I'm Tom Gampper. I'm a professor of plastic surgery and the chair of the department of plastic surgery. A student rotating with us would see the full breadth of plastic surgery. We offer all aspects of plastic surgery; from pediatric to breast reconstruction and microsurgery, hand surgery. They would see the whole gamut of it and they would realize what a broad field that it is. They would be in the clinics with patients and in the operating room as well. What really stands out is our model of teaching. The mentorship model that's prolonged. It gives a one-on-one experience for a six-month block of time and our faculty are working every day with a given resident. And over that period of time, then there's a transference. There's a trust so that they can garner the skills that they'll need, the knowledge and the abilities to then be a practicing plastic surgeon in the future. So I've been on the faculty for 25 years now and I've had 50 residents finish then. So it's always, it's bittersweet when they leave. But then they go off to bigger and better things hopefully. They've gone on to successful careers and they're leaders in the field. But probably the thing that stands out most is that out of those 50, probably 15 or 20 have had the opportunity to go overseas with me. And that's really a transforming experience in a young person's life. That's what happened to me with my mentor when he took me to India and I was, back in 1991. And it's something that I really enjoy seeing them put together and experience the full breadth of what medicine can provide.