are all potometry colleges the same or is one better the other. from what i've read over the internet, all optometry colleges follow a cirriculum that has been approved by the american optometric association.
jholtod -- I'm sorry I made the ranking comment about Puerto Rico earlier in this thread. I completely agree with you -- all the schools are equally certified, and your education is really what you make of it. I'm glad to see someone on our forum "representin'" Puerto Rico, hope you won't hold my earlier comment against me. 🙂Originally posted by jholtod
Actually. . . I graduated for Puerto Rico.
Hey jholtod, can you talk a little bit about the optometry school in Pto. Rico? Is it located in a nice town/city? I could go to school there because I speak Spanish, but about the only thing I've heard about it is that students there don't do that well on the boards 🙁Originally posted by jholtod
Actually. . . I graduated for Puerto Rico. Not only did I come away with far less debt than I would have at other schools, but due to the bilingual nature of the curricculum, I have had several lucrative job offers because I can just as comfortably see spanish as well as english speaking patients. I had no trouble with boards (parts 1,2, or 3), and was accepted into a VA based residency program. Take home message: Each school has very different things to offer. I believe you should appy to every one that you think has something to offer you, then make a deision based on that. You will graduate a competent OD from whichever school you attend. There is not any one, objective way of ranking schools, it depends on what you make of it.
What happens for the students who don't know Spanish?Originally posted by jholtod
Roughly half the classes are in spanish.
Just curious, how many students start 1st year without knowing any Spanish at all? There's so much to learn in school *already* without having to learn another language on top of everything. 😱Originally posted by jholtod
They have to learn . . . fast. Third year you begin seeing patients everyday and 99% of patient encounters are spanish. Early on, everybody that couldn't understand the lectures would get translated notes from someone else in the class that was better with the language.
Northeastern is an exception. The school is located in a small town, but they have a very small class size, and have contracts with the indian tribes around Tahlequah which bring all the patients and pathologies you may need 🙂 .SCO 3rd year said:Schools that are in smaller cities areas are probably the worst clinically, where your patients are often other college students (you get to see your share of those 1st and 2nd year seeing your classmates in lab), you don't see as much pathology at those types of schools.