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I would hate to have grades anywhere close to average but I realize most of my classmates won't be stupid.
What do?
What do?
Do your best and stop worrying about measuring yourself against others.....
Competition can be fierce depending on the school you attend and depending upon your desired career track post graduation. If you want a residency, you better be getting good grades and be involved. The "measuring yourself against others" doesn't necessarily stop with residency either. In any career field with promotion potential, you need to strive to be the best or at least be extremely good at networking and make a lot of contacts. "Doing your best" isn't necessarily enough if your best doesn't match up to others.
If I remember right, top 10% are usually the ones invited to Rho Chi.I understand what you're getting at (especially if you want a residency), but my personal outlook has always been to try to avoid measuring against others and I believe it has saved me alot of stress. I'm just not sure what is accomplished by worring about being in the top 10%. Just do what you can to the best of your ability and let the cards fall where they may.
Competition can be fierce depending on the school you attend and depending upon your desired career track post graduation. If you want a residency, you better be getting good grades and be involved. The "measuring yourself against others" doesn't necessarily stop with residency either. In any career field with promotion potential, you need to strive to be the best or at least be extremely good at networking and make a lot of contacts. "Doing your best" isn't necessarily enough if your best doesn't match up to others.
Is it possible to do better than one's best? Other people are often a useful measuring stick, but if you're already busting your *** and doing everything you can to make good grades, be involved, etc. then what good does it do to say "aww shucks, I'm only in the top 11% of my class... I suck at life"?
I know what I'm capable of, and if I come up short of that it doesn't matter if I'm in the top 1% of my class, I'd still be disappointed. I think meeting one's own standards is more important than just comparing yourself to your peers. I know that if I set ambitious goals for myself, then I can shoot for those and the rest should follow.
I would hate to have grades anywhere close to average but I realize most of my classmates won't be stupid.
What do?
If I remember right, top 10% are usually the ones invited to Rho Chi.
It can be difficult to do. More importantly, just do your best not to be in the bottom 10%.![]()
Oh good for you.😛Yeah, it's top 10%. I just got invited into Rho Chi last month. I am most likely top 1% of my class. 😀
Oh good for you.😛
Oops meant that to be a clap on the back again.
Oh good for you.😛
Oops meant that to be a clap on the back again.
SHC1984: Awesome, do you attend Mercer?
Hot and smart stuff. Someone is... 😛
Hot and smart stuff. Someone is... 😛
Yeah, it's top 10%. I just got invited into Rho Chi last month. I am most likely top 1% of my class. 😀
Thought it was top 20%,as I'm pretty sure it is that at my school. Does it vary by school?
Thought it was top 20%,as I'm pretty sure it is that at my school. Does it vary by school?
incredibly hard.
two main parts:
1. motivating yourself to achieve something completely overblown and meaningless.. (EXTREMELY hard)
2. actually doing it.. (easy)
You can probably guess where most people fail in this particular endeavor.
Seriously.. learn what you need to know for the job (hint, a lot of pharmacy school is not this), be a hard worker at your job (key), and network. It will get you a lot farther and a lot more satisfaction in life
.
Basically: It's a lot of work (that's why it's the top 10%.... its not the smartest 10%, btw), but it isnt impossible by any means.
I look it up. At my school the top 10% gets invited into Rho Chi P2 year. Then the other 10% get invited into Rho Chi P3 year. So yes, techinically it's top 20%. But if you are not top 10% you have to wait till you are a P3 to get invited.
What we are learning in school is actually interesting to me and I think as a pharmacist you need to know that stuff. Yes, it is tiring to study and it is much more fun to party...that's obvious, but if you absolutely HATE what you are learning in school then pharmacy isn't for you. You definetly aren't interested in it.
While not all 10% of us are the smartest, there are definetly some people in Rho Chi that are the SMARTEST. They have a 4.0, a job and a social life...much smarter than your average 3.0 student.
