kriche
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- Jan 11, 2025
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Does UF usually tell you your place on the wait-list?It varies year to year. My cycle it moved 1. Year before didn’t move at all. Unsure about last year.
Does UF usually tell you your place on the wait-list?It varies year to year. My cycle it moved 1. Year before didn’t move at all. Unsure about last year.
I don’t think they usually have. I’m afraid to say no since they’ve decided to change everything this year 😂Does UF usually tell you your place on the wait-list?
Hands on experience is decent compared to other schools. Early on it’s easiest to get hands on experience with affiliated organizations (TNR programs, local clinics). On clinics it really depends on the department how much you are able to do. I’m happy they’re requiring VCOP now to get people adequate surgery experience before graduating. There are a LOT of research opportunities. Like there is an entire organizations dedicated to getting students involved in research. I like that 3rd year spring courses are basically review of major topics for NAVLE and chosen electives. We have to buy NAVLE prep on our own but I think that’s standard at most schools. I’ve gotten a lot of mentorship from faculty and residents. Support for students - there’s been some trouble there. I think they’re actively trying to get better though.for anyone currently attending,
I got accepted into UFCVM Class of 2029, but I also got accepted into Tufts. i am trying to weigh out all the pros and cons. UF is my IS school so definitely leaning that way, in terms of hands-on- experiences, research opportunities, career coaching, support for students, and NAVLE test prep, how good would you say is UF on that?
Please don’t give up if this is truly what you’re passionate about. This was my third time applying to veterinary school and I also received countless rejection letters. I had decided that this would be my last year applying because this process is so draining. I finally got accepted into several schools this year and what really helped me to see results is (1) getting a unique experience and working in pretty much every area of vet med (lab animal, shelter, small animal, large animal, etc.) and (2) retaking prerequisite courses I knew I could get a better grade in.Being IS, I think this means it’s over for me :,( I am beside myself. I am really happy for anyone who got in so please don’t let me bring any of you down. Like genuinely stop reading this because I think you should be celebrating and I know you deserve this.
I am just heartbroken. Right now, I don’t think I can go through this again but there’s nothing else I want to do in my life. I don’t want to spend another year and a half of my life this way. Just waiting for a way out. I am agonizing over my interview. Maybe I didn’t really have a chance before the interview or maybe I truly did and I just fumbled it. I have so many people who have been also waiting to hear if I made it in and it’s so humiliating to say, in addition to the 10 schools I have been rejected from for the second year in a row, I was also rejected from my biggest dream.
Class of 2028 here - I have loved my time at UFCVM so far. Research is very accessible- I am involved in 2 projects already and most of my friends have connections to projects as well. There is even a program called FVSP for summer research (with a stipend and travel fund) between 1st and 2nd year. Hands on experiences in your 1st 2 years mostly come from clubs - I’ve had opportunities to volunteer in the hospital, done basic surgeries in club wet labs, etc. Some friends of mine even work in the ER part time through a school program for paid experience. Support for students so far has been good - professors are receptive to feedback and there is lots of tutoring/mental health counseling/TA assistance/etc. to help you. We have semesterly Lunch and Learns for career prep and other networking opportunities to help with career connections from the get go. Lots of good things to say about the school!for anyone currently attending,
I got accepted into UFCVM Class of 2029, but I also got accepted into Tufts. i am trying to weigh out all the pros and cons. UF is my IS school so definitely leaning that way, in terms of hands-on- experiences, research opportunities, career coaching, support for students, and NAVLE test prep, how good would you say is UF on that?
That's fair. Thanks for all your support this cycleI don’t think they usually have. I’m afraid to say no since they’ve decided to change everything this year 😂
Current fourth year at UF, I agree with previous posters and will also add as someone who took (and passed!) the NAVLE this fall, UF’s unique schedule is a benefit for test prep. We are on clinics 3rd year summer and fall and 4th year spring, and in the classroom 3rd year spring and 4th year fall. It’s an awful lot easier to make time for NAVLE studying when you have, say, 10-14 credits of classes (that often aren’t overlapping) as opposed to being on clinical rotations that have far longer hours, weekend requirements, and are much more physically taxing. You also don’t have to worry about whether you’ll be on a more demanding rotation the same time you’re scheduled to take the NAVLE. I think that our schedule likely contributes to our consistently high NAVLE pass rate percentages and definitely makes for a better quality of life when you’re studying for it.for anyone currently attending,
I got accepted into UFCVM Class of 2029, but I also got accepted into Tufts. i am trying to weigh out all the pros and cons. UF is my IS school so definitely leaning that way, in terms of hands-on- experiences, research opportunities, career coaching, support for students, and NAVLE test prep, how good would you say is UF on that?
