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Agriculture/Livestock Production Air Force, Army, etc Animal Science Department Business/Consulting Services Emergency/Critical Care Medicine Foundation/Charitable

Org General Medicine/Surgery Humane Organization Laboratory 121 49,314 643 233 56 774

132 600

2,821

Membership Assn/Profssional So Missionary/Service Non-Veterinary Employment Not Employed Other Pharmaceutical/Biological Production Medicine Public Health Commission Corps Referral/Specialty Medicine 2,154 State, Federal Temp Not Employed in Vet Field Veterinary Medical College/School Veterinary Science Department Veterinary Technician Program Wildlife Zoo/Aquarium 937

184 64 147 189 2618

4,805 62

1694 125 4,464 106 31 407 252

Total

89,497

SALARIOS

Practica privada: 80-90 k anual 45 a 55 horas por semana Industria: 140 Academia, federales: +/- 100 En uniforme: +/- 90 mas beneficios Especializacion = 20 a 40 adicionales

VETWARD BOUND ENRICHMENT SUMMER PROGRAM


Enrichment Summer Program 2011 June 6 - July 22, 2011 This intensive program is intended for the serious student who is exploring careers in the Veterinary Medicine profession. Among the benefits of participating (pending level placement) are Veterinary-related seminars, MSU farm visits with demonstrations, GRE prep, personal statement development, simulated veterinary curriculum, clinic rotations in the MSU Vet Teaching Hospital, Comparative Veterinary Physiology, Histology, and Anatomy. This program is intensive, but not without reward. In addition to receiving stipend pay for participation, you will gain something much greater--an opportunity to meet other students from across the country with the same focus and interest in Veterinary Medicine. The Office of Diversity Program staff in the College of Veterinary Medicine thanks all applicants for their interest in our Enrichment Summer Program.

THE SUMMER RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES PROGRAM (SROP) IS


a gateway to graduate education at Michigan State University (MSU). The goal of the program is to increase the number of domestic undergraduate students who pursue graduate study and careers in teaching and research at colleges and universities. MSU SROP helps prepare undergraduate students for graduate study through intensive research experiences with faculty mentors and academic enrichment activities. MSU SROP helps undergraduate students gain research experience to give them a competitive advantage as a graduate applicant by: Intense research activities that broaden technical and presentation skills Professional development activities Seminars that introduce students to a range of research fields across discipline Informal gatherings for student and faculty exchange Multiple opportunities to present research MSU SROP typically convenes the third weekend of May and ends the last weekend of July.

Links to Institutions Offering Undergraduate Summer Research Programs www.the-aps.org/education/ugsrf/sumreslinks.htm Summer Undergraduate Internship Program (SUIP) at Upenn

The SUIP application is due February 1. The program begins June 4th and ends August 10th. The stipend is $3,900, and on-campus housing

and round-trip travel are provided.

CO-OP/INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES FOR 2012 FOR PRE-VETERINARY MEDICINE STUDENTS http://people.rit.edu/~gtfsbi/Symp/vetag.htm

FRANCHESKA M RIVERA Francheska M Rivera

A majority of Ph.D. candidates get support from their departments in return for teaching or research duties; they don't have to borrow. But most would-be doctors, dentists, veterinarians, lawyers and pharmacists borrow heavily, graduating with an average of $100,000 or more in debt, only to earn widely varying paybacks. According to FinAid.org, only 40% of Ph.D. candidates borrow and those who do take on average debt of $36,917. Good thing their debt is low. True, Ph.D.s who rise to the rank of full professors do well, earning an average of $118,444, according to the American Association of University Professors. But those cushy jobs are hard to get; most aspiring college teachers these days end up in non-tenure-track positions, earning less than half what professors make. What about professional schools? On the low end, the Association of American Veterinary Colleges reports new vets graduate with a median debt of $103,573. Yet the median earnings of vets in 2007 was just $75,230, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The American Veterinary Medical Association reports slightly higher income; it says private practitioners had a median income of $91,000 in 2007. Either way, that's only a fraction of what people docs make, and less even than pharmacists earn. Medical students take on a somewhat higher debt load--an average of $139,517, according to the American Medical School Association. But the payback appears better, particularly in certain specialties. The Medical Group Management Association reports primary care physicians earned a median of $182,322 in 2007, while specialists earned a median of $332,450, with cardiologists, radiologists and gastroenterologists all above $400,000.

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