- Joined
- Dec 11, 2004
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
I think about this issue a lot and would like to hear opinions. I last engaged in a long-term volunteering experience over a summer in high school at a hospital, and it was a waste of time in which I performed countless menial tasks with no relation to doctorhood nor my future. I have resolved not to perform meaningless volunteer work in college for the sole purpose of placing it on applications and fabricating discussions about it in interviews. I think that if there is meaningful work to be done, money is involved. The premise that volunteering should stem from true passion is a charade in the premed world. Helping out for free at a rock show or sporting event is one thing, and wheelchairing around decrepit patients all day is another. Why does it seem to receive so much attention in admissions?
I request that any responders avoid didacticism. I typically get too much of that when I express these viewpoints, and I am hoping to find reasoned arguments here at SDN. I should point out that I am not an evil person and, God-willing, will do great things for medicine one day. I just do not support the big push for volunteering.
I request that any responders avoid didacticism. I typically get too much of that when I express these viewpoints, and I am hoping to find reasoned arguments here at SDN. I should point out that I am not an evil person and, God-willing, will do great things for medicine one day. I just do not support the big push for volunteering.