I'd say more than half of the students in rho chi from my class went out regularly. We used to joke about the high amount of students in rho chi who sat in the back two rows (and often came in hungover). There were also students who worked full time jobs and had families who were in rho chi. Maybe it was people who were naturally smart, took tests well, knew how to manage their time, or whatever, but we loved it. If you're spending your whole life studying and working something isn't going right. Partly because you need social skills to network and communicate with patients/colleagues when you work.
Yeah, I can think of a few people like that too. One girl in my class is like 21 or 22 years old. She sits in the VERY last row in the class...by the look of her facebook profile she goes out TONS...and she has a 4.0!!! She properly never studies and she is so laid back! I don't know how she does it...but GOOD JOB!!!
I sit near the front, but I didn't study a lot my P1 year. P2 year I am studying much MORE, but I still have a little bit of time to spare. I am not a big party person b/c I am no longer 21 or 22 anymore 🙁, but I do like to go out shopping or watch movies etc. Yeah, I don't think there are anyone in Rho Chi that studies 24/7...but P2 year is much more diffcult for ME anyways! lol....
I got ZERO questions about my grades or classes during my residency interviews (so far). I have several Cs and one D and no one asked me about them. What people were interested in discussing was my work experience (Did you do this at your job? Have you ever done that? How did you handle this situation at work? How would you deal with this if it happened at work?) and my activities/community service.
This is consistent with what I've heard from faculty, which is that grades are important to demonstrate reasonable mastery/competency with the material, but a 4.0 is not essential and not that much more highly regarded than something in the mid to high 3s.
GPA is probably used to screen applicants, so I'd aim to keep the GPA over 3.0 but beyond that screening step, it's not that important. But if you get to an interview and don't have anything to say because you've never really worked and you don't have any interesting activities, leadership or service projects to talk about, it's going to be awkward and you probably won't get the residency or job.
And people who join every club available just to pad their CV but don't have anything they are TRULY involved in/passionate about won't do well either. I was asked indepth questions about my activities and service stuff. At my last interview, I met with four different groups of people and 3/4 groups asked about my involvement with SDN. Luckily, I've been involved with this site for six years and have a lot of meaningful leadership activities and project management to discuss. I think it really helped me differentiate myself from the others.
Work on your writing skills too. A strong LOI can help your application make the cut if you are borderline. I also got questions about things I'd written and how I researched and went about putting various pieces together. I really felt like ALL my interviewers had perused my CV extensively.
So...that was a long answer. But the bottomline is do well in class but don't neglect other stuff. A 4.0 student with no work or life experience is going to get passed over every time in favor of someone who has lower grades but is well rounded and experienced.
I got ZERO questions about my grades or classes during my residency interviews (so far). I have several Cs and one D and no one asked me about them. What people were interested in discussing was my work experience (Did you do this at your job? Have you ever done that? How did you handle this situation at work? How would you deal with this if it happened at work?) and my activities/community service.
So...that was a long answer. But the bottomline is do well in class but don't neglect other stuff. A 4.0 student with no work or life experience is going to get passed over every time in favor of someone who has lower grades but is well rounded and experienced.
I got ZERO questions about my grades or classes during my residency interviews (so far). I have several Cs and one D and no one asked me about them. What people were interested in discussing was my work experience (Did you do this at your job? Have you ever done that? How did you handle this situation at work? How would you deal with this if it happened at work?) and my activities/community service.
This is consistent with what I've heard from faculty, which is that grades are important to demonstrate reasonable mastery/competency with the material, but a 4.0 is not essential and not that much more highly regarded than something in the mid to high 3s.
GPA is probably used to screen applicants, so I'd aim to keep the GPA over 3.0 but beyond that screening step, it's not that important. But if you get to an interview and don't have anything to say because you've never really worked and you don't have any interesting activities, leadership or service projects to talk about, it's going to be awkward and you probably won't get the residency or job.
