Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Fourth Molar Takes Root.

Welcome! I've been blogging for years now and I've always wanted to start a blog that may be of meaning to others, rather than just rant about random topics. So here goes- first a little background.

I'm currently an undergraduate student at SUNY Binghamton University finishing up my B.S. in Bioengineering. This Fall I'll be attending my top choice school - SUNY Buffalo's School of Dental Medicine! I'm a little late starting this blog, as I wanted to document my studying for the DAT as well but as anyone studying for a major standardized test knows, its unbelievably time consuming. I don't expect dental school to be very time friendly either, but I feel posting about material will not only enrich others but may help my understanding as well.

It's funny how you think getting in is the hardest part when you haven't yet, but the devil really is in the details later on. I've recently overcome the first of many administrative hurdles - where and whom to live with. After frantically emailing other students in our Facebook group, and not having much luck, I came across another student's post looking for a roommate to fill a house of four. A couple phone calls and emails later, a deal is made. The main attributes I was looking for were cost, safety and distance to the school. This place I think has all of those, although it is a bit on the pricey side, nonetheless, I'm excited. A few things I learned through this whole housing search:

1. Visit! At LEAST once. If you're a dental/med student you've had an interview at the school already and you have some idea of what things are like. Hopefully you began thinking about potentially living there during your interview.

2. Scour the Internet - Facebook and Craigslist were my best friends honestly. I have a friend whose attending medical school next year and he's yet to have found an "Accepted Students" group for his class, which I think is nuts. Every school (especially professional schools) should have these. Students generally start them so if there isn't one, might as well start one! If all goes well, current students will join as well and connecting with them is perfect since they're the best source to go to. Craigslist helped me get an idea of what else was out there, if it did come down to my finding a place on my own. It also gives you an idea of what you'll be spending on housing. Google Maps street view was also quite handy to check out if houses I was considering were in super sketchy areas or not.

3. Shop Around - With housing there's always options. I know in Buffalo I heard of a number of student plazas, apartment complexes and communities where students are known to live. All these falling into a wide price range. Take a look around, but not for too long...

4. Be Open  - Everyone's got preferences. Ideals for themselves, the people they want to be around, where they want to be, the list goes on. Regardless, what's more important than what we want is the attitude we take toward what we're presented with. Be positive, and positivity will likely follow along. As my professors have drilled into my head the past four years - embrace change - there's opportunity in every change.
 
UB has already sent out a "To-Do" list for us incoming students, which I am yet to get on, thanks to some intense senior level engineering courses. I think that's all for this first post. Looking forward to a fabulous next four years :D!

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