I'm not making a blanket statement. And I'm not saying vet students at some schools are regularly operating, either. I know very well that's not the case. I'm simply giving insight I've obtained from years of working with doctors from upenn, ncstate, davis, rvc, Ross, Ohio, Glasgow, Edinburgh, virginia md, and auburn, as well as being friends with individuals in both in and out of state schools at the moment. The general consensus in my conversations with these doctors is that they USUALLY, not always,
prefer internationally educated vets for reasons I don't feel necessary to elaborate on; mostly because I know how sdn conversations lead to unnecessary debates (which actually had me hesitant to voice my input to begin with, since it seems any opinions that vary from those of certain individuals' seem to be tackled).
This is all personal preference on these doctors' behalf, and certainly speaks no certainty to any vet or school's standard of education or their graduates' potential. I don't discredit any school or location. My intent was to assist the individual poster in viewing their application process in the same, unbiased light as I view my own. I also have no clouded judgment regarding a surgical residency in the future; as I'm well aware of the hurdles and and individual competency necessary to land a spot in such a program. I'd never be silly enough to believe that any vet school would be a shoe-in for that.
Moral of the story: (as previously stated) the experience is what you make of it. You become the doctor you strive to be through hard work and perseverance, not solely by way of the institution that prints your degree.
Good luck everyone!

️