Does anyone have any experience with the online pre med lab courses at ccconline.org ? The schedule flexibility of the online courses is why I am looking. As far as can tell they should satisfy any premed requirements.
Thanks
Thanks
MJB said:I found an online BioChem class...with lab if I remember correctly.
QofQuimica said:How the heck does that even work??? Do-it-at-home gel electrophoresis??? Do you have to buy your own micropipettes??? I could see doing some lectures on line, but lab by its very nature is supposed to a class where you learn by doing experiments, well, IN A LAB!!!!
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Dr Trek 1 said:Hey guys,
I took an online lab for my online A&P class (not a med school prereq by the way). It was an interactive CD-ROM program. The graphics were actually quite excellent. It was lots of things you'd do in a normal lab: electrophoresis, titrations, disserctions, etc. You would set up the experiment on the screen and actually do carry out the experiment on screen. You would actually move the test tubes with your mouse and pour them in to the appropriate beakers, set up the electrophoresis and do the trials, etc. You'd then do a pretty normal lab writeup with the difficult theoretical questions, etc.
I never really got anything out of real labs. Not to say that I think online labs are better, but I think there was some benefit to being able to do unlimited trials and being more free to experiment with different things. I never was able to do this given the time constraints of the real labs.
MJB said:Interesting. I guess I could see how that would work. I'll bet that is some interesting software.
I would even go so far as to say it would be more interesting and educational than most of the microscale crap I've done in Orgo lab that didn't work half the time...
If we can train pilots with flight simulators, I'm guessing we can simulate a chemical reaction using today's technology. I'd be interested in seeing how they do it.
MJB said:I guess what I'm wondering is why it's deemed so necessary to know HOW to do these things unless your life's goal is to do research or be a lab rat?
I can't think of many times in my 8 years in the Pharma Industry that I NEEDED to know lab technique...because I chose not to work in the lab.
Now, I can see the need for live Anatomy labs...I wouldn't want a surgeon cutting on me that had never cut on anything before, for instance.
Labs have always been fairly difficult for me unless they had to do with A or P (and especially chem labs) because I found them incredibly boring. Funny thing is, I'm a hands on learner for the most part, and love "doing work" like that...
I took a look; it's virtual. I assume it works like Dr. Trek explained. The only problem is that your grade might also be virtual.MJB said:Don't know...I didn't say i was taking it...just that I saw it. I'll have to check.
I haven't gotten a whole lot out of my 6+hours of lab work in Organic this semester...that's for sure.
I know you like Chem. Lab work and research and all, but it's a necessary evil to me! 🙂
My fault, it doesn't look like Lab is included...
http://faculty.une.edu/com/courses/bionut/distbio/distbiohome.html
But they do offer an online Org class w/lab...
http://distance.une.edu/organic/
cs300m said:Does anyone have any experience with the online pre med lab courses at ccconline.org ? The schedule flexibility of the online courses is why I am looking. As far as can tell they should satisfy any premed requirements.
Thanks
I took a look; it's virtual. I assume it works like Dr. Trek explained. The only problem is that your grade might also be virtual.
Ok, all joking aside, I don't have a problem with nonmajors doing something like this. I think your arguments make sense, and I'd rather not dissect a cadaver myself (no chance that I'm going to go into surgery) when I can learn anatomy just as well from prosections or computers. But I would advise you against doing it only because I can tell you from personal experience how much adcoms don't like students with unusual transcripts. I got plenty of grief for not having graded pre-reqs, and I *had* taken real labs.
Online LAB courses?! That is the end! I have enough difficulty accepting the idea of online courses for lecture- or reading-based subject matter. I cannot conceive of an online lab course having anywhere near the educational value of a real-live classroom setting. I guess we all do what we have to, but...do you really HAVE to go this route? 😱
Best,
NYM 🙂
Wow, I am going to do all my Organic Chem courses and labs online. WOW, no test tubes or beakers!! Great no periodic tables....just online true and false open book tests for Organic!! WOOOOWEEE!!! This is just great. I wonder if I can take an ONLINE MCAT test that will count and have it OPEN BOOK??? WOW!!!!!Thanks for giving me a laugh this morning, now let me go get a napkin for the coffee I just knocked over from laughing.....ALOHA FROM HAWAII!!!!
