discuss
7/7/2008 10:30:43 PM
if you're one of those "horse people"otherwisethat's a lot of school and debt for such little pay.
7/8/2008 12:13:10 PM
dependsI'm not sure if I'd do it again, but its going pretty well so farPersonally, I dont know if I could do it, knowing that I would spend the rest of my life dealing with crazy pet owners(i'm not a small animal person)There are options w/in vet medicine that provide for a better lifestyle than typical dog/cat practice, and that's what I didand btw, "horse people" start off at pretty low salaries, for the most parta lot lower than I did, at leastdebt, yep there's a lot of that. i believe the average is around 100,000 per student at graduation. There are programs where the state will pretty much pay for all of vet school tuition, provided that you work in large animal practice in NC upon graduation. I did this, but ended up not working in NC, so I have to pay that back[Edited on July 9, 2008 at 12:35 AM. Reason : debt]
7/9/2008 12:33:10 AM
by do it again...you mean the schooling? work? or whatplease explainand yea, food animal program you mean
7/9/2008 1:04:43 AM
As my cousin said to me: "If you can see yourself doing anything else, do it."
7/9/2008 7:05:04 AM
7/9/2008 2:41:10 PM
7/9/2008 7:19:42 PM
one more thing, if you're considering doing food animal stuff, I would consider going to vet school elsewherethat's an entirely different thread, though
7/9/2008 8:09:34 PM
^ so what kind of work do you do? curious
7/10/2008 8:55:35 PM
food animal medicine
7/10/2008 9:35:22 PM
I can't really speak for vet school specifically....but it's a graduate program, so I can speak from that standpoint:It's going to be a lot of bullshit work. I'm not saying that the work that you will do doesn't mean anything. I'm just saying that you will do work that is very redundant for the simple purpose of drilling information into your head. Also, there will be a lot of course work that many people just aren't prepared for. In graduate school your classes are pretty intense. While I attended NCSU for my undergraduate, I can honestly say that there were a lot of classes that I could sleep through. Not too much effort was involved with reading the text the night before a test, and getting an A+ on the exam.Graduate school was a completely different story thought (though I was prepared for it, and expected it). It was a situation where you had to study days ahead of time in order to be prepared for class. Not to mention some of the exams.....Some of the exams lasted an entire weekend. Literally, I would get the exam on friday during class (and finish the in-class portion). Then the professor would send us the take home portion via email to do over the weekend to turn in sunday before noon. Now, I know what you're thinking...."take home exam....I can use the book...it'll be easy". You are 100% correct because you can use all of your texts/articles. But the exam used more applied knowledge, so the texts were of minimal assistance. It really did take an entire weekend to research, compose knowledge, and answer a 3 line question with 40 pages of well documentation. This text that you turned in was to be graded extremely hard for the simple fact that you got to "take it home", hahah.You also spend a good deal of your life in school...in a lab...or doing other 'maintenance'. That's probably why, as quacko said, most relationships end during graduate school. You really have to compete to be the best in this environment.I only say this as a warning. Because if you're not on top of your game, you can easily slip and lose. It's a commitment that you have to be prepared for.
7/10/2008 11:01:03 PM
previous post was too many words, but i'd underscore this statement regarding grad programs about 500 times. at least 500. maybe 1000.
7/10/2008 11:34:07 PM
Sounds like if you have to ask people's opinions, you may want to reconsider. Speaking for myself, I didn't do very well at anything until I figured out exactly what I wanted, and then I didn't need to ask anyone...I knew.
7/10/2008 11:59:37 PM
7/11/2008 1:04:33 AM
If I had to go though vet school again I probably would do it. But it isn't as great as I thought it would be when I first started (NCSU-CVM Grad 2006). And several of my classmates and internmates have already either switch jobs several times or have already considered careers in other fields. I would recommend talking to several vets in your area and spend time shadowing them before you make any decisions. It isn't a bad profession, just make sure you know what you are getting into. The actual vet school part is great. It is like 4 more years of undergrad with a little harder school work. You still have plently of time to go out, play intramurals, work a job, do whatever you want too. And while demanding it is definitely possible to maintain a normal life.If you have any specific questions email me directly and I will be glad to answer them.
7/11/2008 1:34:05 AM
EMCEWhat do you go to grad school for?
7/11/2008 6:18:11 AM
human factors engineering psychology / cognitive psychology[Edited on July 11, 2008 at 8:30 AM. Reason : d]
7/11/2008 8:30:37 AM
Ph.D. or masters?Did you graduate?
7/11/2008 2:36:20 PM
Masters.Yeah, I graduated already.I might go back for my Ph.D later, but I decided to work after I got my MS. So I'm going to do this job thing for a while. I guess the nice thing is that my job will pay me like $20,000 a year to get my Ph.D.....and bring instructors into work to teach, haha
7/11/2008 4:04:33 PM
Yeah they'll pay for it, but it'd suck having to work full time and get a Ph.D.
7/11/2008 4:29:45 PM
the degree would be from Cornell though the other option would be to get another bachelors (I would probably do engineering) in a similar fashion. They would pay for that as well at work
7/11/2008 6:03:36 PM
7/11/2008 11:40:30 PM
i wasn't being critical, although i can see how it may have read that way. .... i was actually curious. i've always been interested in veterinary medicine, just never had the motivation to pursue it as a career.
7/13/2008 2:43:16 AM
Isn't vet school extremely hard to get in?What quako described was pretty much law school in a nutshell. It is hell, lots of marriages break up and people become a bit crazy.[Edited on July 13, 2008 at 9:35 AM. Reason : jk]
7/13/2008 9:32:20 AM
Vet School is *orders of magnitude* harder to get in than Law School. any bonehead can study up for the LSAT and get into Law School. It's even harder to get into than Medical School.
7/13/2008 2:27:02 PM
exactlythere's about 33 or 34 vet schools in the country.There's 5 or 6 law schools and 5 or 6 med schools in North Carolina alone. i think the application numbers have decreased recently, but at one time i think there was about 1000-1500 applications at NC State for 76 class slotsseems like its down to about 400-500/year now
7/13/2008 2:56:39 PM
If you're thinking of going to Vet School, seriously wanting to study to become a Vet, I advise you to be applying to out of state schools as well. 3 or 4 others besides NC State.Is it worth it? I cannot speak on that, sorry.
7/15/2008 4:23:54 PM