You will be unable to inventory your supplies or patients without some sort of schooling.
?????/?????? I went to The Vet Tech Institute. It is not a vet school. It's a vet tech school and my tuition was almost $30,000. I went to the one in Pittsburgh, PA
Vet Tech Institute at Bradford School was created in 1958.
If there is, call the vet!
Yes you can
Vet tech institute is a for-profit private career school. It is not a state funded college.
No, unfortunately, Tarleton does not offer a vet tech program. However, starting Fall of 2011 TSU will begin a Bachelors in Technology with a major in Vet Tech. In order to do this program though, you must already have an associates Vet Tech degree from another school. MCC in Waco offers the Vet Tech Associates degree.
Yes, you can work as a lay vet tech at a veterinary clinic while you are in vet school, and for many students this is partially how they pay for vet school in the United States. A fair number of veterinary students worked in vet clinics as vet assistants or lay (unregistered) vet techs to gain the veterinary experience they needed to apply to vet school; most of them continue to work part time at the same clinics while in vet school.
No, you may return to college, complete the pre-requisite courses and apply to vet school without becoming a vet tech. In fact, it is rare that a veterinarian was ever formally trained as a vet tech.
Simply search for online vet tech schools and peruse the different options. Find the school that is most compelling, as well as one you can afford. I would recommend going to a community college or university for vet tech science though.
No you have to finish school for further training.
Either a veterinary technician or a veterinarian can anesthetize a horse, although the vet tech must be working under the supervision of a veterinarian. Regardless of the path you take to be a horse anesthesiologist, you will need to have specialized training in anesthesiology after completing vet tech school or vet school.
In the United States, the courses you complete to earn a BS in veterinary technology could partially complete the pre-requisite courses needed to apply to vet school. However, the vet tech courses cannot be directly substituted for courses in vet school - the degree of difficulty and depth of information need are much greater for veterinarians than for vet techs.