- Joined
- Jul 26, 2011
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Good evening everyone. This is my first post and I hope I'm not wasting space here..
I'm 27 and I've spent the last six years enlisted in the Navy. Two years ago I decided to pursue my life-long dream of going to veterinary school. I enrolled in a community college and started volunteering in animal care at a museum and science center one day a week. While active duty, working 50+ hours a week and going to school many nights a week I've since graduated from my CC with a 3.8 GPA in general science and will be transferring to a four year college this fall after I'm discharged. I'm an Alabama resident and will be applying to Auburn and others.
I feel like I have what it takes after all of this....I've lived a very stressful last couple years and I've managed it well, advancing in my job all with good grades and even squeezing in 300 hours of volunteer work all while serving, not to mention going through a divorce. Do veterinary schools appreciate experiences like this?
So I guess my question is for the less traditional applicants: do you think schools appreciate older applicants who have unique life experiences and skills? How are some ways you've used your non-traditional experiences to your advantage when applying? Do you think it made you stand apart? What were some of the greatest challenges you faced trying to gather the necessary animal experience?
I'm going to admit... I feel odd taking volunteer jobs next to 19 year old college students while the women I know my age are married with kid #1. But maybe everything happens for a reason!
I'm 27 and I've spent the last six years enlisted in the Navy. Two years ago I decided to pursue my life-long dream of going to veterinary school. I enrolled in a community college and started volunteering in animal care at a museum and science center one day a week. While active duty, working 50+ hours a week and going to school many nights a week I've since graduated from my CC with a 3.8 GPA in general science and will be transferring to a four year college this fall after I'm discharged. I'm an Alabama resident and will be applying to Auburn and others.
I feel like I have what it takes after all of this....I've lived a very stressful last couple years and I've managed it well, advancing in my job all with good grades and even squeezing in 300 hours of volunteer work all while serving, not to mention going through a divorce. Do veterinary schools appreciate experiences like this?
So I guess my question is for the less traditional applicants: do you think schools appreciate older applicants who have unique life experiences and skills? How are some ways you've used your non-traditional experiences to your advantage when applying? Do you think it made you stand apart? What were some of the greatest challenges you faced trying to gather the necessary animal experience?
I'm going to admit... I feel odd taking volunteer jobs next to 19 year old college students while the women I know my age are married with kid #1. But maybe everything happens for a reason!