As a upcoming first year student this fall, I'm sort of worried of maintaining a balance between academics and social life/clubs. I desperately want to get involved in clubs, but I need to separate time for classes. Not to mention I want to keep volunteering and gain animal experience which leads me to this: how do you guys balance work/volunteer/social life so successfully? 🙂
I'm gonna bombard you guys with more questions: Did you guys volunteer/job shadow at the clinics during school? I hear a lot of people also work as vet assistants or have jobs at vet clinics. Was it hard to get jobs there?
You get varying opinions on clubs. Here's mine. Clubs are good for a bunch of reasons: 1) The 'technical/medical' ones give you clinical skills a bit quicker than you might otherwise get them. That means being further along when you graduate, and it also means having some FUN in vet school amidst the drudgery of yer 65th exam of the year. 2) You can network through clubs; not with other students but with speakers. I've pulled in some interesting experiences just by talking to speakers and following up. 3) Minimal commitment. So long as you don't take officer positions, clubs (at least here) don't really demand much. You pay your dues, and then show up for whatever you want. Worst case, you find a club to be totally worthless (or you don't have time) and you're out your dues. Sucks, but not a HUGE deal. And with most clubs (again - at least here) you make back yer club dues in meals at the lunch talks. 4) Knowledge you won't get through school. Our VBMA club, for instances, has some great business-related speakers that talk on topics the school just isn't going to cover in the curriculum.
Some people, otoh, just aren't interested in clubs. They want a break over lunch and they want to get off campus as soon as school ends, or don't feel the dues are worth it. I can understand that, too.
I found that I had to put volunteering/shadowing on the backburner when classes are in session. I still dropped in at the clinic I haunt, and I spent quite a bit of time there this summer, but the other extra-curricular opportunities were more valuable.
Not sure where 'there' is when you're talking about jobs. If you mean at the teaching hospital, dunno. But a number of my classmates work as techs or assistants at clinics around the metro area. They tend to do it one weekend day or something like that, and pick up extra hours during break. If I were you, I wouldn't plan to work more than 10-15 hours/week at most. Maybe you find you can do more (hey, I worked full time for the first couple months of school), but it's better to ramp up than go in overloaded.
A big white-board with due/exam dates on it is a good thing. Our class reps actually maintained two of them - one in our lecture hall and one outside our study carrel room. I greatly appreciated it.