We have also made it an expectation that our residents and faculty spend more time on clinical rotations in teaching the students. This is helpful to both the students and residents. Furthermore, our residents are expected to pursue medical issues rigorously before asking for consults. They initiate and modify medical issues, taking consults for suggestions, and not as an excuse to turn over the case to someone else. The development of a medical psychiatry unit has facilitated this process dramatically. Students often comment that seeing the residents act as residents on other rotations has increased their interest and respect for psychiatry. We have made our residency program more demanding, with morning report, 7 hours of didactics per week, mock oral boards, and three extensive written examinations per year. By setting the standards of our program higher, we have instilled more pride in our residents and improved the perception of our department within the medical center. This appears to have improved the students' perceptions of psychiatry as a discipline and increased the number of students interested in the field.