"Ideally, yes."

Mental restructuring of any kind was not a concrete, step-by-step field. Very few students succeeded in such areas as they would get insuffrably frustrated, calling such matters of the mind a 'lost art of the Jedi'. How little they knew. How little they all knew. Though the extrasensory perception a Jedi commanded was indeed useful, not many of them could affect a mind beyond tricks. There were a rare few that could handily restore or deprive functions, or furthermore command and control, and most were found to be dangerous, twisted individuals who latched too much to the more unsavoury items of this potential. Power was indeed a corrupting thing. However, for a normal medical student, one without such ability, it was either exciting or tedious. Middle-ground was not the norm in medicine, as those that were there wanted to be there. Very few were in it for the credits.

"It is rather difficult to instruct otherwise, as I am sure you could imagine."