Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 YOU THINK YOU'RE SO SMART! HERE'S WHAT I THINK OF YOUR OPINION!!!!!!!! I agree. _____ From: dustdevil31 Sent: Friday, July 16, 2004 3:55 AM To: Subject: Re: Random thoughts on education > I can think of > no other profession that mandates a lower level of certification before you > reach the highest level. Lawyers don't have to become paralegals or legal > assistants before they take the bar exam. Doctors don't have to get licensed as a > PA, etc. I have two theories. First, that is how the profession developed in the first place. There were EMT's before there were paramedics. Wheras, in medicine and law, PA's and paralegals were afterthoughts. In EMS, the egg came before the chicken, as it were. Also, not really a theory, but an observation... PA's and paralegals are separate careers with considerable educational requirements of their own, not month-long merit badge courses like EMT school. Most who choose those careers, I would imagine, have done so after deciding against (or being rejected from) medical or law school. I see it as a good thing in a way. Many people chose med school or law school, only to find out after considerable investment that it isn't really what they wanted, but it's too late to back out. At least in EMS, you have a professional plateau where you can jump off without having already invested a lot of time and money. That said, my opinion is -- FWIW -- that paramedicine should and will eventually become a stand-alone career and be the entry level for EMS, relegating EMT to non-emergency and/or first-responder status. Let the hate mail begin. Rob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 YOU THINK YOU'RE SO SMART! HERE'S WHAT I THINK OF YOUR OPINION!!!!!!!! I agree. _____ From: dustdevil31 Sent: Friday, July 16, 2004 3:55 AM To: Subject: Re: Random thoughts on education > I can think of > no other profession that mandates a lower level of certification before you > reach the highest level. Lawyers don't have to become paralegals or legal > assistants before they take the bar exam. Doctors don't have to get licensed as a > PA, etc. I have two theories. First, that is how the profession developed in the first place. There were EMT's before there were paramedics. Wheras, in medicine and law, PA's and paralegals were afterthoughts. In EMS, the egg came before the chicken, as it were. Also, not really a theory, but an observation... PA's and paralegals are separate careers with considerable educational requirements of their own, not month-long merit badge courses like EMT school. Most who choose those careers, I would imagine, have done so after deciding against (or being rejected from) medical or law school. I see it as a good thing in a way. Many people chose med school or law school, only to find out after considerable investment that it isn't really what they wanted, but it's too late to back out. At least in EMS, you have a professional plateau where you can jump off without having already invested a lot of time and money. That said, my opinion is -- FWIW -- that paramedicine should and will eventually become a stand-alone career and be the entry level for EMS, relegating EMT to non-emergency and/or first-responder status. Let the hate mail begin. Rob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 Just a thought. Isn't it funny how federal, state, and local governments do not recognize ignorance as an excuse for not knowing the law or misunderstanding it, yet, they recognize that you must invest thousands of dollars and 6-8 years of education in order to do so. _____ From: Randell Pitts Sent: Friday, July 16, 2004 5:06 AM To: Subject: Re: Re: Random thoughts on education Though it would never happen, I would submit the possibility of changing medical training to a system similar to that I saw in Russia. Med school is 7 years long (no undergrad time) with the ability to become a nurse after 2-3 years. You could build in diversionary points along the way where one could stop at that level: nurse 2-3 years, medic 3-4 years, lawyer 1-2 days....you get the idea... R dustdevil31 wrote: > I can think of > no other profession that mandates a lower level of certification before you > reach the highest level. Lawyers don't have to become paralegals or legal > assistants before they take the bar exam. Doctors don't have to get licensed as a > PA, etc. I have two theories. First, that is how the profession developed in the first place. There were EMT's before there were paramedics. Wheras, in medicine and law, PA's and paralegals were afterthoughts. In EMS, the egg came before the chicken, as it were. Also, not really a theory, but an observation... PA's and paralegals are separate careers with considerable educational requirements of their own, not month-long merit badge courses like EMT school. Most who choose those careers, I would imagine, have done so after deciding against (or being rejected from) medical or law school. I see it as a good thing in a way. Many people chose med school or law school, only to find out after considerable investment that it isn't really what they wanted, but it's too late to back out. At least in EMS, you have a professional plateau where you can jump off without having already invested a lot of time and money. That said, my opinion is -- FWIW -- that paramedicine should and will eventually become a stand-alone career and be the entry level for EMS, relegating EMT to non-emergency and/or first-responder status. Let the hate mail begin. Rob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 Just a thought. Isn't it funny how federal, state, and local governments do not recognize ignorance as an excuse for not knowing the law or misunderstanding it, yet, they recognize that you must invest thousands of dollars and 6-8 years of education in order to do so. _____ From: Randell Pitts Sent: Friday, July 16, 2004 5:06 AM To: Subject: Re: Re: Random thoughts on education Though it would never happen, I would submit the possibility of changing medical training to a system similar to that I saw in Russia. Med school is 7 years long (no undergrad time) with the ability to become a nurse after 2-3 years. You could build in diversionary points along the way where one could stop at that level: nurse 2-3 years, medic 3-4 years, lawyer 1-2 days....you get the idea... R dustdevil31 wrote: > I can think of > no other profession that mandates a lower level of certification before you > reach the highest level. Lawyers don't have to become paralegals or legal > assistants before they take the bar exam. Doctors don't have to get licensed as a > PA, etc. I have two theories. First, that is how the profession developed in the first place. There were EMT's before there were paramedics. Wheras, in medicine and law, PA's and paralegals were afterthoughts. In EMS, the egg came before the chicken, as it were. Also, not really a theory, but an observation... PA's and paralegals are separate careers with considerable educational requirements of their own, not month-long merit badge courses like EMT school. Most who choose those careers, I would imagine, have done so after deciding against (or being rejected from) medical or law school. I see it as a good thing in a way. Many people chose med school or law school, only to find out after considerable investment that it isn't really what they wanted, but it's too late to back out. At least in EMS, you have a professional plateau where you can jump off without having already invested a lot of time and money. That said, my opinion is -- FWIW -- that paramedicine should and will eventually become a stand-alone career and be the entry level for EMS, relegating EMT to non-emergency and/or first-responder status. Let the hate mail begin. Rob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 Two Words: SPELL CHECK..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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