Hello, I have a question that might be silly. So as I understand it, summer of 2nd and 3rd year is taken up by clinics. Isn’t summer usually the time vet students go out and find extensions/internships (don’t really know the difference) to gain experience in their fields of interest and network? With clinics being in the summer, do UF vet students just not do this? Have you noticed this impacting areas of the students’ success such as residency match rates or anything like that?Current fourth year at UF, I agree with previous posters and will also add as someone who took (and passed!) the NAVLE this fall, UF’s unique schedule is a benefit for test prep. We are on clinics 3rd year summer and fall and 4th year spring, and in the classroom 3rd year spring and 4th year fall. It’s an awful lot easier to make time for NAVLE studying when you have, say, 10-14 credits of classes (that often aren’t overlapping) as opposed to being on clinical rotations that have far longer hours, weekend requirements, and are much more physically taxing. You also don’t have to worry about whether you’ll be on a more demanding rotation the same time you’re scheduled to take the NAVLE. I think that our schedule likely contributes to our consistently high NAVLE pass rate percentages and definitely makes for a better quality of life when you’re studying for it.
Happy to answer any other questions anyone has about UFCVM, feel free to tag me or message me privately 🙂
We have the summer after 3rd year off to do this. I have two scheduled. We are only on clinics summer after second year, third year fall, and fourth year spring. Between 1st and 2nd year most people work, travel, do the research program, or do externships available to first years. When it comes to matching I’m not there yet so @BigCats will likely be more help there.Hello, I have a question that might be silly. So as I understand it, summer of 2nd and 3rd year is taken up by clinics. Isn’t summer usually the time vet students go out and find extensions/internships (don’t really know the difference) to gain experience in their fields of interest and network? With clinics being in the summer, do UF vet students just not do this? Have you noticed this impacting areas of the students’ success such as residency match rates or anything like that?
Also, what do students usually do the summer between 1st and 2nd year? Thanks in advance!
So you have a free summer between 1st and 2nd year as well as a free summer between 3rd and 4th year (you’re on clinics between 2nd and 3rd year, which I called third year summer since you’re considered a third year on clinics at that point). The summer off between 3rd and 4th year was 12 weeks long for my class, which was more than enough time to do externships, travel, relax, whatever you want to do. Additionally, you can use your vacation blocks during clinics to do more externships (but I recommend actually taking some time to relax lol). I actually think having the whole summer available is a huge boon for UF students, since you know well in advance you’ll have that time free, so you can schedule externships even several years in advance. For reference, I’m interested in zoo medicine and zoos frequently fill up their externship spots 2+ years in advance. I applied for my externships during late summer-early fall after 1st year knowing I’d have that summer off, and was able to get the ones I really wanted during times I knew I’d have free. Otherwise, you’re kind of at the mercy of your clinics scheduling to hope that the dates you requested for an externship and the vacation blocks you end up receiving are aligned.Hello, I have a question that might be silly. So as I understand it, summer of 2nd and 3rd year is taken up by clinics. Isn’t summer usually the time vet students go out and find extensions/internships (don’t really know the difference) to gain experience in their fields of interest and network? With clinics being in the summer, do UF vet students just not do this? Have you noticed this impacting areas of the students’ success such as residency match rates or anything like that?
Also, what do students usually do the summer between 1st and 2nd year? Thanks in advance!
Yes, I didHey did anyone else get emails at like 3-4 am? One of the emails (the one sent at 3:56 am), seems like it was supposed to be sent like a month ago after the interview. It includes information that says phone calls were going to be made and even has dates for the DVM preview days. I wish this would’ve come to me sooner! The preview days are in about 3 weeks!
what a freaking messHey did anyone else get emails at like 3-4 am? One of the emails (the one sent at 3:56 am), seems like it was supposed to be sent like a month ago after the interview. It includes information that says phone calls were going to be made and even has dates for the DVM preview days. I wish this would’ve come to me sooner! The preview days are in about 3 weeks!
I'm deeply involved in research at the school.. IMO they don't focus a lot of attention and money in the research portion of the school. If Tufts offers a PhD/DVM program and you are serious about research, you might want to consider that. Of course there are enough labs and projects here, but in terms of the attention and capabilities that the school provides the research departments, I feel it is lacking. Even so, I think I'm involved in very important research and UF is an R1 school. If you include the COM, we are a top notch research school.for anyone currently attending,
I got accepted into UFCVM Class of 2029, but I also got accepted into Tufts. i am trying to weigh out all the pros and cons. UF is my IS school so definitely leaning that way, in terms of hands-on- experiences, research opportunities, career coaching, support for students, and NAVLE test prep, how good would you say is UF on that?
How much did it cost you to retake the pre-reqs? Did you do it through a community college?Please don’t give up if this is truly what you’re passionate about. This was my third time applying to veterinary school and I also received countless rejection letters. I had decided that this would be my last year applying because this process is so draining. I finally got accepted into several schools this year and what really helped me to see results is (1) getting a unique experience and working in pretty much every area of vet med (lab animal, shelter, small animal, large animal, etc.) and (2) retaking prerequisite courses I knew I could get a better grade in.
One vet told me “if you plan on doing veterinary medicine the rest of your life is a few years really going to make a difference in the grand scheme of things?” NO!! It really changed my mindset.
