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     This semester it’s been a hard one, but to be honest I have had worst. It stared out good with good grades and everything, “rehabilitacion vocacional” started to give me my monthly checks, so money was not that tight. But at the middle of the semester I started to fall behind on classes. I started to get depressed again, it always happens because of the stress. Classes start getting harder and teacher start giving more work. Because I was depressed I started to fall behind and fail some classes, and I had to drop out of a class. Even though I dropped out of a class I was still struggling with my other three classes, especially with math. At the beginning, in the first test I got a good grade, but in the second and third test it went down the drain, I wasn’t studying hard enough, I guess and also I didn’t know how to manage my time with the three classes. Also my 90 year old grandmother she fell and broke her hip, not long ago, and that got me more stressed.

     I really like this class in particular, because I like writing but always have trouble with creativity and imagination. And also I like the fact that I got to do a website and got feedback from my peers. I have to admit I took a class similar to this one and the professor was a really good one but Zen was really great. Overall I really liked the class I think it helped me with my writing and I learned a lot while in this class.

     Even though it was a hard and stressful semester, for me, it wasn’t all bad, at least in my social life. I made good friends and I had really good class mates, and I got myself a boyfriend. But I know academically I could have done better. I should have done better. I anticipate I will pass my classes seeing that this is my last semester in the UPRRP. No, I’m not graduating, bur next semester I will be attending another college close to my hometown studying veterinarian technician. Hopefully everything will all go well next semester. I will surely miss the iupi. 


 
Personality type results EI: 12 out of 17

Extrovert |-------------------------------------------------| Introvert

                                            |

                                           70%

SN: 8 out of 17

Sensation |-------------------------------------------------| iNtuition

                                |

                               47%

TF: 7 out of 17

Thinking  |-------------------------------------------------| Feeling

                             |

                            41%

JP: 9 out of 17

Judging   |-------------------------------------------------| Perceiving

                                   |

                                  52%

Your Personality type is ISTP

Please print this page and keep a copy for your records.

Definitions: The four pairs of preference alternatives above (Extrovert, iNtuitive etc.)

Description: Find out what your type means, which job is suitable for you, which type you are 
most compatible with and more!



ISTP - Artisan

ISTPs are action-oriented. They are fearless, impulsive and crave excitement. They like tools and instruments, and often become technical experts. 5% of the total population.

ISTP's value privacy and sometimes keep important issues to themselves. Their concern for the present moment and their inability to recognize the importance of setting goals, often leads them into conflict with authority. Being action-oriented, ISTP's react against restrictions — which typically causes the controls placed on them to increase. In these situations, boredom can quickly set in and the ISTP may experience feelings of internal emptiness. Overly regulated situations cause ISTP's stress. In such situations, ISTP's either attempt to flee or turn to fight their adversary face-to-face. 

The ISTP's form of retaliation can be characterized as defiling what other people value. The ISTP violates rules and regulations that protect individual rights in retaliation for the lost opportunities and freedom that the ISTP believes they have had to endure. Getting even stimulates them and a renewed sense of excitement emerges from the risks of revenge and the expression of outrage. If stress continues, ISTP's will put what remaining freedom they have left in jeopardy by rebelling further.

Careers

This lists represent careers and jobs people of your type tend to enjoy doing. The job requirements are similar to the personality tendencies of your personality type. It is important to remember that this is not a list of all the jobs possible. And it is very important to remember that people can, and frequently do, fill jobs that are dissimilar to their personality... this happens all the time...and sometimes works out quite well.

surveyor
fire fighter
private investigator
pilot
police officer
purchasing agent
chiropractor
medical technician
securities analyst
computer repair person
race car driver
computer programmer
electrical engineer
legal secretary
coach/trainer
commercial artist
carpenter
paralegal
dental assistant
radiological technician
marine biologist
software developer

 
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I always wanted to work with animals and I was clear on that, but when I entered college through another major (anthropology) that was not veterinarian technician I started taking other classes. Another field that caught my attention was psychology. I like helping other people with their problems, even my friends tell me that I should be a psychologist, apparently I give good advice and I know how to be neutral and all of that. In other words I have the temperament and disposition to be a psychologist.  To be honest when I’m done with my associates’ degree in vet tech my plans are to get a bachelors degree in psychology, just because this field really interest me. So technically I haven’t stopped going forward this career path I just putting a pause to It, because right now my main focus right now is animals. 


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Ivan Pavlov

Practically everyone has heard of Pavlov’s dogs. Pavlov wasn’t technically a psychologist, but he made one of the most important discoveries in the field, and had a major hand in establishing psychology as an area of study. Pavlov is the one who recognized that responses to stimuli could be learned, based on his studies of dogs.


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John B. Watson

When Pavlov jump-started the field of psychology by recognizing the role of learned responses, he also kicked off behaviorism. Watson was the first behaviorist, arguing that psychologists can only base their theories on observation, and utilizing the study of animals in order to draw conclusions regarding human behavior.


 
          To be honest I chose to be a vet tech because of my love for animals not because of some philosopher or pioneer or way of thinking. I have been studying for 5 years and I have not taken 1 class that has to do with vet tech, so I don’t know anything about major thinkers or philosophers. So I decided to do a little research on the people that has made history on this area and I learn a lot. From people that discovered diseases to people that fight for animal rights and to the first woman who became a veterinarian. There isn’t much information on these people but they definitely made major contributions to this field of work and it’s something that people should look up to.  Below this there are some major veterinarians that made history:

1.      Belle Bruce Reid – (1883-1945), was Australia's first qualified woman veterinarian surgeon, she went to the Melbourne Veterinary College, Fitzroy, in 1902. Completing the course in 1906, Reid was one of five final-year students who were examined, and the only one to pass. When she was registered by the Veterinary Board of Victoria on 21 November she was said to be the first formally recognized female veterinary surgeon in the world. A formidable woman, she only gained limited status in what was then a conservative, male-dominated profession, partly because she retired from practice early. In 1996 her name was included in the National Pioneer Women's Hall of Fame, Alice Springs, Northern Territory.

