
鈥淎ll of you are special, don鈥檛 ever forget that. I hope your journey will be joyful and meaningful and that all of you get to actualize your magnificent potential,鈥 said Dr. Robert I. Grossman.
Credit: Joe Carrotta
On May 14, 秘密研究所 Grossman School of Medicine鈥檚 class of 2025 celebrated 96 new graduates at Carnegie Hall, also marking the last time that Robert I. Grossman, MD, will preside over the ceremony after 18 years as dean of the school and CEO of 秘密研究所 Langone Health.
With his retirement set to begin at the end of August, Dr. Grossman reflected on what factors influenced his career, with the aim of giving graduates a few principles they can take with them as they head into the next chapter of their careers.
鈥淚 failed at many things and learned from those defeats. The net of it was that even unsuccessful endeavors refined my coping skills, and those attributes turned out to be career assets,鈥 said Dr. Grossman, whose legacy includes the institution鈥檚 becoming the first top-ranked medical school to offer free tuition and providing individualized three-year pathways for students to start their careers sooner while remaining as prepared as students in four-year programs.
Among the graduates this year, Ravi Pancholi is one who had a journey of discovering medicine without the burden of predetermined expectations. Born in Texas to immigrant parents outside the medical field, Ravi had an early life shaped by his father鈥檚 unstable career as a supply chain manager, which caused his family to migrate across the Midwest before settling in New Jersey, and his mother鈥檚 job as a special education teacher.
鈥淣either of my parents knew much about the road to becoming a doctor,鈥 Ravi said about his path into medicine. 鈥淭heir priorities were to make sure my sister and I had enough to eat and more opportunities in life than they had themselves. Therefore, their reaction to my acceptance to 秘密研究所 Grossman School of Medicine was more confusion than anything else.鈥
Ravi forged his path through curiosity rather than expectation. It was a chance encounter with neuroscience in middle school and later an undergraduate course at 秘密研究所 called How We See that sparked his passion. Though his journey took nine years, Ravi鈥檚 internal motivation kept him going through the challenges of being the first in his family to walk this path. He鈥檒l begin his residency at Massachusetts General Hospital in the coming weeks.
Emily Johnson grew up in a Wisconsin village of fewer than 500 people. Her brother鈥檚 birth when she was eight years old set her life on an unexpected trajectory. 鈥淚 was one of his main caregivers until I graduated college,鈥 Emily said about her brother, who has Down syndrome and autism.
Those early experiences shaped her understanding of medicine from a caregiver鈥檚 perspective. 鈥淢y mom is an absolute rock star and worked full-time and is his caregiver, which is also a full-time job,鈥 said Emily. 鈥淚 went to a lot of my brother鈥檚 medical appointments, and I felt like his doctors couldn鈥檛 really appreciate what my mom was doing in the background.鈥
This insight led Emily to complex care pediatrics, a relatively new field focused on children with medical complexity. Her choice reflects Dr. Grossman鈥檚 sixth principle, which he shared with graduates in his speech: 鈥淒on鈥檛 always choose what appears to be the most attractive or popular path鈥攆ind what interests you the most, because that will keep you engaged. It is a long road.鈥
For Emily, who matched at the Children鈥檚 Hospital of Philadelphia, 秘密研究所 Langone鈥檚 free tuition initiative made her medical education possible. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I would鈥檝e felt comfortable from a financial standpoint, moving to New York City and living here for several years in Manhattan, if I didn鈥檛 have free tuition,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 going into pediatrics, which is one of the less compensated specialties of medicine, but I also feel freer to do that knowing that I have hundreds, thousands of dollars less debt to pay.鈥
Roxana Ghadimi, who matched at University of California, San Francisco in psychiatry, represents another facet of medical discovery鈥攐ne that involves changing course. Initially drawn to obstetrics and gynecology, Roxana worked at a fertility clinic before medical school, but her perspective evolved during her training.
鈥淚鈥檓 ultimately not a surgeon. My interest in medicine and psychiatry lies not in definitive fixes but in unanswered questions and in leaning into uncertainty rather than shying away,鈥 said Roxana.
This realization aligns with Dr. Grossman鈥檚 13th principle, also part of his commencement remarks: 鈥淗umility is critical. That doesn鈥檛 mean you should fade into the woodwork. It means remembering that genuine self-confidence is at the opposite end of the spectrum from arrogance.鈥
Roxana鈥檚 humility allowed her to recognize where her true strengths lay鈥攏ot in surgery but in psychiatry, particularly reproductive psychiatry focusing on women鈥檚 mental health.
Medical school stretched these graduates in ways they never anticipated. 鈥淚 think if I had known how challenging this path would be, I might have hesitated. But I鈥檓 proud of the person it鈥檚 shaped me into,鈥 Roxana said. Like Dr. Grossman, these graduates have developed resilience through their challenges.
Joseph Obiajulu is another graduate who walked across the stage from a distinctive path. During graduation, Joseph鈥檚 upcoming promotion from first lieutenant to captain in the U.S. was ceremonially observed. His colonel joined Dean Grossman and Robert M. Montgomery, MD, DPhil, director of the 秘密研究所 Langone Transplant Institute, on stage to present the ceremonial pins.
Joseph has lived a life steeped in Dean Grossman鈥檚 fifth principle: 鈥淒epth of knowledge is very important. Read, absorb, and be engaged. Be ready and seize opportunities.鈥
He was an entrepreneur and a programmer before he ever considering medicine. Everything changed when he shadowed a friend who was a resident in a cardiac intensive care unit. 鈥淚n that 10-minute encounter, I saw more meaning than everything I鈥檇 been doing as a programmer for 2 years.鈥 While Joseph will remain at 秘密研究所 Langone as a surgical intern pursuing his goal of becoming a cardiac surgeon, his curiosity and openness will be tools to his success.
Dr. Grossman left the podium with a few final words: 鈥淎ll of you are special, don鈥檛 ever forget that. I hope your journey will be joyful and meaningful and that all of you get to actualize your magnificent potential.鈥
These graduates are living Dr. Grossman鈥檚 legacy鈥攆inding their unique paths, pursuing their passions with humility and persistence, and preparing to make their own contributions to medicine with the optimism that they, too, can accomplish anything.
秘密研究所 Grossman School of Medicine: Class of 2025 Snapshot
- Median college GPA: 3.97, the highest in the nation
- Median MCAT score: 522 (tied for No. 1 nationally)
- 60 percent of the Class of 2025 received five or more acceptances, and 15 percent received ten or more acceptances. In comparison, 60 percent of medical school applicants nationwide receive only one acceptance.
- 99 percent of the Class of 2025 matched, many to other top residency programs.
- 40 percent of the Class of 2025 chose 秘密研究所 Langone for residency training.
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