Saturday, September 1, 2012

A NEED TO KNOW BASIS

Students have been on my mind lately. I've made school visits to the Illinois College of Optometry, am visiting the School of Optometry at Inter-American University tomorrow, and head to the Indiana University School of Optometry in mid-September. I've had the good fortune to go to Pacific University, SUNY, and the University of Houston during my term as Academy president, and, of course, I work with Ohio State's optometry students every day. These interactions always energize me. Regardless of institution, the students are excited about optometry, overflowing with information and ideas, and seem to have newly discovered our Academy.

Our optometric institutions are our profession’s lifeblood, our future, even our destiny. We all became optometrists at one of them, and they are different in many respects but bond us with their similarities, too.

Recently, I was at a brown bag lunch organized by Fellow and Faculty-Student Liaison Committee Chair, Jeff Walline, for six Ohio State students who competed for and have completed a research rotation, through a grant from the National Eye Institute. Several other US optometric institutions host the same program. The lunch was attended by Fellows (and optometrists/faculty members) Andy Hartwick, Dean VanNasdale, and Don Mutti, too. The conversation turned to how each of the faculty members had decided on graduate school and a career in academia.

Andy related a colorful story that involved tent camping, a poster about the OD/MS program at the University of Waterloo, and undergraduate research observations on the mating habits of beetles. Dean recalled a random email about a retinal imaging training opportunity, and I decided that a PhD might be the best path for me, in part because I thought I might have some leadership chops. Don simply said, “I just needed to know stuff.”

I’ve been thinking about that ever since. Isn’t that why our Academy exists, when all is said and done? Optometrists become Fellows because they … need to know stuff. Students come to the Academy meeting because they… need to know stuff. The American Optometric Foundation (AOF) subsidizes residents, students, and faculty endeavors based on the applicants’ descriptions of their… need to know stuff. Scientists pursue research, conduct experiments, write grants, and publish papers because they…need to know stuff. Editor, Fellow, and Past President Tony Adams dedicates himself to Optometry and Vision Science every month because his readers… need to know stuff.

Our American Academy of Optometry, its Annual Meeting, its journal, and its academic charity all continue to thrive because the optometric profession needs to know stuff to satisfy our innate curiosity about the eye and visual system so that we can take better care of our patients. Come join us. If you’re a candidate, finish up the Fellowship requirements. If you’re a student member, become a Student Fellow. If you’re a scientist non-member (or you know one), take advantage of the free non-member scientist registration opportunity in Phoenix this year by contacting Fellow Shaban Demirel, Chair of the Vision Science Section. If you’re a Fellow, pick a Special Interest Group and become active or find a Section and start that Diplomate process. If you’ve never donated to the AOF to support a young person’s need to know, do so now. Read and/or contribute OVS.

Lastly, this year in Phoenix, there’s a unique opportunity to celebrate the life of one of us who needed to know stuff, every day. Come to this year’s Borish Festschrift, featuring Borish award winners and Borish Ezell fellows, on Saturday, October 27, in Room 122 A-C of the Phoenix Convention Center. Irv would love to know you’re there.

P.S. I thought you might like to know. I biked a 160-mile charity ride, the Pan Massachusetts Challenge, earlier this month. It’s the trip I’ve made every year since 2005, but I suffered a concussion riding it in 2011. I finished the event this year, in record time for me, without visiting the emergency department at Cape Cod Community Hospital.

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