Medical students viciously abide by lunch time rules after being forced to skip it by faculty members and are teased by student-friendly dean
Our whole life is an attempt to teach us to sacrifice something. Sacrifice your career for your family, your family for your career. Sacrifice time to reach your goals. Sacrificing health in the name of preserving tradition. This is the paradigm of the world we live in.
But sometimes people want to rebel against such a system of sacrifice and fully enjoy what life has to offer. Especially if it does not violate any rules. This story about an entire class of veterinary students I didn’t want to give up my legal right to have lunch, so I went against the teacher.
An entire class of veterinary students once asked the professor to come to the lab an hour ahead of schedule
Image credit: energypic.com (not actual photo)
The students were offended by this request. This meant we had to skip lunch time entirely.
Image credit:meek enthusiasm
Image credit: NIH Image Gallery (not actual photos)
Image credit:meek enthusiasm
The class unanimously decided to stay and have lunch, but they were reprimanded by the enraged professor.
Image credit: Luke Jones (not actual photo)
Image credit:meek enthusiasm
Image credit: USAG- Humphreys (not actual photo)
Image credit: meek enthusiasm
But the dean sided with the student, arguing that such a request was simply inappropriate.
So the original poster (OP) was a veterinary student, a surgeon who informed the class that an important lab scheduled for the 12th was about to begin. – For example, 11 o’clock. At the same time, we had classes from 7:00 to 11:00 and lunch break from 11:00 to 12:00.
So the class had two choices. Either you don’t eat anything early in the morning, or you eat right away during lectures. Needless to say, none of the options were suitable for students. Additionally, that day, the OP and his classmates witnessed an anesthesiologist yelling at a student in another class that they were late. They were on time for appointments.Also, many students had conflicts with their professors before.
In general, the class unanimously decided not to miss lunch and to arrive about ten minutes before the scheduled start. This time around, according to the original poster, it was enough to be fully prepared. But 20 minutes before she started, one of her surgeons came into the lecture room where the students were having lunch and asked why she wasn’t in the lab yet.
Receiving the answer that the whole class would be there on schedule and at the appointed time, they accused the students of being unprofessional and endangering patients by keeping them waiting. But just five minutes before he started, the whole class was ready. They heard another outraged speech from the surgeon, then got to work.
By the way, we have to pay tribute to the Dean: Any student who receives a complaint about a student’s behavior will take their side and make a statement that forcing classes to come early is totally unacceptable. Another small victory for this class over worldly injustice – after all, according to the original poster, the student dismissed a professor who made racist remarks toward a student more than once. achieved. “We’re hated by clinicians, but at least the class behind us is having a little better time,” OP said.
Image credit: SOMANEDU (not the actual photo)
According to one academic study, it’s unacceptable to skip a full lunch break, or even half of it.
What can be said about this story, except that the students are absolutely right in defending their rights? Research by Harvard TH Chan School of Public Healthstudents who spent less than 20 minutes eating lunch consumed 13% less appetizers, 12% less vegetables, and 10% less milk than students who spent at least 25 minutes eating. Not to mention having no lunch at all.
“It’s essential to give students enough time to eat lunch.” Julianna Cohen said, adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Nutrition at Harvard Chan School, assistant professor in the Department of Health Sciences at Merrimack University, and lead author of the study. By the way, his original poster also confirmed this, recalling, “I had several students pass out because they skipped lunch to go to surgery instead.”
Commenters also praised the original poster and its classmates for standing their ground. , required students to eat first to avoid fainting. “If students do indeed form a union, not necessarily a formal union, but act together as a group, they will be able to notice changes very quickly,” people in the comments summed up. increase.