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- About extra-mural studies (EMS)
- EMS requirements
- Information for vet students
- Information for EMS providers
- Information for vet schools
- Temporary EMS requirements
- Practice by students - regulations
- Health and safety on EMS placements
- EMS contacts and further guidance
- Extra-mural studies fit for the future
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- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Surgeons
- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Nurses
- Contact the Advice Team
- XL Bully dog ban
- 'Under care' - new guidance
- Advice on Schedule 3
- Controlled Drugs Guidance – A to Z
- Dealing with Difficult Situations webinar recordings
- FAQs – Common medicines pitfalls
- FAQs – Routine veterinary practice and clinical veterinary research
- FAQs – Advertising of practice names
- GDPR – RCVS information and Q&As
Choosing your GCSE/Standards options? Why not consider a veterinary career...
14 February 2011
“School and college students currently considering what subjects to take should look at what science has to offer,” says Professor Stuart Reid, Chairman of the Education Policy and Specialisation Committee of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS), the body responsible for assuring standards in veterinary education in the UK.
“A career as a vet, for example, is science-based and offers plenty of variety and good employment prospects in all sorts of different fields.
"Not only do vets treat people’s pets but they can also run their own businesses, make discoveries that stop human diseases spreading, help with wildlife conservation and, critically, ensure the food we eat is safe and produced in a welfare-friendly fashion.” Veterinary surgeons are also employed within the pharmaceutical industry.
For those who may not have considered applying to veterinary school, the RCVS careers material – Veterinary Science…for all Walks of Life – is well worth a look.
Comprising short videos and an accompanying brochure, it features advice from real-life vets and veterinary students about the different jobs vets do, what vet school is like, and how to get there.
“Vets come from all walks of life,” says Professor Reid, noting that bursaries and other financial support are provided by the universities for students from lower-income backgrounds.
“This year, the University of Liverpool joins the Royal Veterinary College, and the universities of Nottingham and Bristol, in taking talented, disadvantaged students with lower grades, or relevant experience and vocational qualifications. These students undertake a pre-entry year and, as long as they pass, are guaranteed places on the degree courses that qualify them to become vets.”
Students, parents, teachers and careers advisers can find an interactive version of the Walks of Life brochure at http://www.walksoflife.org.uk/ which also incorporates the video modules.
The videos can also be viewed on the VetCareers channel on YouTube (www.youtube.com/vetcareers).
Hard copies of the brochure are freely available by contacting the RCVS ([email protected] or 020 7202 0791).