Entries in SAVMA News (119)

Friday
May232014

Insurance Designed for Students Like You - AVMA GHLIT

As a veterinary student, you may need affordable, reliable insurance coverage. Without it, even a minor illness or injury can financially overwhelm you and could jeopardize your veterinary career. That’s why the AVMA GHLIT created affordable insurance plans specifically designed for veterinary students and their dependents.

For more than 50 years, the American Veterinary Medical Association Group Health and Life Insurance Trust (AVMA GHLIT) has made available to AVMA members like you, insurance coverage you can trust.

Veterinary students can take advantage of the Student Life and Disability plan, as well as Hospital indemnity, Dental and Vision coverage. And for veterinarian graduates, there’s the Graduate Guarantee Program, which includes guaranteed coverage for Disability, Life, Professional Overhead Expense, Accidental Death & Dismemberment, Basic Protection and Hospital Indemnity insurance, as well as financing options!

For more information or to find the authorized representative at your college, visit http://www.avmaghlit.org/content/students.aspx.

Thursday
Mar202014

Welcome to Colorado!

 

Are you at SAVMA Symposium? We arrived last night and will be continually updating the blog with photos of your classmates and news from the House of Delegates. Follow our live tweets @StudentAVMA. Are you taking pictures? Send them to savma.editor@gmail.com and we will post them! 

Monday
Feb172014

Partners for Healthy Pets Update

The January 2014 issue of the Partners for Healthy Pets Special Care Newsletter is out! It offers a quick primer on Social Media, as well as several posts ready to “cut and paste” onto your Facebook page or Twitter feed.  The issue also provides a direct link to our Public Service Announcement, which is receiving national air time on a number of networks that are popular with our target audience. 

Partners for Healthy Pets - Special Care Instructions :30 from Partners for Healthy Pets on Vimeo.

 

This is the newsletter that is emailed to Practice Enrollment Program registrants, a database that now includes more than 4,000 unique veterinary practices across the United States.  You don’t have to be a veterinary practice to register –  all Partners for Healthy Pets Members, Associate Members and enthusiasts are invited to use this tool to stay up to date on our communications to PEP practices and updates on the consumer campaign.

Other news of note:  our recent www.partnersforhealthypets.org  refresh included the addition of a Consumer Campaign tab, with sections specifically for PEP practices and also for Associate Members.  These sections include Special Care Instructions campaign materials – we encourage you to make use of any and all of these materials on your websites and in your communications.  The refresh also improved our tools overview and added a “Quick Start” page to help guide users’ way into the Resources Toolbox.

Tuesday
Jan142014

Easy reference on interest rates

Whether you are starting your first year or counting down the final days until you begin your first real job, it is important to understand the student loans that you have been reliant upon for sustenance for the past several years.  Since there are no longer subsidized loans for graduate students, below is a table explaining the various interest rates for student loans that are dispersed by the government.  The rates highlighted in yellow should be of particular interest during your time in graduate school, although loans from undergraduate may be subject to the rates that are not highlighted.

However, more important than understanding the rate of your loan is understanding a logical way to manage and pay back your student debt following graduation.  It is no longer uncommon to find that student loans may be coming from multiple sources, with varying rates, due dates, and amounts due per month.  For this very reason, the website https://www.tuition.io/ was created. This website is designed as a management tool for those with student loans to provide guidance towards how much money should be going where and when. For those familiar with www.mint.com, this is a very similar concept.  For a brief review of this site, please visit http://mashable.com/2013/08/13/tuitionio/ .

For a more detailed explanation concerning the 10-year treasury note index, please visit http://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/products/prod_tnotes_glance.htm.

How to consolidate your student loans:  http://studentaid.ed.gov/repay-loans/consolidation

 

Another Great Tool ""Your Guide to Paying Off Student Loans'"


Saturday
Dec282013

We want your opinion, vet students!

Editor's note: The New York State Veterinary Medical Society is recommending to the AVMA Executive Board that the AVMA no longer accredit foreign veterinary schools. Attached below is the proposed resolution. What are your thoughts on this? Please comment below on why or why not you agree with the resolution. Your SAVMA Executive Board wants to share the voice of the students with the AVMA Executive Board.

