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Has anyone done teach for America and what was the experience like? Did you enjoy it / did it help your application?
I would only do it if you genuinely want to teach kids, and put your heart and soul into it. Too many people are using Teach for America as a stepping stone to bigger things that have absolutely nothing to do with education.
Thus, in my opinion, if you want to be a half-ass hospital volunteer that slacks off all the time, be my guest. You might piss off a few people, but that's it. It's a harmless way to check the box. But with Teach for America, these are real living children that are depending on the educational system to help them advance in life. Half-assing it causes collateral damage to the children, and that's not okay.
There are plenty of ways to check the boxes on your application which allow you to put forth far less effort and not have any significant collateral damage. Think wisely, and only do this if this is something you genuinely want to do. Put the kids first, not yourself.
Yeah they wrote an article about that phenomenon too: http://www.theonion.com/articles/teach-for-america-chews-up-spits-out-another-ethni,1293/Had a friend/classmate do it. Left the program early to start med school. Sated the reason was "I got tired of being called "bitch" by 30 15 year olds every day."
Thanks for the response, and you're right! I'm asking about Teach for America not for personal gain, but to try and understand more about kids. I'm interested in pediatrics and children, but I've never spent (outside of my youth) more than 5 days with them. I think the role model aspect of the program is very interesting. Also I'm interested in it because I've been in a couple teaching programs (mentoring type) for younger inner city kids. I really enjoyed the experience, and I came from a public HS known for poor academics and something like a 70% minority population. I've liked the idea of being a teacher, but I know I would never want to get a career in it. I think it could be a great launch pad for pediatrics, and a more in depth look into children's lives. It'd be really fun to work with kids too. Not just ye olde box checking.I would only do it if you genuinely want to teach kids, and put your heart and soul into it. Too many people are using Teach for America as a stepping stone to bigger things that have absolutely nothing to do with education.
Thus, in my opinion, if you want to be a half-ass hospital volunteer that slacks off all the time, be my guest. You might piss off a few people, but that's it. It's a harmless way to check the box. But with Teach for America, these are real living children that are depending on the educational system to help them advance in life. Half-assing it causes collateral damage to the children, and that's not okay.
There are plenty of ways to check the boxes on your application which allow you to put forth far less effort and not have any significant collateral damage. Think wisely, and only do this if this is something you genuinely want to do. Put the kids first, not yourself.
Sounds like you might enjoy it.Thanks for the response, and you're right! I'm asking about Teach for America not for personal gain, but to try and understand more about kids. I'm interested in pediatrics and children, but I've never spent (outside of my youth) more than 5 days with them. I think the role model aspect of the program is very interesting. Also I'm interested in it because I've been in a couple teaching programs (mentoring type) for younger inner city kids. I really enjoyed the experience, and I came from a public HS known for poor academics and something like a 70% minority population. I've liked the idea of being a teacher, but I know I would never want to get a career in it. I think it could be a great launch pad for pediatrics, and a more in depth look into children's lives. It'd be really fun to work with kids too. Not just ye olde box checking.
Have you heard any of the stories from peds attendings explaining why they went into peds? I'm guessing you've had some experiences with them I could be wrong, but have any of them ever told you the defining moment for their decision into peds. It just feels atypical to take a pay cut and work with "runny noses" for the rest of your life. I think t4a could be a good place for me to have that moment like "I really like kids, maybe I want to do this for the rest of my life".Sounds like you might enjoy it.
I just want to play devils advocate here and say 99% of people going into pediatrics don't need/do TFA and they go on to become fine pediatricians. I think it would provide a very unique perspective, however.
Most of the people I know in my class going into peds share these characteristics:Have you heard any of the stories from peds attendings explaining why they went into peds? I'm guessing you've had some experiences with them I could be wrong, but have any of them ever told you the defining moment for their decision into peds
Hahahaha ah jeez. Yea, I was thinking those are probably the hallmark precursors to a pediatrics path. Have you ever met any pediatric hematologist/oncologists? I bet that would be a bit more dark, and different motives for joining that sub-specialty.Most of the people I know in my class going into peds share these characteristics:
1. like kids/babies
2. like their patients to be pretty healthy in general/like well-child visits
3. don't mind/can tolerate dealing with ****ty parents
4. enjoy that most of their patients get better after being ill/hospitalized.
5. for general peds, hours usually aren't too bad post-residency if you join a big group.
For general pediatrics, its usually some combo above. Sub-specialties of peds are a whole different ball game. Pediatrics is pretty unique, most of the time kids aren't doing things to harm their bodies like adults do (drinking, unprotected sex, smoking, etc) or atleast they aren't presenting to the pediatrician with problems related to those things. It can get frustrating in adult medicine dealing with your 555th person with COPD who smoked a pack a day for fifty years and is now wonder why they are having shortness of breath.
Yes, I did a rotation on peds heme-onc. That's very far down the line, I wouldn't worry too much about that right now.Hahahaha ah jeez. Yea, I was thinking those are probably the hallmark precursors to a pediatrics path. Have you ever met any pediatric hematologist/oncologists? I bet that would be a bit more dark, and different motives for joining that sub-specialty.
True, thanks for the insight though!Yes, I did a rotation on peds heme-onc. That's very far down the line, I wouldn't worry too much about that right now.
Thanks for the response, and you're right! I'm asking about Teach for America not for personal gain, but to try and understand more about kids. I'm interested in pediatrics and children, but I've never spent (outside of my youth) more than 5 days with them. I think the role model aspect of the program is very interesting. Also I'm interested in it because I've been in a couple teaching programs (mentoring type) for younger inner city kids. I really enjoyed the experience, and I came from a public HS known for poor academics and something like a 70% minority population. I've liked the idea of being a teacher, but I know I would never want to get a career in it. I think it could be a great launch pad for pediatrics, and a more in depth look into children's lives. It'd be really fun to work with kids too. Not just ye olde box checking.
Had a friend/classmate do it. Left the program early to start med school. Sated the reason was "I got tired of being called "bitch" by 30 15 year olds every day."
/I really wouldn't give anyone points for altruism for doing it though. If you really wanted to be "altruistic", you'd just become a teacher.