i believe that there is a big difference in giving an opinion and talking down to someone.
Unfortunately, in the written environment of the Internet, it's almost impossible to disagree with someone's opinion without causing some level of offense or insult. That's the nature of it all. You can't take every disagreement personal. But, on the other hand, I agree that there is no excuse for blatant disrespect. We can have disagreement without disrespect.
I can understand if it was someone whose fresh out of emt school, but i've been on the streets for 3 years now
In my world, three years is "fresh out of EMT school", lol. Three years -- or even ten years -- of EMT experience means nothing. It is the quality of that experience that holds the possibility of meaning something. We (or at least I) don't know what that experience really consists of. Personally, I give you a LOT more credit for the education you have achieved since EMT school (which significantly surpasses even most paramedics) than I do for your experience. Education provides the foundation for your knowledge and experience, not driving an ambulance.
...so granted i obviously don't know everything but i sure know alot more than someone fresh out of school.
Not necessarily. Some EMT schools turn out well trained and well prepared providers. Other EMT schools turn out people without a clue, and they remain clueless through five years of driving an IFT van. Again, time as an EMT really doesn't mean anything on the surface.
so far i've taken a&p1, pharmacology. i am currently taking a&p2 and microbiology. i am also interested in taking pepp and phtls(don't have time to take these till after this semester) and i've been reading a book given to me by my old partner about ekgs(want to get a head start) but i haven't been able to read it due to this semester of classes. Oh and i have a medic textbook that i started(again for a head start) and thanks for being nice, any advice i'd gladly take.
Excellent! You are doing all the right things. Every student can always reach down deep and give their education a little more effort. Do that now, while you are establishing your foundation. If the sciences come easy for you, don't settle for that minimum effort necessary to pass the tests with a good score. Strive for excellence. Strive to be the very best that you can possibly be. Get the most out of those courses, because there is no second chance to build a foundation.
As for the "head start", EKGs is really the only topic that I recommend for students to start early. This is because so many schools just really suck at teaching them. They overcomplicate it with poor educational technique. The orange "Rapid Interpretation of EKGs" book by Dubin is the only teacher you will ever need for EKGs. Seriously. It's a self-paced, programmed learning text that takes you from the very basics, all the way through advanced 12-lead interpretation, in as quickly as a couple of days, depending upon your pace. Each page builds on the learning of the previous page, like a workbook. There is no easier or better way to learn EKGs. Other than EKGs, the only head start that you need, or that I recommend, is that provided by A&P, Micro, Pharm, Algebra, Communications, Sociology, and Psychology. After all that, paramedic curriculum should come very easily to you. Any attempt to "get ahead" by randomly reading the textbook ahead of time -- out of order and out of context -- can prove counterproductive, so I do not recommend it.
oh and i have a question, did you get your medic first or rn? i want to get my rn since it takes longer and then the medic. just was wondering what you think about that?
You are spot-on in your thinking. Paramedicine is a very narrowly focused and specific education and practice style. Nursing is very broad based, intending to establish a foundation for practice on all persons, to be focused later by the individual practitioner. By choosing nursing first, you enter paramedicine with that broad foundation to build upon, and it makes you ten times the practitioner that you would ultimately become without it. Paramedics are taught a very myopic, cookbook approach to patient care, having very little true understanding of the conditions they are treating, or even the rationale for that treatment. As a nurse entering paramedicine, you will have that foundation, making it MUCH easier to grasp the concepts of paramedic practice. As a nurse entering paramedicine, you won't have to worry about the quality of your school or instructors. You won't have to worry if they know what they are doing, or if they are just teaching you to pass the test. You already know more medicine than them. All you have to learn from them as a nurse is simple skills, and how to function in the field. Nursing school before paramedic school is the very best possible course for professional preparation. In fact, I have come to believe that it should be a requirement, as it is in countries where EMS blows the US completely away.
Unfortunately, I was a paramedic for many years before I went to nursing school. I didn't think I needed all that book learnin. I thought they should just give me a nursing license, since I already had teh aw3some skillz. I was wrong. I didn't know jack. And if I had it to do all over again, I would have gone to nursing school right out of high school, before EMT school or paramedic school. There is absolutely no disputing that it is the best possible way to prepare a pre-hospital provider.
Best of luck!