logo
It now takes more than good grades to get a chance to become a great veterinarian at this P.E.I. college

It now takes more than good grades to get a chance to become a great veterinarian at this P.E.I. college

CBC13-03-2025
Students at Atlantic Veterinary College still need good grades to become great vets, but from now on, the school says life experience will play a larger role in the people it selects to study there.
Up until now, academic achievement held the most weight in the application process for the Charlottetown-based college, accounting for 60 per cent of a potential student's score.
If their grades were high enough, applicants would qualify for an interview that counts for another 20 per cent, with the remaining marks coming from a behavioural aptitude test.
"Essentially, the entire decision on whether or not an applicant would get an interview came down to their academic score," said Dr. Anne Marie Carey, the AVC's dean of academic and student affairs as well as a member of the college's class of 2006.
"But there's a lot more to being a successful veterinarian. So yes, we want to select a successful vet student, but we also want to select someone who's going to be a successful veterinarian."
Starting this fall, the college is lowering the percentage that academics weighs for admission to 40 per cent, and will add a test worth 20 per cent that will gauge things like a candidate's compassion, empathy, teamwork and integrity.
If they score well on both of those, applicants will get an interview that's worth 30 per cent and write a personal essay for the remaining 10 points.
"Because we only interview based on [grades], there are people who would likely make exceptional veterinarians that we're just not even getting to meet and see," Carey said.
"My hope is, by introducing this earlier in our process, we'll get to see a different range of applicants and people will have an opportunity to really shine."
WATCH | Atlantic Vet College amping up the importance of life experience:
Atlantic Vet College amping up the importance of life experience to find more great future vets
5 hours ago
Duration 2:14
The Charlottetown-based Atlantic Veterinary College has changed its admission criteria. Grades are still a big priority, but everyone knows they don't tell the full story. The school is now focusing more on life experience during the admission process. CBC's Sheehan Desjardins explains.
'People are more than their grades'
Current vets-in-training seem to like the changes.
Danielle Harmon, a second-year student at the college on the UPEI campus, said she always strived for academic perfection throughout her schooling, but has since come to realize that grades aren't everything.
"I feel like people are more than their grades, and so looking at a more holistic view and non-academic aspects of an applicant is very beneficial," she said.
Being a veterinarian is a very personable job. You are talking to people… although you are treating their pets. — Danielle Harmon
"Being a veterinarian is a very personable job. You are talking to people… although you are treating their pets. And so looking at someone as a whole is the right move."
Harmon's classmate, Sam Berube, agrees. He said the admission changes will lead to a more diverse group of students who can bring different perspectives to the table.
"I really am excited to see it draw in more people who have a varied and diverse life experience," Berube said.
"One of my favourite things about AVC is the community and that, when you get a lot of us in a room together, we usually all have different pieces of knowledge that fill in the gaps."
WATCH | High-tech new lab at vet college will help protect scientists testing for animal diseases:
High-tech new lab at vet college will help protect scientists testing for animal diseases
2 days ago
Duration 2:22
The Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown has a new Foreign Animal Disease Testing Laboratory. It was built to create a level of biocontainment — to allow for safe testing of samples for diseases such as the avian flu. Come along with CBC News as we get a tour of the facility.
Carey said the AVC's new process is the same one being adopted by a number of other academic specialties, such as medical and nursing schools and pharmacy programs.
UPEI's Senate has adopted the vet college's changes, and they'll be officially in place for the 2025-26 application cycle.
"Academics tells a portion of your story… but there's a lot that's missing from that picture," Carey said.
"I'm certain there are candidates who can still handle the rigour of this program — who may not have been among our top-ranked academic candidates — that are still going to shine as vet students and veterinarians."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PETA sues American Kennel Club over standards for French bulldogs, other breeds
PETA sues American Kennel Club over standards for French bulldogs, other breeds

