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What should I start doing now to become a veterinary technician? #Fall25

I'm a high school senior, looking to major in veterinary technology next year. I currently volunteer at animal sanctuaries but wondering what else should I do to gain experience.


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Karin’s Answer

Hi Lauren,

To become a veterinary technician in the state of New York, you need to complete high-school and at least an accredited 2-year college program in veterinary technology before you can take the Veterinary Technician National Examination (VTNE) that is required to be licensed.

Volunteering at an animal shelter and/or on a farm and/or in a zoo are all good ways to get animal experience. Make sure you get a broad range of experiences with different types of animals and especially experience with the animal population you want to specialize on (if you want a specialty), e.g. exotic pets, birds, large animals, zoo animals, small animals etc.

Since you want to work in veterinary medicine, aim to get clinical experience with a veterinarian too. Ideally, you would find a mentor who can teach you and guide you through your education. But any shadowing, internship, part-time job would be valuable at this stage.

I hope this helps! All the best to you!

KP

Karin recommends the following next steps:

https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/veterinary-technician/license-requirements
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Adaobi Maryann’s Answer

Hello Lauren,

You are doing great by wanting to be ahead. It shows you are futuristic. Here are some points


1. Get Hands-On Experience in Clinical Settings

Volunteering at animal sanctuaries is great, but vet tech programs love to see clinical experience.
You can:

Shadow a veterinarian or vet tech at a local clinic.(this exposes you faster to the kind of work you'll soon be doing)

Ask to help with kennel work, cleaning, restocking, or observing exams/surgeries.

2. Strengthen Your Animal Handling Skills like:

Restraining dogs/cats safely

Handling stressed, fearful, or injured animals

Basic grooming, nail trims, etc.

Sanctuaries help with this, but clinics expose you to medical handling.

3. Take Science Courses Seriously

Biology

Chemistry

Anatomy/Physiology etc

4. Learn Basic Veterinary Terminology

You don’t need to be perfect, but knowing common terms like will go a long way.

Please note there are free online courses and YouTube channels that teach these.

5. Build a Simple “Experience Portfolio”

Proof of hours you have worked

A personal statement

Start keeping:

A list of where you volunteer

What tasks you perform

Skills you have learned

This will help when applying or interviewing.

8. Develop your Soft Skills such as:

Communication

Compassion mixed with firmness

Stress management

Teamwork etc

I believe these few points will get you started. Good luck all the way.
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Amie’s Answer

Volunteering at an animal shelter to gain handling skills is so useful. Extra bonus if they have veterinary services and you can ask to volunteer there!!!
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