Continuing Education For Veterinary Technicians


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Ce For Veterinary Technicians

If you have a CE for veterinary technicians that is certified by the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, and if you want to keep your registration you need to complete a certain number of continuing education credits each year, depending on which certification you hold. The higher the level of certification you hold, the more continuing education credits you need to complete in order to keep your certification current.

Where to Get Your Credits

Ce For Veterinary Technicians

There are a wide variety of ways to get credit for Ce For Veterinary Technicians. You can get credits for professional society participation if you are an officer, trustee or committee member. You can also get CE credit for publishing articles or books in the field, or for giving presentations at conferences and events.

Finally, you can get credit for different types of formal education and professional development. Formal education could mean a class at a university, a workshop, or even answering the continuing education exam questions at the end of the Journal of AALAS.

Online Options

Some sources of Ce For Veterinary Technicians include the Veterinary Technician magazine, as well as the Veterinary Medical Association of the state where you live. There are online options for Vet Tech CE offered by Colorado State University, VetMedTeam.com, and the Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine, to name a few.

If you are looking for options, just do a search on the internet for Ce For Veterinary Technicians and you will get a variety of courses to choose from, many of which can be completed online whenever you have the time, which makes things convenient. Any courses you do online or at home normally require you to pass an exam on the content in order to get credit.

As you only need between 10 and 24 hours of Ce For Veterinary Technicians per two year period, depending on your certification, it shouldn't be too hard to find and complete the appropriate number of CE credits. There are a lot of different options to choose from, with each receiving varying numbers of credits.

For example, authoring a book or a book chapter can get you 5 or 10 CE credits (depending on whether you were the first author or not), and each hour of a course can get you a CE credit. Just answering the continuing education questions at the end of the Journal of AALAS gets you two CE credits per issue, so this might be an easy way to get your credits.

 

 

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