Med school is hard enough without feeling trapped in one building, one routine, or one social circle. We sit down with three current NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine, Arkansas students, Taylor, Lilly Figgins, and Zariyae Moore, to paint an honest picture of day-to-day life at a medical school located on the Arkansas State University campus in Jonesboro, Arkansas. If you’re comparing osteopathic medical schools and wondering what “student experience” actually means, their answers get specific fast.
We dig into the practical stuff that shapes your weeks: favorite study spots across a Division I campus, how first-year structure turns into second-year independence, and why having easy access to libraries, quiet rooms, and the student union can make long study days feel manageable. Then we zoom out to student life and leadership, from specialty interest groups and skills practice like suturing, to student government advocacy where student voices reach deans through meetings, feedback, and real follow-up.
We also talk about culture. These students describe a collaborative environment where peers help each other, faculty know you by name, and community shows up in unexpected ways, like “Run With The Dean” followed by coffee. Finally, we cover what living in Jonesboro is like, how students use athletics and fitness resources for a real break, and the advice they wish they’d heard as pre-meds: don’t chase perfection, don’t compare timelines, and take opportunities as they come.
If this helped you picture your own path to medicine, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more future doctors can find it.
@Arkansasstatemedianetwork.com.
@NYITCOM