> bad habits picked up during residency and ER/on-call work die hard.
I initially found it surprising how many residency program directors tell interviewees that their programs don't allow illicit drug use. But yeah, extreme stress can lead to some bad habits, and it's apparently common enough to feel the need to remind candidates.
When I arrived at Oxford University, the first thing they told us at the international student orientation session was "don't try to bribe the police officers".
Things like this don't have to be very common to be worth pointing out.
Were there many folks from developing countries in the orientation? In my orientation (at an American university), there was a huge emphasis on "you might be used to plagiarism back home, but please take it seriously".
Some students from developing countries, yes. And I'm sure that admonition was largely aimed at them. IIRC most of the room looked European.
you might be used to plagiarism back home, but please take it seriously
Yeah, this is a problem my university runs into too -- international students are around 20% of the undergraduate population but consistently around 50% of the cases of academic dishonesty. :-(
I initially found it surprising how many residency program directors tell interviewees that their programs don't allow illicit drug use. But yeah, extreme stress can lead to some bad habits, and it's apparently common enough to feel the need to remind candidates.