I'm in!!
I finally got the official letter today! I've been accepted into the Biomedical Communications Master's program at the University of Toronto!:bounce:
You may know I have a background in Biology and a couple years ago I decided I wanted to become a scientific animator. Since then, I've been learning Maya, and aiming to get into this program. Well, hard work for the last ~20 years (since preschool ;)) has paid off, and I finally get to jump into the grad school of my dreams. So, I'm off to Toronto in the fall to learn how to be a medical illustrator, molecular animator, scientific visualizer. If you're curious what kind of stuff you might do with that, here's a few grads of the program that started their own studio. AXS Studio Showreel 2010 on Vimeo Really looking forward to it :) |
Congratulations stwert, looks like a really interesting program. Also not a lot of info on medical animation online so a good thing to study at uni and moving to a new place is always interesting.
Don't get all paranoid about how your body's falling apart though when you're creating the sims for tumor growth and clogged veins :D |
Thanks Nilla, it should be really interesting. I recall you studied anatomy or something? Where did you study?
Haha, I'm already a bit of a hypochondriac, so I'll be on guard against medical overload. |
dude, you just gained a whole new level of respect!
good job! |
Thanks Chirone!
I won't ask how much respect I had before... *ahem*... if any... haha. |
Mate....mate...mate...BLOODY well done man LOL wow go for it stwert...congrats mate and I hope you have a fantastic time learning and teaching....sweet.
cheers bullet |
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Heaps respect mon....
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congratulations, best of luck.
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I did two years of medical school at the Charles University here in Prague, I dropped out after the pre-clinical because I can't stand hospitals and sick people and spending the rest of my life in one would have made me a horrible person. Funny thing, I remember one of our professors saying that the most popular specialisations here were anasthesiology and pathology, so patients preferred asleep or dead which is often reflected in the bedside manners of doctors :) I really like the idea of your program though, it makes perfect sense to combine art and medicine in a degree my favorite part used to be making giant poster drawings of biochemical pathways and membrane transporters and so on. Also there must be a lot of work opportunities for a scientific animator it applies to so many fields making it quite flexible. For hypochondria prepare for it to get worse ;) Which type of biology did you study before? |
You should be a medical illustrator, Nilla, you've obviously got the pre-reqs. I couldn't see myself as a doctor either, I love helping people, but I don't think I could cope with all of the patients' pain and abnormal situations.
I studied general biology, whatever courses I was interested in, cause I didn't have a clue what I wanted to do. I like the molecular stuff better, and I thought biotechnology would be interesting to do. Started working in bioinformatics (doing that now) until I put the pieces together. It's a good feeling knowing what direction to go in finally. |
Congs man!
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excellent well done!! It payed off in the end
Jay |
Thanks guys!
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