High school internship/jobs in optometry?

<p>I'm a high school junior interested in studying optometry in the (quite far) future and I was thinking about getting an internship or a job (paid or unpaid, either works) during the summer. I am 16 years old, 17 in October. </p>

<p>Do optometrists offer this, or do you mainly have to be in college already? And if they would let me, what would I do and how would I go about asking or finding them? I want to see if I would at least like the field before I begin college so I have a focus.</p>

<p>Thanks in advance for any input!</p>

<p>I doubt that a high school student could get any kind of meaningful internship – paid or unpaid – in this field. Optometry is a medical profession that requires significant training/licensing, even for technicians and assistants. At most, they might let you answer the phone or do general office work – which is certainly not going to give you any insight into whether or not you would like a career in this field.</p>

<p>What might be more helpful to you at this point (as well as more likely to arrange) is a shadowing opportunity – i.e., simply following an optometrist around to see what a typical day might be like. You should start by going to your own eye doctor, telling them of your interest, and asking them if you could just shadow them for a day or two.</p>

<p>Good luck!</p>

<p>You might call a few local optometrists office to see if you can get front office work. These folks do reception work checking people in, scheduling appointments, calling when glasses or contacts arrive. It’s a job that’s related to what you’re interested in and you will at least see some of the business side.</p>

<p>I am currently a pre-optometry student at UCLA and I actually work at an optometry office as the optometric assistant. I had no prior training in anything optometry related, no certification or anything. I do a lot of billing and reception like work but by all means is that not good insight to the field. In fact, I think its much better insight to the field than shadowing because you are more exposed to the field and thrusted into the practice.</p>

<p>Try to get a job as a part time optometric assistant or part time receptionist at your local optometry office. You will be around the environment of optometry a lot and get a feel of the practice. The doctor may even teach you how to pre-test (not hard at all) and is rather fun! </p>

<p>Shadowing is definitely a great alternative. You just ask your local optometrist to come in for a few hours on any day that works for them to shadow their practice and watch the general office procedures. Shadowing different optometrists is a good idea as well since all optometrists are different - (vision therapy, contact lens specialists, etc.) </p>

<p>Getting a part time job at a nice optometry office is like shadowing an optometrist except for you get paid. (Even better, right?)</p>