Another ignorant post. One only hopes that this forum will one day become more tolerant and progressive. Whatever the root cause of your obsession will cookbook classroom labs and conventional learning, your mockery is out of place. I would remind you that perhaps 30 years ago if not more recently still, "nontraditional" students would have met such skepticism and derision upon applying to medical school with community college courses, or at a given age, or from some other line of work, etc.
If online labs and courses from accredited colleges and universities meet your real life needs in meeting the pre-med requirements, I encourage anyone out there to defy the "purists" bench scientsts like QofQuimica and ignoramuses like FutureDoctor (sad, very sad...) and proceed to learn the material. At then end of the day, your MCAT score will speak as loudly as theirs.
Moreover, you will actually become a truly independent learner in the process.
Onward and upward.
I hated lab work as well. But stay away from the online versions-- they will not be as highly regarded. As non-trads we have enough to explain without adding things like this.
While I get your point, and speaking as neither a purist nor a particularly sciencey person, I have to say that it would be impossible to adequately duplicate the lab experience some of us had via an online course. Some of the chemicals used are biohazards you wouldn't want to use at home without proper ventillation hoods, and others are subcomponents of substances such that if you tried to order them, you would generate some interest by the DEA. Virtual labs don't work, because much of lab is actually the doing, seeing how sometimes you don't get the desired results and then trying over, or to explain why it didn't work, inadvertently creating human error, etc. We all know when we get to lab what SHOULD happen -- and that really is never the point of lab (at least not in something like organic). The importance is not seeing that if you mix X+Y you get Z, but often explaining why you didn't get Z, keeping adequate lab notes, learning both what should happen and what actually did. There was a ton of learning how to use various apparatus, learning how to work under hoods, learning how to run gels, titrate things, dispose of things -- all of which you have to have the opportunity to handle and to screw up and have to start from scratch to get the actual learning experience. Some things are suited to the virtual world, others not. Lab falls squarely in the not category -- you can give a view of the experience, but you cannot give the experience.
At least not with current computer technology. Perhaps when we get to the point of seamless virtual environments with those gloves and helmets they use in certain video arcades, then it can be approximated. Even then it will be decades before it is perfect, but maybe you can get to the "good enough" level. But a normal PC computer most of us have at home can't give you the same experience. So it's still reasonable that places insist on the in person experience.
It is, alas, disturbing to witness the degree of dogmatism and indoctrination ("that's the way I learned it so there can't possibly be another way...") expressed herein.
Virtual labs may not "replicate" the standard experience but in many ways they exceed it, at least as pedagogical tools.
You probably are going to find some frustration in medical education then -- it is steeped in tradition.
Like I've said, the MCAT score will speak as loudly for someone whose taken online labs as for someone whose taken the conventional classes.
The MCAT is meaningless if you haven't taken the prereqs. Lots of prereqs are not on the MCAT. (English, Math, in some places Biochem). But they still are required. Lab is another example. You can do fine on the MCAT from chemistry lecture but if you don't have the right lab you don't get in.
You're so biased against online and alternative labs that you assume someone who takes such courses has not actually taken a lab. I am not saying that a high MCAT with out meeting lab requirements suffices; I am saying that online/distance learning/alternative labs are sufficient and will become increasingly common in the years to come in spite of the estasblishment's prejudices.
A lab is a lab and most transcripts don't mention the distinction between on site and distance courses any longer.
Again, for people who cannot leave a job or for any other reason cannot take a conventional course then good online/distance alternatives exist and will likely only grow in number and quality in the future.
You have no right and no basis to pass judgment on virtual labs and distance learning.
