Friday, October 11, 2013

White Coat Ceremony Shenanigans

Hey all, so I skipped blogging last week since my parents were in town and I was busy doing white coat ceremony stuff, but I am here now! And we only have 3 weeks left of this quarter before we get a little over 3 and a half weeks off for Thanksgiving!!! (Can you tell I'm excited?)

So yeah! Our white coat ceremony was a week ago today and what an awesome/fun experience it was. If you haven't heard of a white coat ceremony before, it's basically a small ceremony that schools will have for health-related professions to somewhat "signify" the student's transition into clinical practice (ya know, since lots of doctors wear white coats). So we all had our turn with our names being called to walk up on stage, have our coat put on us by the dean of the optometry college and some of the head faculty, and take lots of pictures with all of us wearing our snazzy white coats.

The entire Arizona College of Optometry Class of 2017

All of us getting our white coats!


So the picture above was put together by a brother of one my classmates who was kind enough to take pictures of ALL of us having our coats put on and then arrange it like this. We all thought (and still think) this is the coolest thing ever, especially since we're a relatively small class and are finally getting around to knowing everyone.

For my methods class, we had learned all about visual acuities and such (like if you can see 20/20 or not) and how to test for them. One of our assignments was to make our own visual acuity chart and bring them in the day of the white coat ceremony (we still had class that morning) so that we could hang them up in our lab so that all the parents/family could see them too. I decided on a music themed one, as seen below :)

"If music be the food of love play on" - William Shakespeare
20/20 (bottom) line: Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do
This was kind of a fun assignment, but I decided to make it hard on myself apparently and draw out all the letters myself. All of the sizes had to be accurate for a proper test distance (like 20 feet away), so I was literally using a straight edge ruler drawing out every single letter both to measure it, and to get the lines as straight as possible. So that took some time, plus doing all the math for the sizes of the letters and doing calculations to figure out the "critical detail" of each letter, which is optometry talk for "1/5" of the letter size (like the arms on the I are 1/5 as tall as the entire I itself). But I thought it still came out well.

My parents were able to come down as well and got to see some of our cool classrooms with all our equipment as well (which I have several pictures of up on facebook).

But yeah! We are literally down to only 3 weeks left, which means my "finals week" starts 3 weeks from today with my proficiency practical in my methods class (doing all the eye tests in front of someone) so over these next few weeks I will probably be spending some time in our lab practicing on people to make sure I have our skills down. I can't believe how fast this is going.

Classes are still going well! I've taken another 3 exams since my last post (2 basic science tests, 1 methods/theory test) and I did really well on all of them. I think I've finally gotten my study system down and know what works/what doesn't work for me. 

Until next week!

Optometry Fact
Snellen Eye Chart



This is the typical "eye chart" you probably see somewhere when your vision needs to be tested. Basically, the way it works is the lowest line you can read from a certain calibrated distance is your "visual acuity". So if FELOPZD is the lowest line you can read, you have a 20/25 visual acuity. In layman's terms, what you can see from 20 feet away, other people with normal vision can see from 25 feet away...indicating your vision might be just a little bit worse than normal.

This isn't the exact science definition of what 20/20 or 20/30 means, but generally is what makes the most sense to people when we explain it. If you're REALLY curious to what they mean, you can ask me and I can give you all kinds of definitions and words to explain the laws behind it. But....it might be kind of boring :)

1 comment:

  1. Congratulations on acquiring the white coat, Sherah, and best wishes on your upcoming exams! Karl's school had their white coat ceremony last night. He got his coat last year, but he "sponsored" a couple of first year students for this one.

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