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I am trying to pick my major in college and was thinking about Radiologic technology and was just wondering what people thought about that career field? If anybody actually works in that field what do you like and dislike about your job?

2006-12-26 07:05:19 · 3 answers · asked by nhale24 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

"Students follow many paths into radiologic technology. Some attend two-year programs based in hospitals, earning a certificate when they graduate. Other students enroll in two-year programs at community colleges or technical schools, earning an associate's degree. And others choose to attend four-year programs at universities and colleges, graduating with a bachelor's degree. With nearly 1,000 accredited programs in the US, there is probably a radiologic technology school near you.

No matter which type of program you attend, you won't spend all of your time in the classroom. You'll also work side-by-side in radiology departments with doctors, nurses and experienced radiologic technologists. During this part of your education, known as clinical rotation, you'll have a hands-on opportunity to practice your patient care skills and fine-tune your technical knowledge"

From: http://healthcare.monster.com/rad/articles/radcareers/

2006-12-26 07:15:42 · answer #1 · answered by dontknow 5 · 0 0

I went to an Allied Health school, where that was one of the programs. They all seemed pretty happy with it. It's not the easiest program, in fact, it can be quite challenging, but all of last year's graduates have jobs now, and they make fairly comfortable salaries.

I think if it interests you, you should go for it.

2006-12-26 07:14:25 · answer #2 · answered by Emmy 6 · 0 0

I went to an Allied wellness college, the place that replaced into between the courses. all of them looked exceptionally happy with it. it isn't the least complicated application, in certainty, this is incredibly problematic, yet all of ultimate 3 hundred and sixty 5 days's graduates have jobs now, and that they make incredibly mushy salaries. i think of if it hobbies you, you could choose for it.

2016-10-06 01:11:25 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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