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A&P, Biology and chemistry. Pretty much any science classes your high school offers.
Get as much EMS experience as you can. Paramedic school will teach you the A/P and sciences you need to know. Taking those classes won't hurt but get as much EMT experience as you can.
Uh, NoYou need a much better understanding of basic sciences and A/P then the average paramedic program provides.
IMHO, A solid education is much more important than experience.
Take advanced placement classes if possible to get college credit while still in High School then finish up a degree at a community college. Try to find a paramedic program that is an associate program. Take all the science classes you can.
More knowledge is always better but would not recommend going to ALS school right after graduating from EMT class straight out of high school...
and it says you're an RN/EMT-B so how can you judge what was taught in Paramedic school??? just asking...
and it says you're an RN/EMT-B so how can you judge what was taught in Paramedic school??? just asking...
Uh, NoYou need a much better understanding of basic sciences and A/P then the average paramedic program provides.
IMHO, A solid education is much more important than experience.
Take advanced placement classes if possible to get college credit while still in High School then finish up a degree at a community college. Try to find a paramedic program that is an associate program. Take all the science classes you can.
If you're living in a rural area find a HIGH VOLUME agency. Get as much EMS experience as you can. Paramedic school will teach you the A/P and sciences you need to know. Taking those classes won't hurt but get as much EMT experience as you can.
Start with an explorer post if you can't become an EMT yet and ride with an ALS provider if possible. Find someone who you trust/respect in your area who will mentor you through the process, that is invaluable, and learn as much as you possibly can. And figure out if you like it, EMS isn't the dream everyone sees it to be but it is the most rewarding life choice I've ever made. Enjoy the journey, there's nothing like it.
-Matt
Despite having college A/P, sciences found the quality of my paramedic program to be excellent and at par for what we need to know. More knowledge is always better but would not recommend going to ALS school right after graduating from EMT class straight out of high school...
and it says you're an RN/EMT-B so how can you judge what was taught in Paramedic school??? just asking...
Yay paramedic A&P. Taught by medics who never even took college level A&P.
Paramedic instructor: "We can skip this, you don't need to know this mambo jumbo for the exam"
Paramedic student: "Okay...but can you explain it please?"
Paramedic instructor: "I will Google it and get back to you"
Do not get me wrong we are trained and drilled for very small subset of emergency medicine. Which you can perform without having college education.
However take 2 semester of college level AP and come back in a year and tell me paramedic AP was excellent.
IMHO, A solid education is much more important than experience.
Take advanced placement classes if possible to get college credit while still in High School then finish up a degree at a community college. Try to find a paramedic program that is an associate program. Take all the science classes you can.
Sorry but I have to disagree with you here. Knowledge is important, but experience tops it. Do I want a green paramedic straight out of school or a 20 year paramedic going on my family? I'll take the latter.
Sorry but I have to disagree with you here. Knowledge is important, but experience tops it. Do I want a green paramedic straight out of school or a 20 year paramedic going on my family? I'll take the latter.
And don't only go into a program because of the associate degree. Again, do you want a piece of paper saying you're a college grad, or do you want to be a good paramedic? My paramedic school didn't offer a degree but we went way above and beyond the required hours for national registry with departments that had much higher call volume than those from a university that offered a degree. I entered the field much more compitent than anyone coming from the other program. For example- When I left my program I had 35+ intubations in the OR and 1 field intubation. The graduates from the Univeristy I mentioned- Lucky if they had 2 OR intubations.
The experience you gain from Medic school is what's gonna make you most comfortable in the field.
I think we can agree both formal education and experience are important. Why would you compare straight out of school paramedic with a 20 year medic? Do you honestly believe that is fair comparison to make?
Additionally stating "paper saying you're a college grad, or do you want to be a good paramedic? " is dismissing the value of proper formal education. How are you able to state that without having a college degree?
Why do all other health care providers such as doctors, nurses, rt attend college?
I am sure you would want a doctor who never attended college to work on your family? Correct?