2.      Elinor McGrath - Elinor McGrath was born around 1888 (exact dates unknown). She made her way to the Chicago Veterinary College and in 1907 was the first woman admitted to the school. Caring for horses and livestock had always been a male profession and when Elinor entered the Chicago Veterinary College many of her fellow students were upset about her presence. In later years Elinor recounted a story to another woman veterinarian telling her that “it got so rough I offered to the Dean that I should leave the college but he said “well you better not because you’ll make a better veterinarian than any of them.” Elinor graduated to become Elinor McGrath DVM in April of 1910 and she set up a small animal practice on Indiana Avenue on Chicago’s South Side. Besides being a compassionate animal doctor Elinor acknowledged the intimate role of animals in our lives.

             a.       McGrath was the first woman veterinarian in the US with another  woman, Florence Kimball who graduated from Cornell in the same year, and together they established the first small animal practice even though little is known about her practice

3.      Bernhard Lauritz Frederik Bang (1848-1932), was a Danish veterinarian. He discovered Brucella abortus in 1897, which came to be known as Bang’s bacillus. Bang’s bacillus was the cause of the contagious Bang’s disease (now known as Brucellosis), a malady that can cause pregnant cattle to abort and that can cause undulant fever in humans. For his contributions to veterinary medicine, he received an honorary doctorate from the Veterinary College of Utrecht in 1921. Bang also is known for his work in development of a control for bovine tuberculosis, research on smallpox vaccination, and research on animal bacillary disease.

4.      Buster Lloyd-Jones (1914-1980), during his career, may have been the most sought-after vet in Great Britain. Buster cared for sick, injured and abandoned animals during the Second World War. He was a very kind man with a passion for animals. During the war, he kept a menagerie of abandoned animals at his house, "Clymping Dene." Buster Lloyd Jones founded Denes in 1951, which produces herbal veterinary products for animals. Buster wrote an autobiography entitled The Animals Came in One by One, and a sequel, Come into my World.

5.      Debbye Turner is an American vet, a talk show hostess and winner of the 1990 Miss America contest. After graduation from college with a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, she became a spokesperson for Purina and pursued a career in veterinary medicine before going into television. Turner’s first hosting job came at St. Louis’ NBC affiliate, KSDK, on a show called Show Me St. Louis in 1995. Six years later, Turner joined CBS News as a reporter and contributor on The Early Show, a position she still holds. Turner has been dubbed The Early Show‘s resident veterinarian, sharing a wealth of advice about quality pet care. In 2002, Debbye garnered an interview with President & Mrs. Bush at the White House for a Pet Planet segment about the first family’s pets.

6.      Dame Jane Morris Goodall is a British primatologist, ethologist, anthropologist, and UN Messenger of Peace. Considered to be the world's foremost expert on chimpanzees, Goodall is best known for her 45-year study of social and family interactions of wild chimpanzees in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania. She is the founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and has worked extensively on conservation and animal welfare issues. Goodall set out to Tanzania to study wild chimpanzees by sitting amongst them, bypassing more rigid procedures and making discoveries about primate behavior that have continued to shape scientific discourse. She is a highly respected member of the world scientific community and is a staunch advocate of ecological preservation. Although Goodall is not a veterinarian I include her on this list because she works with animal welfare issues and she is a really important person in this line of work. And if I want to work in a zoo. I must know more about her.

Links

  1. http://www.vet.cornell.edu/library/women/1kimball.htm 
  2. http://www.petmd.com/blogs/fullyvetted/2011/aug/ten_vets_who_made_history#.UMze7m83h5G 
  3. http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/reid-isabelle-bruce-belle-11503 


 
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      I’m currently studying Anthropology but my dream academic/career path is veterinarian technician, also known as vet tech. Vet techs are the people who provide care and comfort to sick or injured animals. They work with veterinarians or scientists in a way that is similar to the help a nurse gives to a doctor. In other words it’s like an animal nurse.  Even though I’m not studying what I really want to study. I’m doing everything I can to change majors and hopefully next semester I will be studying veterinarian technician. When I was a little girl I always wanted to be a veterinarian but as I grew up I learned that it is the vet that put the  animals to sleep, and I don’t think I have the heart for that. So I started to look for other options, that works with animals and care for them. I have always been an animal lover, so I decided to go for veterinary technician. I have encounter a lot of challenges while in my studies, friends, boyfriends, peer pressure , but the hardest I would have to say my depression. Because of it I dropped my grades from a 3.00 GPA to below 2.00 GPA. And it’s been really hard to try to raise them and keep them to at least a 2.85 or 2.75 GPA. I’m planning to get my degree on the year 2014 may be 2015, but since I’m so unpredictable. And when I do graduate from veterinary technician I plan to get a job at a veterinary clinic in the states or better yet at a zoo in Australia, work my hardest, and maybe get a another degree on psychology which is something that always interested me. One thing that I have never been surer of is choosing this career path. Is what I love, animals. I know that there are something’s I won’t like, like the blood and math, but those things I can handle and besides “I would much rater suck at something that I love, that that be good at something that I hate and be miserable for the rest of my life.”


links: 

http://dot-job-descriptions.careerplanner.com/VETERINARY-TECHNICIAN.cfm

http://www.allalliedhealthschools.com/health-careers/vet-tech/veterinary-technician-job-description