Winnipeg Free Press

time5 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

PETA sues American Kennel Club over standards for French bulldogs, other breeds

NEW YORK (AP) — The animal rights group PETA sued Tuesday to try to force the American Kennel Club to abandon the standards it backs for hyper-popular French bulldogs and some other breeds, contending that the influential club is promoting unhealthy physical features. The lawsuit turns up the heat around one of the biggest flashpoints in dogdom: the attributes that have been honed to define some breeds, including the Frenchie, which the AKC ranks as the United States' most popular breed. 'The AKC's official breed standards for the bulldog, French bulldog, pug, dachshund and Chinese shar-pei provide blueprints for the breeding of deformed, unhealthy dogs,' PETA says in the suit. The AKC said it's committed to protecting 'the health, heritage and well-being of purebred dogs' and that responsibly bred dogs that conform to the standards are healthy. 'We categorically reject PETA's mischaracterizations of specific breed standards and their assertion that these standards create unhealthy dogs,' the club said in a statement, adding that dog health and welfare is 'paramount and at the core of our mission.' Founded in 1884, the New York-based AKC is a nonprofit that acts like a league for many canine competitions and runs the United States' oldest dog registry, where owners may choose to document their dogs' existence and accomplishments. Mixed-breed dogs and rescues can be registered as 'canine partners' and compete in some sports, but the club's history is closely tied to fanciers who cultivate and show purebreds. Each breed has its own club that sets the 'standard,' or ideal characteristics, for the dogs. The AKC reviews, approves and promulgates them. PETA, also called People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, describes itself as an animal liberation organization. Its advocacy includes boycotts and litigation. Its supporters are known for staging sometimes disruptive protests in settings including a papal audience, a Starbucks and sporting events such as the Westminster Kennel Club dog show. The Norfolk, Virginia-based nonprofit opposes dog breeding in general and has clashed for years with the AKC. Peppered with photos and diagrams, PETA's new lawsuit runs through health problems that can beset short-legged, long-backed dachshunds ('the animal equivalent of a poorly designed bridge,' in PETA's view) and shar-peis, which can have spates of fever and inflammation known as 'shar-pei autoinflammatory disease.' The complaint points to pugs' risk of injuries to their marbly eyes and susceptibility to breathing problems and overheating because of their flat faces. The suit zeros in on those and other parts of bulldogs and Frenchies, including the big heads that often prompt caesarian births. The various problems that PETA cites don't afflict all dogs of these breeds, and some do agility, dock diving and other sports. But the conditions can be serious for those that have them. In the U.K. — where research involving about 24,600 dogs suggested that Frenchies have 'very different, and largely much poorer' health than do other canines — the British Veterinary Association campaigns against advertisements that feature flat-faced breeds. The Netherlands has prohibited breeding very short-snouted dogs. Norway's Supreme Court, however, declined to block the breeding of English bulldogs — but upheld a lower court's prohibition on breeding cavalier King Charles spaniels, citing a different set of health concerns. The AKC says the breed standards it approves reflect 'decades of collaboration with veterinary experts and breeders.' Some breed clubs donate to and participate in dog health research, and the AKC says it has given over $40 million since 1995 to its canine health research charity.

Salmon group says aquaculture companies stashing garbage along Newfoundland coast
Salmon group says aquaculture companies stashing garbage along Newfoundland coast

Winnipeg Free Press

time5 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Salmon group says aquaculture companies stashing garbage along Newfoundland coast

ST. JOHN'S – An eastern Canadian conservation group is calling for a moratorium on aquaculture expansion in Newfoundland and Labrador, alleging fish-farming companies are stashing plastic garbage along the province's remote southern coastline. In a report summary released Tuesday, the Atlantic Salmon Federation said satellite images suggest aquaculture companies appear to have left broken cages, rope and other detritus in six sites along Newfoundland's south coast. The New Brunswick-based group is demanding the federal fisheries minister halt aquaculture expansion in the province until the companies get their waste under control, said spokesperson Neville Crabbe. 'Fix your problems, utilize your existing sites, optimize what you have,' Crabbe said in an interview. 'The industry is not going anywhere right now in Newfoundland and Labrador, but nor should it go anywhere else.' Newfoundland's south coast is known for its towering fiords and small communities dotting its shores, some of which are only accessible by boat or plane. The aquaculture industry is a valued source of jobs in the area. The Atlantic Salmon Federation has been monitoring aquaculture waste in the region for more than a year. Crabbe said the federation is not calling for the companies to shut down or cut jobs. In its latest investigation, the federation worked with Planetixx, a U.K.-based climate data and analytics firm. The team used more than 60,000 satellite images of the area, spanning more than a decade, to train an artificial intelligence model to recognize sea cage rings — the frames that support large nets inside which salmon is farmed. The AI model could then identify sites with abnormalities, such as misshapen rings or haphazard arrangements. When the AI identified a site with anomalies, the researchers viewed high-definition images of the area from Maxar Technologies' satellite constellations. Through this process, they identified six sites they allege were dumping grounds for 'broken, degraded salmon farm equipment,' the report said. They found no equipment at any time between March 2020 to May 2025 in half of the 106 licensed sites analyzed, indicating the areas were inactive. For Crabbe, that suggests the companies don't need to expand into other areas. Last year, members of the federation visited a cove known locally as The Locker, near Gaultois, N.L., and captured images of discarded plastic bags, blue barrels, rope, buoys and old sea cages. Crabbe said the province ordered companies operating in the area to clean it up earlier this year, though the provincial Fisheries Department did not respond to a request for information about the order. He flew over the site in a helicopter in February and saw the debris had been cleared. But when he returned last month by boat, it was once again full of trash, he said. A remotely operated vehicle took images of a sea cage and netting sunken beneath the water. 'The buoyant structure appears to be anchored to the sea floor, unable to float up, potentially indicating a deliberate sinking,' the federation's report summary on Tuesday said. They also found garbage at a site in nearby Roti Bay, Crabbe said. Wednesdays Columnist Jen Zoratti looks at what's next in arts, life and pop culture. 'It's very clear in their licences, and in the regulations governing the industry, that they have to have waste management plans,' he said. 'The discovery of that sunken cage in the locker, at the very least, should compel authorities to go and survey these areas to see what else is under the water.' In a news release Monday, the Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Association said the provincial regulator allows companies to store unused equipment, including sea cages, in leased marine areas before they are dismantled and recycled. 'Plastic sea cages may be held at leased sites until vessel and staff resources are available to safely transport them to shore-based yards and recycling facilities,' the release said. Abandoned sites operated by different owners under different rules 'have been and are being addressed,' it said. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 8, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store