image from http://academicdepartments.musc.edu/musc/
So it’s 8:27pm on Friday, the third Friday that I have been
in class (10th day of class) and I’m taking a study break to write
this blog. My intent was to update
everyone on what life looks like for me now…and I think that paints a pretty
accurate picture.
It’s not as bleak as it might seem at first glance,
though. First of all, most of you know I
can be nerdy at times, so studying on a Friday night would not necessarily have
been an anomaly before school. The
volume has certainly increased, though.
Also, most of what I’m learning really interests me. And if the particular topic doesn’t interest
me as much, I know it’s a means to the end goal – becoming a PA.
Here’s a little synopsis of what’s been going on:
- - Moved to Charleston on May 18
- - Started orientation on May 22
- - Started class on May 24
- - My first tests will be June 11, 13, and 14
The classes I’m currently taking are:
- - Gross Anatomy (yes, cadavers and all)
- - Physiology (which will turn into Pathophysiology)
- - Pharmacology
- - Bioethics and Behavioral Medicine
- - Intro to the PA Profession
- - Inter-professional Project (with PT and OT students)
I spend roughly 25 hours per week in class, as in being
taught. I’m usually on campus studying
with groups and/or tutors when I’m not in class during the day – will probably
end up being around 8-10 hours/day on campus and then studying on my own (or at
least off campus in a group) at night.
Weekends are for catch-up – both sleep and study.
They have thrown a ton of information at us from day one. No one expects us to learn it all…but they do
expect us to learn a lot. The way I look
at it is this is my job (granted, I’m paying to do this work), so I’m going to
work as hard as I can at it.
A friend back home told/warned me that this would be like
trying to drink from a fire hydrant – you can’t drink it all, just don’t get
hurt.
I’ll update the blog when I can so that those of you who are
interested can keep up. I promise no
pictures of cadavers, April.
Forget cadavers -- If you put a picture of ANY body part that is gross, we can no longer be friends.
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear that you are enjoying it. I hope you are eating well, sleeping enough, and making new friends. :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for refraining from the cadaver pictures :-) I think they appropriately named your Gross Anatomy class. And glad you found a moment to update. Some of us actually are interested in your life ;-)
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