learning to trust your own work. We end with what helped her most, community outreach, including LECOM’s Bridging the Gaps and her own program, Rounds, bringing health education to a homeless shelter and reminding future physicians why patients and service matter.

    If you’re considering LECOM, researching DO vs MD, or wondering if a non-traditional medical school journey can really work, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs the push, and leave a review with the biggest lesson you took from Katie’s story.

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    9 min
  • How An MCAT-Free Early Entry Program Changes The Pre-Med Journey
    Apr 3 2026

    Medicine can feel like a maze of costs, gatekeeping, and tests that decide your future in a single morning. We sit down with third-year medical student Senna Zofikar to talk about a different route: an early entry medical program that offered stability early, eased her testing anxiety, and changed what she chose to do in college.

    Senna shares how she first learned about LECOM through family connections, why the chance to avoid the MCAT mattered so much, and how using SAT or ACT scores helped her move forward when standardized testing felt like a wall. We get specific about timing too: applying early, interviewing at the start of senior year, hearing back fast, and what it feels like to head into undergrad already knowing you have a seat in medical school.

    From there, we dig into the real payoff. When you’re not chasing admissions checkboxes, you can study with purpose. Senna explains why she took anatomy even when it wasn’t required, volunteered in a children’s hospital, and felt less pressure to do “resume research” just to look competitive. We also connect that idea to school culture more broadly, including how removing class rank incentives can help students take the classes that actually make them better learners. If you’re searching for early assurance medical programs, med school admissions alternatives, or practical pre-med advice, this conversation offers a grounded perspective from someone living it.

    If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a student who needs a clearer path, and leave a review so more future doctors can find the show.

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    4 min
  • A Med Student’s Path From High School To LECOM While Swimming And Dual Majoring
    Apr 3 2026

    You can want medicine and still want a life. We sit down with Adidi Ayur, a third-year medical student currently training at Mercy Jefferson, to talk about how she found LECOM in high school, applied, and suddenly had a clearer path into the medical profession. That one shift changed everything: less time obsessing over the next application cycle, more time building skills, confidence, and a college experience that didn’t feel like constant sacrifice.

    Adidi shares what it’s really like to be a student-athlete on a premed track, including swimming at Illinois Tech in Chicago, juggling early morning practices, classes, MCAT preparation, and weekend travel for meets. We also dig into why she pursued a dual major in biology and psychology and how that “human side” strengthens the way you think about patients, communication, and the day-to-day reality of becoming a physician. If you’re a high school sophomore, junior, or senior trying to map out your premed plan, this is a grounded look at time management, mentorship, and choosing programs that support you.

    We end with practical advice on MCAT anxiety and study strategy, especially if brute memorization doesn’t work for you. Adidi explains how learning her own study style early, with visualization and real understanding, made medical school studying more effective. If you’re searching for LECOM admissions insights, early acceptance medical programs, MCAT tips, or a sustainable premed lifestyle, you’ll leave with a clearer picture of what’s possible. Subscribe, share this with a future doctor, and leave a review telling us what part of the medical school journey you want us to unpack next.

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    4 min