You got this I promise!!!!
There are separate IS and OOS waitlists. The OOS wait list will be significant longer because it tends to move a significant amount (I think 5x) is the ratio I was told.Dumb question but does anyone know how many people actually get put on the waitlist? Is the waitlist different for OOS vs IS?
We have the summer after 3rd year off to do this. I have two scheduled. We are only on clinics summer after second year, third year fall, and fourth year spring. Between 1st and 2nd year most people work, travel, do the research program, or do externships available to first years. When it comes to matching I’m not there yet so @BigCats will likely be more help there.
Thanks for these in depth answers! I appreciate your help! I’m definitely leaning towards UF and hoping to make it to the DVM day in March!So you have a free summer between 1st and 2nd year as well as a free summer between 3rd and 4th year (you’re on clinics between 2nd and 3rd year, which I called third year summer since you’re considered a third year on clinics at that point). The summer off between 3rd and 4th year was 12 weeks long for my class, which was more than enough time to do externships, travel, relax, whatever you want to do. Additionally, you can use your vacation blocks during clinics to do more externships (but I recommend actually taking some time to relax lol). I actually think having the whole summer available is a huge boon for UF students, since you know well in advance you’ll have that time free, so you can schedule externships even several years in advance. For reference, I’m interested in zoo medicine and zoos frequently fill up their externship spots 2+ years in advance. I applied for my externships during late summer-early fall after 1st year knowing I’d have that summer off, and was able to get the ones I really wanted during times I knew I’d have free. Otherwise, you’re kind of at the mercy of your clinics scheduling to hope that the dates you requested for an externship and the vacation blocks you end up receiving are aligned.
I did apply for the match this year and receive results in less than 2 weeks (!!!), but in general I don’t think UF students suffer in any way as far as match success, except maybe that it is slightly more challenging to get LORs from clinical faculty since you aren’t on clinics during match season, so some people had to scramble to ask faculty they’d worked with over a year ago on clinics for a letter, which could be challenging if they don’t really remember you at that point. I knew well in advance I wanted to go through the match, so during my first chunk of clinics, I made it a point to find recommenders and ask them during that rotation if they’d be willing to write me a letter later on. One of them actually wrote the letter at that time so it would be fresh in their mind, and the other I checked in with a few times leading up to match to make sure they still remembered me lol. So it might be more challenging to get a strong faculty letter if you didn’t ask for any during third year clinics and have to see if people still remember you during fourth year fall, but also faculty know what it’s like to have to ask for letters and I haven’t heard of people having real issues getting letters together.
Summer between 1st and 2nd, I did externships and a lot of my classmates worked, externed, did the summer research program, traveled, or took time to relax. Totally up to you and honestly, whatever you do that early in your education is probably not going to make or break your life, so do something you want to do.
Me too! The silence is killing me....Wish they just tell us if we were denied or waitlisted....
No problem at all! Preview day is definitely worth it if you’re trying to decide. The hospital is so modern and awe-inspiring the first time you see it!Thanks for these in depth answers! I appreciate your help! I’m definitely leaning towards UF and hoping to make it to the DVM day in March!
I don't know if you can assume you didn't get in just yet, but this happens all the time. Many people get rejected by their IS and end up going OOS.Hey - I didn’t even realize calls were going out until now. I’m an IS applicant but already got into Cornell and Tufts OOS. I’m worried now. I am kind of banking on the affordability of IS tuition. I’m so confused - no call or anything. Why would I not get in UF IS when I already got into more difficult schools OOS???
I had an undergrad classmate get into Cornell and not UF (our IS). She was brilliant and incredibly qualified. She graduated from Cornell last year and is very successful. Admissions are just like that sometimes.Hey - I didn’t even realize calls were going out until now. I’m an IS applicant but already got into Cornell and Tufts OOS. I’m worried now. I am kind of banking on the affordability of IS tuition. I’m so confused - no call or anything. Why would I not get in UF IS when I already got into more difficult schools OOS???
Still nothing for me!Has anyone still heard nothing…. I’ve gotten radio silence since my interview 😃
Same!Has anyone still heard nothing…. I’ve gotten radio silence since my interview 😃
Nothing at allHas anyone still heard nothing…. I’ve gotten radio silence since my interview 😃
They emailed you?I was notified of waitlist/alternate at around 3 PM. I’m IS
Yes they emailed me and at the same time I received a separate thread w the post interview email update that others have mentionedThey emailed you?
Our dress code at the school is scrubs or business casual. At orientation and other events we have to dress business casual so that’s what most people wear to preview!What do we have to wear for the preview day in March? Business, professional, or casual?
Do you know if we are allowed to bring guests? Thanks!Our dress code at the school is scrubs or business casual. At orientation and other events we have to dress business casual so that’s what most people wear to preview!
I think someone further up mentioned they called and were told 1-2 guests. Keep in my you can also bring more of your family to family day of orientation!Do you know if we are allowed to bring guests? Thanks!