I'm going to try to get my point across while hopefully being less rude to you than you were to me. The thing is, LS, I have way more experience with applying to medical school with a nontradititional academic record (no grades, GPA, or credits) and a nearly perfect MCAT score (43S) than I could have ever wished for. It sucked, big-time. My goal in writing that post was to save others from going through some of the same unnecessary hardships, not to judge the value of online learning per se. What you need to understand is, when it comes to applying to medical school, it doesn't actually matter how well prepared you are if you don't have the right credentials. Basically, if an adcom wants you to jump through a specific hoop and you haven't jumped through it, you probably won't get accepted, no matter how qualified you are. But please, don't take my word for it. Do your online labs, apply, and come back to let me know how wrong I am when the med schools all come knocking down your off-the-beaten-path door. My friend, I will seriously be the first one in line to congratulate you for doing what I could not, and beating the pants off the crusty, traditional, prejudicial, elitist, and dated medical school application process. 🙂Your opinion is extremely prejudiced, elitist, and dated. There is a growing body of educational research about distance learning science courses (including those for majors) substantiating the efficacy of on-line technologies, simple and affordable at home lab experiments, and other methods enabling individuals who cannot attend a conventional classroom or lab to attain their educational goals. Moreover, in many cases the data reveal that students learning through virtual and a variety of other distance methods outperform their counterparts in traditional settings.
It seems ironic that the medical school admissions establishment is so opposed to on-line labs and other such innovative pegagogical appraoches while many of the best medical schools are investing million of dollars in simulation technologies ("standardized" patients, virtual clinical skills software, etc.)!
I wasn't aware you were able to read my mind, Counselor. 😎FWIW, calling people and their opinions biased, prejudiced, ignorant etc. as you have done in prior posts, is actually always the worst way to convince people - it usually pushes them in the other direction. Take it from a former mouthpiece.
I'm going to try to get my point across while hopefully being less rude to you than you were to me. The thing is, LS, I have way more experience with applying to medical school with a nontradititional academic record (no grades, GPA, or credits) and a nearly perfect MCAT score (43S) than I could have ever wished for. It sucked, big-time. My goal in writing that post was to save others from going through some of the same unnecessary hardships, not to judge the value of online learning per se. What you need to understand is, when it comes to applying to medical school, it doesn't actually matter how well prepared you are if you don't have the right credentials. Basically, if an adcom wants you to jump through a specific hoop and you haven't jumped through it, you probably won't get accepted, no matter how qualified you are. But please, don't take my word for it. Do your online labs, apply, and come back to let me know how wrong I am when the med schools all come knocking down your off-the-beaten-path door. My friend, I will seriously be the first one in line to congratulate you for doing what I could not, and beating the pants off the crusty, traditional, prejudicial, elitist, and dated medical school application process. 🙂
I wasn't aware you were able to read my mind, Counselor. 😎
is less than becoming a forum that fancies itself "nontraditional."
I stand by my words and chose them carefully. When someone outright mocks and ridicules the mere idea of an online lab -- e.g., read the reference to "virtual grades" --that in my mind is an act of ignorance. I am not trying to reduce this discussion to ad hominem attacks but it is evident that you are both predisposed, i.e., biased, against the idea and/or substance of alternative distance learning methods for laboratory coursework. So be it.
However, to attempt to undermine the quality of a person's education because it has been undertaken through heterodox means is less than becoming a forum that fancies itself "nontraditional." Distance learning in general is democratizing education and creating opportunities for countless people from all walks of life who have no other feasible alternatives, including aspiring medical students. There is always resistance to change; it is just both ironic and painful to encounter that mindset on this forum.
LS, it was a joke. I was making a JOKE when I said that. That's why I included theI stand by my words and chose them carefully. When someone outright mocks and ridicules the mere idea of an online lab -- e.g., read the reference to "virtual grades" --that in my mind is an act of ignorance.
Well, but you did reduce it to an ad hominem attack, and you still don't seem to realize that I was teasing another poster with whom I am friendly when I made that comment!LastSamurai said:I am not trying to reduce this discussion to ad hominem attacks but it is evident that you are both predisposed, i.e., biased, against the idea and/or substance of alternative distance learning methods for laboratory coursework. So be it.
I don't think it's ironic at all. We're med students. The desire to be different begins to be beaten out of you after a while. 😉LastSamurai said:I appreciate your desire to prevent those of us who have no other viable options from undertaking the quixotic path of online labs.
However, to attempt to undermine the quality of a person's education because it has been undertaken through heterodox means is less than becoming a forum that fancies itself "nontraditional." Distance learning in general is democratizing education and creating opportunities for countless people from all walks of life who have no other feasible alternatives, including aspiring medical students. There is always resistance to change; it is just both ironic and painful to encounter that mindset on this forum.
