What classes are the first years taking?

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pressmom

Third year!
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Here at UTK we're taking:

Gross Anatomy
Microscopic Anatomy (Histology)
Immunology
Physiology
Clinical Correlations and Ethics
Physical Diagnosis
Bacteriology
and...
Application Based Learning Experience (ABLE) for one week
 
anatomy
physiology
micro anatomy (aka histology)
cellular physiology and genetics
ethics
parasitology
problem solving
ethology (starting next month)

are we having fun yet?
 
This quarter we are taking:
Canine Anatomy
Epidemiology
Radiology
Histology
Cell Biology
"Basic Life Skills"

The basic life skills course is I think to acclimate us to the work/stress load of vet school.
 
Doctoring (stuff about communication, leadership, financial management)
Radiology
Clinical skills
Locomotor Anatomy
Cardiovascular and respiratory system structure/function
Cell and Tissue structure/function
physiological chemistry
ethics and law
behavior
epidemiology

oh and electives. I'm doing small animal radiology case discussions.
 
Anatomy
Histology
Developmental anatomy
Physiology
Radiographic anatomy
Introduction to VMTH- checklist of things to see in the hospital
Health, History and Physical exam
Ethics
 
At Washington State we're taking:

Microscopic anatomy
Anatomy I
Embryology
Cell Physiology
Animal Handling and Agricultural Animal Orientation
and Animals Society And Vets
 
wow, i feel like a slacker. at Pennwe have

anatomy
histology
developmental
biochem
intro to clinical vet med
wildlife
how to become a seasoned alcoholic.
 
Anatomy
Histology
Physiological Chemistry
Bacteriology
Nutrition
 
Mississippi State:

Anatomy
Physiology
Histology
Immunology/Infectious Agents I
Parasitology
Informatics/Evidence-based Veterinary Medicine
Professional Development
 
tufts:

gross anatomy I (dog and cat)
developmental anatomy
physiological chemistry for 3/4 of the semester, then physiology for the rest of the year
histology
human-animal relationships
clinical skillz
PBL
adopt-a-vet (program where you spend at least a weekend working on a farm learning about farm animals in general or a new species if you have some experience)
 
Gross Anatomy (dog/cat)
Microanatomy (histology)
Embryology
Cell physiology
Friday afternoons--in clinics with 4th years (but not many people go)
Veterinary orientation aka cool stuff to do in the veterinary field

doesn't sound like much, but boy...
 
First year in Helsinki, Finland we had:

Biochemistry
Anatomy
Physiology
Histology
English
Computer things
Ethics
Embryology
 
Massey first years take

Biochemistry
Anatomy (including Embryology)
Physiology (including Histology)
Animal Behaviour, Training & Welfare
 
If you want a peek into the future, here's what 2nd years take this semester at the U of MN:

-Gross pathology
-Epidemilogy
-Bacteriology
-Pharmacology
-Parasitology
-Professional Skills
-Clinical Skills
-Swine Core

.. and I'm taking an elective course in zoo animal medicine.
 
At Mizzou, for the first 2 blocks (first full semester), we got:

Anatomy (dog and cat)
Histology
Cell Biology (AKA: lots of biochemistry)
Physiology

I'm taking this optional class on practice management if you want have your own practice and whatnot.

For 3rd block (second semester):

Anatomy (horse and ox)
Histology
Physiology
Nutrition

For 4th block (second semester):

Anatomy (more horse and ox)
Endocrine & Reproductive Physiology
Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Immunology

For 5th block (summer semester):

Pathology
Bacteriology
Immunology
Informatics
Genomics
 
Oh wow! You guys go year round?
 
No, not quite. We have a 6 week summer. The only problem is that by May, I'm gonna be feeling like it's quitting time. But class for another 8 weeks. Boo...but we get more clinical time that way. Nearly 2 full academic years instead of the usual 1 or 1.5, which is cool.
 
i've read a lot of this on the individual schools' webpages, but man, reading it from you guys really puts it into perspective 😱
 
Here's semester one classes for CSU:

Functional Anatomy (Dog/Horse along with comparative anatomy of other species)(this class takes up the largest amount of our credit hours)
Histology/Physiology
Principles of Diagnostic Imaging
Veterinary Immunology
Perspectives in Veterinary Medicine

I cant believe we are almost halfway through the semester... only 3.75 years to go!!!
 
So do you basically go to classes from 8-5, study from 5-2am, then wake up and do it all over again, hoping that you can retain all that information?
 
So do you basically go to classes from 8-5, study from 5-2am, then wake up and do it all over again, hoping that you can retain all that information?

I think I would be dead by now if I even attempted it!

My schedule is more like 8-5 class, although some days we start later, some days end earlier, and sometimes there are long lunch stretches.

Then usually come home, find some dinner, hit the gym, hang out with the boyfriend & dog for a while, or attend a club meeting, then usually read & study for 1.5-3 hours. During "exam crunches" as I'm learning to call them, when there seems to be an over-abundance of exams in just a few days or weeks, I have spent entire weekends studying straight though, but I almost always try to go to bed by midnight or I'm useless.

I know some people get the "if you're not studying 4-5 hours every single weeknight then you're not going to get through vet school" when they first start, but I think that's a huge exaggeration!
 
Here at UTK, we're out out of class by 3:00 or 3:30 almost everyday. I usually spend about 4 hours studying a day (more if there is an exam coming up) and play with my dogs, hang out with friends and watch one TV show a day. I almost always go to bed before 11:30. It would KILL me to get less sleep. It really isn't so bad. The time before the first exam is rough because you're not used to having to study that much, but once things get rolling you realize what you have to do and you just do it.
 
how much you study depends on how obsessed you are about your grades. i only study for an hour or two at night and i'm getting by fine. but i know kids that do a lot more than that because they want the perfect grade.
 
So do you basically go to classes from 8-5, study from 5-2am, then wake up and do it all over again, hoping that you can retain all that information?
i'm going to wait until i get grades back on my first two tests, but i laughed out loud at this. no freakin' way.


how much you study depends on how obsessed you are about your grades. i only study for an hour or two at night and i'm getting by fine. but i know kids that do a lot more than that because they want the perfect grade.
word. there are definitely some students that spend the majority of their weekends in the library, and then there are some students that go out every night the weekend before the exam. to each their own.
 
So do you basically go to classes from 8-5, study from 5-2am, then wake up and do it all over again, hoping that you can retain all that information?


class 9-5 most days. i study 2-3 hrs a night. relax, then bed by 11-1130. havent gotten any grades back so we'll know soon enough if its working.
 
At Texas A&M the first years take:

SA anatomy
Physiology
Microbiology/Immunology
Histology
Neuroanatomy
Clinical Correlates
LA anatomy
Embryology
 
VMRCVM:

Anatomy
Biochemistry
Domestication (elective)
Embryology (elective)
Histology
Immunology
Large Animal Husbandry
Physiology
Professional Foundations (p/f)

I usually have class 8-12, lab 1-3 three days a week, lab 1-5 once a week (double labs are no fun). Fridays we're usually out at noon and in September we had several Fridays off for football games. Then I go home, relax for a bit and study from 6 or 7 to 11. I'm not one of those looking for perfect grades, it just takes me a while to retain stuff. Also, I do NOOOOO work on Sundays so I fit all my work in on weekday nights and Saturdays. It's rough sometimes...10 classes, 20 credits.
 
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