I thought of something else. There are some people in my class who have very high grades but cannot apply what they have learned to save their lives. They can memorize every exquisite detail for the exam and then regurgitate it and earn that 4.0 but then they forget it all. Being able to use and apply information in real life is a FAR cry from being able to ace a multiple choice exam.
I was on rotation with one such student during my IPPE. It was sad to see this 4.0 student look like a deer in the headlights when asked to recommend an H2 blocker for a patient with no insurance because she 1) couldn't name any H2 blockers on her own 2) when prompted with the brand names couldn't relate them to the generic names we learned in class and 3) had no idea which agents even had generics available and might therefore be cheaper. This was after our OTC therapeutics class and lab with weekly case studies so there was no excuse. PS: this student also had very very limited work experience...
Another student was asked to leave an APPE hospital rotation the first day because she couldn't describe the MOA of coumadin, give any reasons a patient might be taking the drug and didn't know how we monitored it. Hmmm. Wierd. Because we had a very good therapeutics module on anti-coagulation. And this is a another Dean's List student.
Just to be equal opportunity, I will tell the story of a student from another school in my state who was asked the first day of our rotation together to make a recommendation for a patient who needed an ACE inhibitor. He couldn't tell the preceptor why the patient needed the ACEI and he had to go look up a list of ACEI on Wikipedia. She also made him do a topic discussion on the thyroid and the role of TSH and T3/T4 and how they affect each other + differentiate between hyper and hypo thyroidism. Because he had no clue how to interpret thyroid labs or treat hypothyroidism.
My theory is that we are getting so idealized in terms of what is taught in pharmacy school that we are neglecting the basics. That or we are admitting too many people who don't have a lick of common sense.
I was on rotation with one such student during my IPPE. It was sad to see this 4.0 student look like a deer in the headlights when asked to recommend an H2 blocker for a patient with no insurance because she 1) couldn't name any H2 blockers on her own 2) when prompted with the brand names couldn't relate them to the generic names we learned in class and 3) had no idea which agents even had generics available and might therefore be cheaper. This was after our OTC therapeutics class and lab with weekly case studies so there was no excuse. PS: this student also had very very limited work experience...
Another student was asked to leave an APPE hospital rotation the first day because she couldn't describe the MOA of coumadin, give any reasons a patient might be taking the drug and didn't know how we monitored it. Hmmm. Wierd. Because we had a very good therapeutics module on anti-coagulation. And this is a another Dean's List student.
Just to be equal opportunity, I will tell the story of a student from another school in my state who was asked the first day of our rotation together to make a recommendation for a patient who needed an ACE inhibitor. He couldn't tell the preceptor why the patient needed the ACEI and he had to go look up a list of ACEI on Wikipedia.
She also made him do a topic discussion on the thyroid and the role of TSH and T3/T4 and how they affect each other + differentiate between hyper and hypo thyroidism. Because he had no clue how to interpret thyroid labs or treat hypothyroidism.
Look at SHC, she refuses to work during the school year to protect her grades, and yet complains when companies arent interested in hiring her for 10 weeks during the summer. A true pharmacy baller would accept lower grades in order to become known as a great worker, which will help lock in a great job much more so than being known as a "great studier"
If Cardinal Health wants to hire me I would work there during the school year...I really really realllllllllllllllllllllllllly want to work for them. I'll take a 3.8 GPA if I get to work for Cardinal!!! 😀
Pepcid/famotidine - Bam!
Inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase, all kinds of information about the clotting cascade. Anticoagulant, soooo many reasons a patient would be on it, monitored by INR. Boom!
Anything that ends in pril (I like lisinopril). Kapow!