I honestly do wish you the best. Just, from now on, would you not take my months-old jokes with other people as personal attacks against you??? Sheesh!Last Samurai said:I take your words, QofQuimica, as the throwing of the gauntlet. Very well, nothing will give me more satisfaction than to post of my successes on this forum. Untill then, I will follow the only path open to me in spite of the naysayers.
Another ignorant post. One only hopes that this forum will one day become more tolerant and progressive. Whatever the root cause of your obsession will cookbook classroom labs and conventional learning, your mockery is out of place. I would remind you that perhaps 30 years ago if not more recently still, "nontraditional" students would have met such skepticism and derision upon applying to medical school with community college courses, or at a given age, or from some other line of work, etc.
If online labs and courses from accredited colleges and universities meet your real life needs in meeting the pre-med requirements, I encourage anyone out there to defy the "purists" bench scientsts like QofQuimica and ignoramuses like FutureDoctor (sad, very sad...) and proceed to learn the material. At then end of the day, your MCAT score will speak as loudly as theirs.
Moreover, you will actually become a truly independent learner in the process.
Onward and upward.
LOL you get it all out? LOL LOL lighten up. Bottom line, NO MED school is going to take anyone serious taking online classes.....WAIT, let me take a sip of my mai tai here in paradise.....thanks for waiting......lighten up, life is too short......ME KE ALOHA PUMEHANA MAI KAI LO MAHALO!!!! ALOHA FROM HAWAII!!!!!!!!
LOL you get it all out? LOL LOL lighten up. Bottom line, NO MED school is going to take anyone serious taking online classes.....WAIT, let me take a sip of my mai tai here in paradise.....thanks for waiting......lighten up, life is too short......ME KE ALOHA PUMEHANA MAI KAI LO MAHALO!!!! ALOHA FROM HAWAII!!!!!!!!
Also, I've seen Q here for a long time, she's not vicious, though she can be opinionated 😀
Non-trads posting often here try to help each other out by putting things in the worst possible light -there are a LOT of posts on this forum questioning people's core motives for pursuing medicine, which is going quite a bit further than questioning your courses.
I'm personally grateful for the nay-sayers, I'd rather read it here now than hear it from an adcomm later (it's a lot cheaper), but if you really want to hear it from the adcomm, just call several schools you want to apply to and ask.
Agree.I think it's less about putting things in the worst possible light and more about trying to give folks a reality check. If the poster meets the challenge, knows the risks and the ugly under belly, and yet still wants to proceed, most on here wish them well. But if someone on here posts that they want to try and be sole support to 13 kids while attending med school, or marry a dizzy freckle faced woman for a green card to get into school (both examples from this year), a lot of the regulars aren't going to say "I see no flaws in that plan" and cheer them on. And someone deciding that s/he can decide better than the adcoms what prereqs are permitted (and "enter med school on his/her own terms") falls within that camp I think. If the OP can prove us wrong, fantastic -- I hope he posts once he gets in so others can follow in his footsteps. Till then, it's the reality check issue.
I do have my opinions, and as one of the minority of regular posters in the nontrad forum who is already in med school and who volunteers for the admissions office at my school, I am happy to share my experiences when those of you who are applying now ask for advice. That being said, people are free to take my advice for whatever they think it's worth; if you think I'm talking out of my derriere, by all means, feel free to ignore me. I won't take it personally, and I'll still wish you all possible success. 🙂montessori2md said:Also, I've seen Q here for a long time, she's not vicious, though she can be opinionated
Non-trads posting often here try to help each other out by putting things in the worst possible light -there are a LOT of posts on this forum questioning people's core motives for pursuing medicine, which is going quite a bit further than questioning your courses.
I'm personally grateful for the nay-sayers, I'd rather read it here now than hear it from an adcomm later (it's a lot cheaper), but if you really want to hear it from the adcomm, just call several schools you want to apply to and ask.
Please I really need help . Does anyone know of any immunology online courses?
Please I really need help . Does anyone know of any immunology online courses?