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Conference noted::equitation

Title:Equine Notes Conference
Notice:Topics List=4, Horses 4Sale/Wanted=150, Equip 4Sale/Wanted=151
Moderator:MTADMS::COBURNIO
Created:Tue Feb 11 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2080
Total number of notes:22383

967.0. "Vet Schools--Medicine or Science?" by IMPULS::HARTEL () Tue Jun 06 1989 13:26

    
    What is the difference between veterinary medicine and veterinary
    science?  A friend asked me this the other day (figured this was
    the right place to find out).  That friend is applying to colleges, 
    and would like to know, also, which would be "better" to choose as 
    a major.  He would like to be part of, or have his own practice 
    some day.  Was I right in telling him veterinary medicine is the 
    right choice?
    
    Cathy  
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967.1CSC32::M_HOEPNERSometimes the dragon wins...Tue Jun 06 1989 14:4431
    
    Generally undergraduates major in some "science".  Then after
    fulfilling certain requirements (i.e,. core requirements for chemistry,
    physics, math, zoology, anatomy, ... depending on the school they
    intend to apply to) the student applies for admission to a school of
    Veterinary Medicine (i.e., Tufts, Penn State, Colorado, Iowa,
    Illinois...).  (In fact I knew a political science major who was
    accepted to vet school--but had fulfilled the pre-vet requirements.)
    
    I have known students with Animal Science majors, Chemistry majors,
    Biochemistry majors, zoology majors...  Some have advanced degrees in
    Veterinary Pathology, Vet pharmacology, Vet anatomy (vet. "sciences")
    
    Your friend should contact the admissions offices at the schools they
    intend to go to for undergraduate work and for Vet Med.  Some
    universities have specific requirements concerning residency.  I.E.,
    Iowa's first year vet med class is 99% Iowa residents and states which 
    have reciprocity (i.e., Nebraska, South Dakota).  Colorado, Minnesota,
    Illinois, and Texas all have similar rules.  And some Vet Med
    admissions boards are funny about those applying from a college or
    university other than were the Vet School is--i.e., given a student
    from CSU and a student from Podunk College which equal academic
    records, the student from CSU is going to win out.  Check the
    reputations of colleges you intend to your pre-vet work at.
    
    It is almost impossible for a student who is a resident of a state in
    which there is a Vet school to be accepted at a Vet school in another
    state.  (Tufts may be different since I don't believe it is a
    land-grant university.)
    
    Mary_Jo_ex_Admissions_Office_type