Hey, guys. I've been a lurker on this site for close to two years now, and I'm about to start as a freshman in college this upcoming fall. Does anyone have any tips or advice to share? Maybe things like how to juggle volunteering/studying/possibly working/a personal life, or even study habits you find to be particularly effective? What worked (or is working) for you guys?
Thanks so much. 🙂
I am going to be a freshman this coming fall as well. I have a little over 30 hours shadowing a small animal veterinarian and also I am a volunteer at a horse therapy center. I shadow at the vet's office once a week for about five hours. I suppose I am just a little nervous and I do not know if I am doing everything right. Should I go into the office more? I plan to shadow different specialists as well to hopefully total a few hundred hours from just the specialists. I have called a LA and equine vet and was told to try next summer because they are very busy. Should I try to get a job as a vet assistant? When I shadow, I help with restraining, fecal samples, and I have helped with a few C-sections. How good is this type of experience?
I think that I am just panicking because I am not sure if I am going to get in or not. Does anyone remember what they did to balance their time of school, animal experience, and vet experience? Do schools focus more on grades and the GRE and then make sure you obtained their desired amount of veterinary experience? I am an Ohio resident and so I really want to go to The Ohio State University because I believe it is the only thing I could ever afford. If anyone knows anything about Ohio State and could give me any advice I would be so grateful. I am already extremely nervous and I haven't even started college yet!
Just some things that may help....
I graduated with honors (number 7 in my class)
I have taken 3 years of bio, 1 of physics and 1 of chemistry
Took calculus
I was captain of my volleyball team, in NHS, MathFest, Physics Olympics, and I was on the Envirothon team (I went to state with my team and I placed second at state in my topic which was wildlife), I am a backyard birdwatch volunteer, and also a FrogWatch USA volunteer.
I do not know if any of my experiences are helpful to me, so basically if someone could assess my profile and could share any words of advice I would be so grateful!
To any incoming (or current) pre-vets, my biggest piece of advice is to get your anxiety under control. It is very common for pre-vets to have anxiety levels that would honestly kill the average person, and it is
not healthy for you. I don't care how many hours you need or what GPA you want or how much money you want to make working outside of class, anxiety will set you up for so much misery right from the start. Stay focused, keep your head down, sure, but work on reducing your stress levels and taking care of yourself. Learning the art of self care is the single most important skill you will ever take with you. Developing resilience to stress, knowing how to prioritize your own well-being, and recognizing when you are overwhelmed are vital.
I did not do this right away in undergrad and I suffered for it. I graduated with nearly a 4.0, thousands of hours of work and volunteer and veterinary experience, but I wish I had taken the time to care for myself more often. My OCD and anxiety got set off
hard for the first ~year and a half of undergrad. I had days where I stayed in bathrooms for hours counting the tiles on the floors and the ceilings, hours in my room counting the bricks in the walls. On paper I was doing well, but I was not well. I was depressed and would lay awake for hours thinking about applications that were
years away and my heart would race the way it only should if a lion is chasing you. I eventually went to therapy and I'm working on my $#!%, and you know what? I am doing
way way way better. I can sleep at night. My heart rate isn't 400+ when someone mentions school to me. It's wonderful.
Ask any of the vets on here and they will tell you that it is important to learn to let things go and to take care of yourself. You can be the greatest clinician in the world someday, but even then you will have to leave the clinic at the clinic and head home eventually. Veterinary school will challenge you and even students who had 4.0s in high school and undergrad will sometimes struggle. This is not a bad thing, this is normal. When it comes to college, for most pre-vets all I can say is this: however hard you are on yourself, you need to be at least 50% less hard on yourself.
Veterinary medicine is just a career, albeit a great one. Please don't make the mistake of making it your life.