busyizzy,
why so serious. plenty of people get into pharmacy school without taking speech 101. Plenty of people do pharmacy without being native english speakers as well. Its the attitude that counts, not the pedigree.
Granted, some folks may not speak so clearly or may speak with thick accents or what have you-- thats okay too. That means the field of pharmacy is multi-cultural, and "diverse"; "diversity". THats a good thing, did you know that?
Did you see how Switzerland banned that Islamic cultural whatever. Thats a bad thing. This thread is going down a slippery slope, whether we support ethinic intolerance or keeping hard-earned jobs in America.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh5pqt1sM8w
First, pharmacy IS a serious field. You mess up, someone can die. That applies to a lot of different careers, but yes, pharmacy is included. If someone can't understand you because your english is so broken - then YES that it a problem!
I've looked into about 30 different schools and their prereqs, and they ALL required speech in their prereqs. Now, I'm not saying that ALL of the US pharm schools do, as this is only from my experience (so perhaps I was wrong in saying most pharm schools require it). But really, please, enlighten me, and tell me which ones do not require it, so I might consider applying, cuz I don't really want to take a speech class spring/summer semester. Anyway, my point in pointing out the speech prereq is that some schools think it's so important to be able to speak clearly that they even require it as a prereq!
I never said I was anti-culture or anti-multi-cultural or anything. "diversity is a good thing, did you know that?" This issue has NOTHING to do with diversity, did YOU know that? Look, just because I said it's important to speak PROFESSIONALLY at an INTERVIEW for a PROFESSIONAL school, it doesn't mean I think native English speakers or people with thick accents should not apply. So, don't start putting words in my mouth. This is NOT about ethnic intolerance. It is ABSOLUTELY IRRELEVANT. I have met MANY non native English speakers able to communicate clearly and professionally. In fact, I work at a science lab where ALL the postdocs are from out of the country (Indian, Italian, Greek, Korean, Chinese, and Japanese), and they are able to speak perfectly well with me, and I to them. I'm not asking for perfect English when speaking. But speaking clearly, making sure people understand you, and some grammatical understanding of the language - these things are important, at least to me, and they are qualities I would look for in a health care provider.
I just stated the truth: you have to be able to speak well! If you can't convey your thoughts or concerns coherently and clearly, then you will be bad at your job as a pharmacist (unless you're just holed up with zero patient interaction). This means, you need to be able to speak professionally.
And finally I disagree with your statement, "it's okay if you can;t speak clearly." Are you saying that if you mumble to a patient the important things about their medication and they can't understand you because you're not talking clearly - that it's okay??? I can't be the only one that thinks this is ridiculous.