Care, Observation, and Reflection

Req 6 — Choose Your Field Experience

6.
Do ONE of the following:

You must choose exactly one option for this requirement. Both choices ask you to observe, take notes, and prepare a presentation, but the kind of veterinary work you will see is different.

Your Options

How to Choose

Choosing Your Option

Compare the two experiences before deciding
  • What you will see: Option 6a usually shows patient exams, treatment, surgery prep, and clinic teamwork. Option 6b usually shows public-health, inspection, research, military, teaching, or policy work.
  • Who you will meet: Option 6a may involve veterinarians, technicians, reception staff, and pet owners. Option 6b may involve agency staff, researchers, inspectors, educators, or military personnel.
  • What you will gain: Option 6a builds a better picture of day-to-day animal care. Option 6b builds a better picture of how veterinary medicine protects communities and systems.
  • Ease of access: A neighborhood clinic may be easier to arrange than a government or laboratory visit, but the less familiar setting can teach you more about unusual veterinary careers.

What both options have in common

No matter which path you choose, your presentation should answer three questions:

  1. What did I observe?
  2. What did I learn about the veterinarian’s role?
  3. Why does this work matter to animals, people, or the public?

Bring a notebook, ask permission before taking photos or recordings, and be ready to respect privacy rules. In a clinic, that means patient and client confidentiality. In a public-health or research setting, that may mean restricted spaces or information.

Start with the first option page. Even if you later choose 6b, it helps to see what a strong observation plan looks like.