- Networking with other students interested in applying to pharmacy school
- Meeting representatives from PharmD programs, including admissions officers
- Hearing from guest speakers like current PharmD students, local pharmacists and other health professionals
- Participating in community outreach activities with other club members
- Developing leadership skills and teamwork experience
It's for you! Join it!
Wait! But your campus doesn't have a pre-pharmacy club. Perfect! Start one. What a way to demonstrate your initiative and leadership! And it should be fairly easy to get it off the ground.
- Visit your campus Student Activities or Associated Students office (ask if a pre-pharmacy club ever existed on your campus -- if so, they will likely have a file with helpful information to get you started)
- Inquire about starting a new organization on campus (you'll likely have to complete paperwork, submit names of officers, and develop a constitution/bylaws)
- Ask the Student Activities advisor for a sample constitution (or better yet, ask to see the constitution of a similar organization -- like pre-med or pre-dentistry)
- Work with the activities office to reserve a room for your first/informational meeting; post announcements/posters in key areas that likely will draw prospective members (i.e. science department building) to the meeting; develop an agenda
- Recruit your favorite professor to serve as the club's advisor
Build it! They will come!
4 comments:
I really enjoyed reading your history, thanks!
Hi Joel,
Though you wrote this post years ago, I would like to comment on it.
A pre-pharmacy club could offer all of the opportunities you have mention, but these opportunities are certainly not restricted to people in a club. Furthermore, I would argue that an undergraduate education is a time to explore many different options. If a student wants to become a pharmacist maybe it is more relevant to join clubs that look at health care differently. Why is it important to become so committed to pharmacy even before leaving your undergrad institution? Is meeting other students who are applying to pharmacy school more important than meeting students who are interested in other realms of public health?
I would like to think that pharmacy schools would look at the breadth of my experiences and how they have shaped my ideas of health care. Once in pharmacy school, such ideas can be molded to fit the pharmacist's role. But why, during a time at which it is so important to explore different ideas, should I be limited or attracted to people that think and will chose the same career plans as me?
Thanks,
I look forward to you posts.
It was just a suggestion, geeze. Nothing more, nothing less. People get experiences in different ways.
Im wanting to start a pharmacy club at our community college, this is just what i was thinking of! thanks!! great post!!
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