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Anyone thinking of working on a DVM/PhD? What do you want to study and where at?
I have a masters in ruminant nutrition. But most univeristies will allow you to get a PhD without a MS. And there are vet schools that have programs that let you get your Phd while studing for your DVM. You finish both at the same time (in four years). This is the program that I am really talking about.
I have a masters in ruminant nutrition. But most univeristies will allow you to get a PhD without a MS. And there are vet schools that have programs that let you get your Phd while studing for your DVM. You finish both at the same time (in four years). This is the program that I am really talking about.
I am looking at LSU. I know of alot PhD students that have finished in three years when they have done it separately. An extra semester of two may be need, but I am looking at five years, tops.
You finish both at the same time (in four years). This is the program that I am really talking about.
Nyanko - you applied to both grad and DVM at Davis? Did you apply under the VSTP (if you didn't, how are you going to pull it off?) Are you interviewing next week?
I know of alot PhD students that have finished in three years when they have done it separately.
BobDog, I know you've done a PhD and are now going to start a DVM. What did interviewers seem to think of that and what are your career goals, if you don't mind me asking? What was your dissertation on?
I DO think that you should really be sure that you like research if you go decide to do a PhD only program like I have, because I have seen too many people who get here and then hate it (for a million different reasons). There are also no guarantees about how long a PhD will take (not even with a DVM/PhD program). It is just the nature of the work. Some projects run perfectly and some don't. Honestly, I had the data I am now writing up for my dissertation (that also comprises my two publications) in my first two years here. Then I had a series of experiments that simply didn't work. That is how things go.
Since I've never really felt the pull for research, I can't really comment on it, except to say that I totally admire you guys and am very grateful that other people want to do it! 🙂
BobDog, just wanted to say that comparative onc is awesome and to rock on. 🙂 I know a veterinary pathologist at NIH conducting a study on canine gliomas. They're such terrible tumors...whenever we had a case that was a confirmed tumor (w/ MRI), we asked owners for permission for NIH to take the brain. Very cool stuff and GBMs scare the crap out of me. 🙂 Good job and keep up the good work! We need you! 😍
Oh my gosh, I know Dr. Khanna--he works at Friendship Hospital for Animals. He is AMAZING in comparative onc--forgot he was an investigator in that study, too.
Did you know Michelle Silver? She did her general rotating internship at my practice (referral center in VA) and then did an oncology internship with us + rotations with Dr. Khanna. She matched to an onco residency in Boston and should be finishing up her first year there.
Dr. Khanna is a god! He's wonderful. 🙂 🙂
Because I thought I had misunderstood something about the DVM/PhD option that I am intrested in, I talked face-to-face with some of the LSU faculty at a conference this weekend. I was told that the average time required for the five students that have previously completed the program was about 5yrs. (You apply for grad school after the first semester and you work on it during breaks and during sessions, if you are capable handling the load) But, it depends on your intrests and if you wait untill after clinicals or during clinicals to finish. Also, it may depend on your advisor (etc) and experience.
Because I thought I had misunderstood something about the DVM/PhD option that I am intrested in, I talked face-to-face with some of the LSU faculty at a conference this weekend. I was told that the average time required for the five students that have previously completed the program was about 5yrs. (You apply for grad school after the first semester and you work on it during breaks and during sessions, if you are capable handling the load) But, it depends on your intrests and if you wait untill after clinicals or during clinicals to finish. Also, it may depend on your advisor (etc) and experience.
I am by no means doubting the information they gave you at LSU, but a recurring theme throughout all of my research on the DVM/PhD programs has been that it really isn't beneficial to truncate the PhD time. Faculty members at the vet schools I've been to as well as ones at my undergrad have said numerous times that a 1-2 year PhD isn't going to pull any weight.
While I was typing my epic post based on my experiences, Banditalfi said the exact same thing 😀.