In the United States, yes you can be accepted to a college of veterinary medicine without having an undergraduate college degree. However, this is becoming more rare.
Yeah, and you have to have a college degree in a science related area of study. And then you have to go to vet school for a couple more years after you get your undergraduate degree. Unless you mean "vet" as in veteran. Somebody who served in the military forces. Then you just need high school or a GED certificate.
Yes, she has a degree in Vet Tech.
Yes, you are just as competitive on your application with a biology degree as anyone else with a pre-vet degree. Actually, you may have a slight edge over someone with just a pre-vet degree, as the biology degree shows foresight and probably a Plan B if you aren't accepted to vet school on your first try. A Pre-Vet degree is useless unless you are accepted to vet school.
A veterinarian must have a DVM or VMD degree; to be accepted into vet school requires 3-4 years of undergraduate college.
There is no degree required at all, actually - The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine does not require a Bachelor's degree for admission into the college. However, most applicants do have a Bachelor's degree and the typical majors are biology, chemistry or animal science. The fun part is, you don't have to have a specific major to be admitted to vet school - one of my classmates had a BA in fashion design and was a very successful vet student.
well, you have to go to college and get a vet degree. you have to study the bones, muscles and so forth. you need to get good grades in school and don't let anyone try to get you pregnant or try to get you to get them pregnant in school. focus on being a vet first. give it all your effort. don't think that this is too much because it isn't!
Vet tech institute is a for-profit private career school. It is not a state funded college.
You must finish college, preferably with a degree in science or pre-med, and then attend four years of veterinary school. Vet school is highly competitive: there are 28 schools in the country, as opposed to nearly 150 medical schools. After four years of vet school, there is a residency in the specialty field, like large animal or orthopedics, etc. Four years of college + four years of vet school + residency = 8 - 10 years of formal education
a four year (bachebr degree) plus four year of vet school
A veterinarian has a Doctorate's Degree in Veterinarian Medicine. That requires 3 to 4 years of school after a Bachelor's Degree. Entrance into vet school is one of the most competitive graduate schools to get into. Many that fail to get into vet school go to med school instead!
Yes, and college as well as vet school.
those are the requirements to be a VEGETARIAN... to be a VET you have to have D.V.M, a state license, pre-vet courses, you have to be able to diagnose the problem with the animal, and much more.