This I would need to look up. There goes my winning streak. 3/4 is pretty good I think?
good luck with that 3.8 gpa working 1am-6am before school. It's really hard to study after a 16 hour day of class and work on only a few hours of sleep.
everyone I knew from nuclear took a gpa hit to work there, you gotta ask yourself tho, is it worth the job after graduation? I thought so but ymmv. After 9 months I felt like a burnt out shell of a human, and now I see my friend who works nuke experiencing the same thing, it's not pretty. That said, cardinal offers 4 weeks + as starting vacation for new graduates and most people there are also taking 1-2 hours of break during each shift
I never felt like a pharmacist in school. I didn't really feel like one until after residency and still am humbled on a daily basis. Medicine is never a field where one feels completely comfortable in their knowledge - so much to learn, so much changes. That's why I love it 🙂As a prepharm student matriculating this Fall, the breadth of knowledge pharmacists are required to know in regards to drug therapy is astounding. When do you, as pharmacy students, really start to feel like pharmacists? I heard it's during P3. Anyone care to elaborate?
I would hate to have grades anywhere close to average but I realize most of my classmates won't be stupid.
What do?
Honestly, if working at Cardinal almost guarantee me a position there when I graduate (meaning I won't be left jobless upon graduation) I will work there during school and take a GPA hit. I have pretty much a 4.0 right now (I only made one B+ in pharmacy school) so even if I made all C(s) my P3 year, my GPA will still end up being around the 3.5 area (actually higher since I have 2 years of A(s) balancing out my 1 year of C(s) lol..). I'll take a 3.5 if it means I get to become a nuclear pharmacist.
Cardinal Health in my location might be hiring this summer. One P4 is about to graduate and leave for sure...but they told me they are under a hiring freeze right now so they are not 100% sure if they can hire another person....but if they can they would interview me for the position. If I can get that job I will be MORE than happy. The problem is will they be hiring? 🙁
It may be worth it. It would be if you want to work nuclear. But you also gotta remember there are only a literal handful of nuke jobs open in the us at a given time, and not many of them are conducive to having a family. Are you ready to move out of california ?. But also the fact that there are only a few students in the US who work nuke means your chances are not as bad as it would seem if you have a good work experience.
Pepcid/famotidine - Bam!
Inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase, all kinds of information about the clotting cascade. Anticoagulant, soooo many reasons a patient would be on it, monitored by INR. Boom!
Anything that ends in pril (I like lisinopril). Kapow!
This I would need to look up. There goes my winning streak. 3/4 is pretty good I think?
good luck with that 3.8 gpa working 1am-6am before school. It's really hard to study after a 16 hour day of class and work on only a few hours of sleep.
everyone I knew from nuclear took a gpa hit to work there, you gotta ask yourself tho, is it worth the job after graduation? I thought so but ymmv. After 9 months I felt like a burnt out shell of a human, and now I see my friend who works nuke experiencing the same thing, it's not pretty. That said, cardinal offers 4 weeks + as starting vacation for new graduates and most people there are also taking 1-2 hours of break during each shift
I am not 100% sure that I want to work nuclear. I know I prefer it over retail!!!But I am not 100% sure that I want nuclear. I would like to experience it though b/c I have no idea what they actually do. I just know they work alone in a quiet environment, no patient interaction. That works well for me. I don't live in CA and I don't have a family, but I would like to have one someday. I will take any job that isn't retail.
I will tell you, you are right about one thing. Having a job really INCREASES your chances of getting hired at that place after graduation. That is better than having a 4.0 for sure...but you still need to do your best of course. I would say anything 3.5 and above is good enough.
Yep, I did an interview to be a tech at a nuclear pharmacy back in 2008. And at the end of the interview the guy was like, "You do know that the hours for this position are 2AM-10AM?"
That pretty much killed it. They have 3 different shifts there but most of the work is done from 2AM-10AM.
High TSH = hypothyroidism because its decreasing your levels of T3/T4
Low TSH = hyperthyroidism because its not inhibiting T3/T4
I'm on my Internal Med rotation right now and it's going pretty good. The attending has me giving lectures to the residents and med students 1-2 times a week, and these are additional projects on top of the journal clubs, literature evaluations, vanco/anticoag monitoring, following patients. My preceptor was surprised when I told him my GPA was in the low 2s.
Dude, your pathophysiology is completely ass backwards. I hope you're not bringing that out to the medical team.