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How many years of school does it take to become a Pediatrician?

I want to become a Pediatrician but I'm not really sure about how many years after high school I need to study for. #pediatrics #children

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Alexandra’s Answer

After graduating from high school, a student that wants to become a Pediatrician must finish:


four years of college, four years of medical school, one year of a Pediatrics internship and two years of a Pediatrics residency. That adds up to about 11 years of school and training to become a Pediatrician.
It is important to note that during your internship and residency years, while you are still learning, you are not really in school and are getting paid for your work.


As an alternative, you could apply for an accelerated college/medical school program, which can compress those eight years of school into just six or seven years.

Thank you comment icon Thank you for the information! Andrea
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Mark J’s Answer

It sounds long but 11 years is not that long considering that every year is different. I am a practicing pediatrician and I remember high school like it was yesterday. Four years of college is needed. But every year is different because you are taking different classes every semester. You are learning about the world and yourself and you are setting goals and achieving them which builds your confidence. Then medical school. The first two years are mostly in a classroom so its a lot like college except you learn exclusively things in the medical field. The third year you will be learning how to see patients and apply the knowledge you gained in the first two years. Your classroom is the hospital or office where you and a trained doctor will see patients together. And the fourth year you are more independent to care for patients yourself while still learning. After you graduate medical school you are a doctor. In medical school we learn about every major specialty (Surgery, Pediatrics, Adult Medicine, etc) but after we graduate we now pick a specialty and work in that field exclusively for 3 years or more. A surgeon has at minimum 5 years of training whereas pediatrics or adult medicine is 3 years. During these years after medical school you DO get a paycheck. Technically you are now working in medicine. But we call it extra training because there is still so much to learn. Frankly, in medicine, we practice life-long learning. We learn from every patient even after training is complete. Pediatrics is 3 years of training but if you want to become even more specialized it could be longer. So yes, 4 years of college plus 4 years of medical school plus 3 years of training but believe me each year is completely different and you will never have a more impactful job than helping sick children regain their health. If you want to do this then do not let the time line scare you. It goes by in a flash and now I get to do what I want to do with my life for the rest of my life.

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