Resolution 1—Winter 2014 Regular Winter Session

Submitted by New York State Veterinary Medical Society

THE AVMA WILL NO LONGER ACCREDIT FOREIGN VETERINARY SCHOOLS, DEFINED AS THOSE SCHOOLS LOCATED OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA

Resolved, that the House of Delegates recommend to the Executive Board that the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) will-

1.    Initiate steps to cease the accreditation of foreign veterinary schools by the AVMA Council on Education (COE). Foreign veterinary schools are defined as those schools that operate outside the United States and Canada.
2.    Permit foreign veterinary schools currently accredited by the COE to maintain their accreditation until such time as that accreditation expires. Upon expiration, there will not be an opportunity for said schools to be re-accredited unless said school meets the criteria set forth in paragraph 3 below.
3.    Permit those students currently enrolled in a foreign AVMA COE-accredited program to complete their education and upon graduation, be considered graduates of an AVMA COE-accredited program. For those schools whose COE-accreditation expires prior to the graduation of their freshman class, a one-time accreditation extension will be granted until the time of graduation of that freshman class.

Statement about the Resolution

The accreditation of veterinary schools is a resource intensive process. It requires a great deal of effort from AVMA members and staff as well as being logistically challenging. This is particularly true when accrediting a veterinary school in a foreign country, where English may not be the native language. These concerns are exemplified in the reports by the AVMA’s Task Force on Accreditation of Foreign Veterinary Schools and the recent Staff Report to the Senior Department Official on Recognition of Compliance Issues by the U.S. Department of Education.

The focus of the Council on Education should be to continually improve the quality of the graduates, programs, and institutions of Domestic and Canadian veterinary Colleges. This is best accomplished by adhering to the Standards of Accreditation and ceasing to accredit foreign veterinary schools.

In July 2011, the AVMA House of Delegates passed a resolution for a task force to evaluate the accreditation of foreign veterinary schools. The report of the Task Force on Foreign Veterinary School Accreditation was made available in March of 2013.

The task force listed a number of concerns in the conclusion of its report. Chief among those concerns is the following:
a.    Recognition as a competent accrediting body of veterinary schools by the USDE and CHEA requires the COE to apply accreditation standards consistently across schools. The diversity among countries suggests that the COE encounters an ever wider programmatic variety in schools and ever greater complexity of applying a common set of standards to them. Lack of familiarity with the intricacies of the accreditation process can contribute to individual perceptions of uneven application of accreditation standards, and such misunderstanding can be exacerbated by the necessary confidentiality adhered to by the COE.
b.    The Task Force believes that the COE should clarify the criteria for determining whether a veterinary school is part of a larger institution of higher learning asrequired by Standard 1 or is a free-standing institution and thus not eligible for
accreditation c.    Because the Task Force finds it is unclear how clinical education and outcomes
assessment standards are met across diverse institutions, the Task Force believes it is unclear how the COE–accredited foreign veterinary schools consistently matriculate graduates that are equal to US entry-level veterinarians.
d.    Aside from the overall accreditation process, objective data to measure competency of graduates of accredited foreign and domestic programs are lacking.
e.    The Task Force sees a contradiction in the role of the NAVLE in accreditation. Although the NAVLE is not required for accreditation, there is a pass-fail threshold for those schools whose graduating seniors generally take the NAVLE. The Task Force believes that this use of the NAVLE creates an inconsistency that the COE should address.
f.    The NAVLE cannot provide comparative data across all COE-accredited veterinary schools because it is not a requirement for accreditation. With the exception of Ross University and St. George’s University, most graduates from accredited foreign schools do not take the NAVLE because they are not pursuing licensure in the United States or Canada. However, for schools whose graduating senior students normally take the NAVLE, the COE expects a pass rate of 80% or more.

In December of 2012, the U.S. Department of Education met to evaluate a Petition for Continued Recognition. The Department of Education recommended to continue the AVMA’s recognition as the accrediting body for only the next 12 months, as opposed to the typical five years. The AVMA is expected to come into compliance within 12 months of that report’s issuance. Quoting from the report: “It does not appear that the agency (Council on Education) meets the following sections of the Secretary’s Criteria for Recognition.” It appears obvious that if the USDE has questioned our methods of accreditation for domestic schools, we ourselves must question our criteria for the even more difficult task of effectively accrediting the ever- growing number of foreign veterinary schools.

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