Quote Originally Posted by tangentgirl View Post
My mom and I were in college at the same time - she became an OT. I skated through on a communications BA while she worked her patootie off for a BS. I do admire her for her hard, hard work there.

I can't imagine doing that kind of program and trying to maintain a full-time job. A part-time job sounds really hard, unless it's something where you could study.

My mom went to Loma Linda University, a small private school in California known mostly for its education and work in the medical field. She studied with the PT students and took some classes with them.

It was intense, to say the least. I would liken what she did to a pre-med program. She used to study by grabbing me or one of my sisters and rattling off parts of our bodies - arms, legs, whatever, and tracing nerves and bones and tendons and muscles with her finger. Sometimes she'd even draw on us. She had to memorize everything, know how it all worked together. She really did spend about 80-90% of her waking time studying. If she wasn't sleeping she had a book or index cards in her hand.
I would have to agree with this. Although it depends upon if you want to just "get through it" or if you want to excel. Often times you have to maintain a rather high GPA to even get into a program. A lot of the programs tend to be pretty competitive. I spent a lot of time studying because I wanted to do well and have a thorough understanding of all the topics. I ended up with close to a 4.0 GPA with a lot of hard work. There would have been no way to work full time job at the same time unless I only took a few classes a semester. Then at the end I had internships for close to a year which was full time work without the pay. Many of my PT friends have said the same.

Good luck on your search!!