The Medical University of Białystok is officially recognized, and its diploma is valid across the EU. However, the way the institution treats students raises serious concerns. While some aspects of teaching are acceptable, the administration is extremely rigid and shows little to no willingness to support students in decisive moments.
One of the most striking examples was the Internal Medicine final exam, where an entire group of students failed the last retake at the very end of their studies. This meant that a whole class had their graduation postponed by a full year. Instead of acknowledging that such an outcome indicated a fundamental problem with the exam itself, the faculty shifted all responsibility onto the students and refused to provide any alternatives. No commission exam, no oral option, no adjustments of any kind were offered.
For prospective applicants: yes, the diploma is valid and carries weight, but be aware that the university enforces its rules with inflexible harshness rather than fairness. Exceptions are practically nonexistent, even under extraordinary circumstances. This environment creates unnecessary stress and can be especially discouraging for international students, who pay high tuition fees yet receive minimal support in return. If you are considering studying medicine in Europe, there are many other universities that provide the same EU-recognized diploma while maintaining a far more balanced and respectful approach toward...
Read moreAs a student, I feel compelled to speak out about the appalling conditions and inhumane treatment at this university. The facilities are nothing short of horrendous — outdated, broken, and completely unfit for the demands of modern education, let alone for students training to enter a life-or-death profession like medicine.
We are consistently failed on every level. Basic resources are either inaccessible or nonexistent. Classrooms are overcrowded, lab equipment is malfunctioning or insufficient, and any requests for support are met with indifference or outright dismissal. It’s as if we’re being set up to fail.
But worse than the physical conditions is how we’re treated: like burdens, not people. The administration’s attitude toward students borders on contempt. There’s no respect, no empathy, no sense that they are here to educate or support us. We are spoken to as if we are subhuman — expected to give everything while receiving nothing in return.
We pay thousands to be here. We sacrifice our health, time, and mental well-being, and in return we are met with disorganization, neglect, and hostility. This is not education. This is exploitation.
To incoming students: think twice. To the administration: you are accountable for this. And if no one else will say...
Read moreAs part of the English division professors should have a decent proficiency of the language. The lectures have embarrassing spelling mistakes everywhere and have poor English which is not expected of a medical university running a course in English and charging a staggering 11,000 EUROS yearly.
Class size in anatomy department are massive. Too many people to be able to see the specimens. Specimens that med students learn from are degraded beyond any level of usefulness which is unacceptable since the university is heavily funded by the millions of EUROS paid each year by the 500 + students in English Division. I have seen better facilities and resources in public universities that don’t charge one-fourth of what...
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