They spent their middle school and high school years with a firsthand view of the development of the burgeoning Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus, including the sparkling new downtown building that houses the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
Now, amazingly, six graduates of City Honors School find themselves in the Class of 2023 at the Jacobs School.
These first-year students Hani Al-Jabi-Lopez, Lillian Dixon, James Ghosen, Fiona Hennig, Aleena Jafri and Joseph Nathanson are all alumni of the prestigious Buffalo school adjacent to the BNMC that routinely shows up in rankings of the best public schools in the state and even the country.
Hennig graduated from City Honors in 2012 and Dixon in 2015, while the others graduated in 2014. All six were enrolled in the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program, a program that prepares students in high school for the rigors of college.
City Honors is one of our stronger inner city schools, so its not a surprise that they are preparing students that eventually end up in medical school, says Dori R. Marshall, associate dean and director of admissions. Our hope is that we can help foster relationships with other high schools through our pipeline programs so the other Buffalo public schools also see that success with students.
The Jacobs School does not break out official statistics for the high schools its medical classes attended. However, James J. Rosso, admissions adviser in the Office of Medical Admissions, says that in the past 25 years, there have not been that many graduates of one high school in a single medical class at the Jacobs School.
The six are adjusting well, and have been impressed with the faculty and staff, and the new building that houses the medical school.
The professors and the deans really care about you doing well, and really try to help us out if were struggling, says Al-Jabi-Lopez, who earned bachelors degrees in behavioral biology and Spanish from Johns Hopkins University in 2018.
The facilities are also very impressive, adds Al-Jabi-Lopez, who plans to work in a clinical setting after residency and is also interested in academic medicine.
After graduating from Cornell University in 2016 with a bachelors degree in biology, Hennig moved to Oakland, Calif., and spent three years working and enjoying some time off before applying to medical school.
Therefore, all my fellow Centaurs (the schools mascot) were two or three grades below me in high school, she says. We knew of each other but now, being in the same medical school class, I have gotten to know each of them a little bit more.
I think it is no surprise that City Honors graduates excel in whatever they choose to pursue, she adds. I personally am very fortunate to have had many resources throughout my high school and undergraduate career, including a loving, supportive family.
The Jacobs School is also given high marks.
I really like the environment that the deans and faculty have created. I feel lucky to be in this high-tech facility, says Hennig, who has been especially impressed with the anatomy lab, which is not uncommon for current and prospective students.
After medical school, she hopes to pursue a surgical residency.
My goal is to become a surgeon specializing in gender-affirming surgeries for the LGBTQ+ community, she says. I hope to make an impact on the future of medical education and curriculum, and bring more awareness to LGBTQ+ health care wherever I end up.
Dixon, who earned bachelors degrees in molecular genetics and psychology from SUNY Fredonia in 2019, also finds the Jacobs School a nice fit.
The environment here is supportive and a lot more relaxed than other medical schools that Ive seen, she says. Its more focused on our health and happiness.
Ghosen and Nathanson have been good friends since they arrived at City Honors in fifth grade.
More than anything, City Honors prepares its students for the rigors of undergraduate life, and this in turn enables us to pursuecompetitive fields of study, Ghosen says. Many of the premedical students I met in college had never been exposed to such a large and difficult workload, and coming from City Honors, the transition wasnt as difficult.
Ghosen, who earned a bachelors degree in biology from SUNY Geneseo in 2018, enjoys the collaborative atmosphere at the Jacobs School.
The workload is definitely an adjustment from undergrad, but everybody in the class has been really great, he says. Its not cutthroat everybody kind of works together and that helps.
And he can think of nothing better than staying in his hometown after he gets his degree and completes his residency.
I definitely plan to practice in the Buffalo area, and could one day see myself teaching medical students from the Jacobs School, Ghosen says.
Thats music to Marshalls ears.
Whether they do their residency here or somewhere else, our hope is that they will come back here and make this their home because there is a physician shortage here, says Marshall, whos also an associate professor of psychiatry. We need our graduates to stay here and work.
Nathanson, who earned bachelors degrees in biological sciences and psychology from UB in 2018, appreciates the solid academic foundation that has prepared him for medical school.
I think that City Honors is second to none when it comes to preparing their students for furthering their education in an advanced setting, says Nathanson, who hopes to one day run his own medical practice. I was lucky enough to already know how to study before getting to college, and have carried some of those same techniques that I used in high school all the way to medical school.
Jafri, who earned a bachelors degree in biology from Cornell University in 2018, also likes being back in her hometown.
I chose the Jacobs School because of family and friends living in the city, because Buffalo is home, and also because this school offers a truly high-quality medical education with programs and opportunities in areas that are of interest to me, she says. The tremendous developmentof the surrounding medical complex and the many hospitals affiliated with the university were also a big plus.
They are continually making adjustments to the curriculum to improve the quality of our education and to cultivate a good environment that doesnt lead to burnout, Jafri adds.
William Kresse, principal at City Honors, says there has been an upswing in students from the school headed into STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields over the past decade, and notes that City Honors has also expanded its intensive four-year science research program at the BNMC.
We are excited that so many of our alums are making their way to the Jacobs School, Kresse says.
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