Sure.
In the Fall, we took Biochem (undergrad prof), physiology (med school prof), and immunology/micro (med school prof). All of the exams were very fair and straightforward, and all came from the powerpoints. Everything is lecture based. Physiology is critical thinking and was the most difficult class (but fair, required application of knowledge), biochem is biochem (mostly memorize, some application), and immuno/micro (memorize, very little application). All of the professors were very explicit with what they expected for their exams, and all the exams were fair. Most, if not all the tests were multiple choice. Pretty helpful for the MCAT, but obviously, not passage-based because it helps with the content.
Spring right now we're taking genetics, cancer/cell biology, anatomy, and another class that's related to healthcare where we have lectures and have a class project. This class project is a group presentation, and the only one you'll do all year. No labs.
PCOM linkage is not guaranteed. An interview, I believe is, but an acceptance is not. I heard the requirement is a 3.25 gpa in the program and a 504 on the mcat (raised from 500). 5-10 students usually link per year out of the cohort of 30-40, and not everyone is aiming for PCOM. It is a decent linkage, but if you interview poorly, do poorly in the program, miss a deadline (this is a big one), and don't make the MCAT, or even if PCOM decides not to accept you, it's not a guarantee. So just be careful if you're banking on solely coming to this program for a linkage.