Anonymous wrote:Has anyone had any experience with the military paying for their med school tuition? How does this work?
Nursing is actually a great undergrad as a precursor to medicine. I did a nursing degree and there were quite a few in my class whose intention was to use nursing as a foundation for med school, a couple others to be chiropractors. These students had no intention of being nurses, and it seemed to be a great career path as they were all successful at getting into med school and chiropractor school. The first year med students were in my nursing science classes so we were all learning identical material. Nursing provides a different perspective on healthcare that can be very advantageous for a physician to have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DD is still passionate about medicine in 15 years than maybe you could convince her to go into nursing. If she likes that and does well than consider MD. If she wants to be an MD then she can find a way to pay for it. That is her incentive.
Yes, and if your son wants to be an engineer, please first convince him to be a mechanic. If he excels at that, let him consider engineering.
Nursing is actually a great undergrad as a precursor to medicine. I did a nursing degree and there were quite a few in my class whose intention was to use nursing as a foundation for med school, a couple others to be chiropractors. These students had no intention of being nurses, and it seemed to be a great career path as they were all successful at getting into med school and chiropractor school. The first year med students were in my nursing science classes so we were all learning identical material. Nursing provides a different perspective on healthcare that can be very advantageous for a physician to have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DD is still passionate about medicine in 15 years than maybe you could convince her to go into nursing. If she likes that and does well than consider MD. If she wants to be an MD then she can find a way to pay for it. That is her incentive.
Yes, and if your son wants to be an engineer, please first convince him to be a mechanic. If he excels at that, let him consider engineering.
Anonymous wrote:My kindergarten son doesn't want to go to college or ever move out. So no use saving for his college.