Re: [Histonet] HTL Certification

2024-06-27 Thread Jay Lundgren via Histonet
Make flashcards, all your esoteric fixatives with recipes, and all your
special stains with reagents and what they stain for.  Work them both sides
till you can get 100% consistently.   For example, so you can answer the
questions "What is the oxidation step in a GMS?" as well as  "Which of
these stains uses silver nitrate?"  There WILL be a question about which
fixative to use or not use with uric acid/gout.  There WILL be a question
about fire extinguisher types.

There you go, I just gave you two free ones.

I wouldn't even worry about the photomicrographs.  They're so lousy you end
up just guessing anyway.  You can miss all the photo questions and still
pass.

By the way, the convention when listing your credentials is to only list
your terminal degree, unless you want to point out some certification in
another field, like M.D., MBA, or MSN., J.D., or BSN, MPH.  Yours would be
B.S., HTL, (ASCP) CM.

Jay A. Lundgren, M.S., HTL (ASCP)



On Thu, Jun 27, 2024 at 12:08 PM Rathborne, Toni via Histonet <
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu> wrote:

>
> Hi Diana,
>
> We have had two students complete the program at University of North
> Dakota. Both passed their certification exam the first time. You can get
> more information from this link.
>
>  https://med.und.edu/histotechnology/admission-requirements.html
>
> Best of luck finding a program that works for you!
>
> Toni
>
>
>
>
> 
>
> NOTICE: This e-mail and its attachments, if any, may contain legally
> privileged and/or confidential information protected by law. It is intended
> only for use by the named addressee(s). If you are not the intended
> recipient of this e-mail, any dissemination, distribution or copying of
> this e-mail and its attachments, if any, is strictly prohibited. If you
> have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify the
> sender by telephone or by reply e-mail, and permanently delete this e-mail
> and the attachments, if any, and destroy any printouts.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Diana Martinez-Longoria via Histonet <
> histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu>
> Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2024 12:48 PM
> To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> Subject: [Histonet] HTL Certification
>
>
> *** This is an External Email ***
>
> Good day all,
>
>
> I have a question that hopefully I get some guidance on. I have an HT
> certification, but I wanted to try to study for the HTL certification, but
> it has been a very long time since I had to study for the boards therefore,
> I was wondering if you guys that are so knowledgeable can give me guidance
> on how to pursue my endeavor. I am a type of person that needs structure
> and an outline on how to study, so preferably I would need like an online
> school that can help me for the HTL.  Any recommendations?
>
>
> Thank you,
>
> Diana Martinez-Longoria
>
> El Centro Regional Medical Center
>
> Lead Histotechnician (ASCP)cm, B.S, A.S
>
> Laboratory – Pathology Department
> 1415 Ross Ave | El Centro, CA  92243
>
> (: 760.339.7267  | *: diana.martinez-longo...@ecrmc.org
>
>
>
> P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail
>
>
>
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Re: [Histonet] HTL Certification

2024-06-27 Thread Rathborne, Toni via Histonet

Hi Diana,

We have had two students complete the program at University of North Dakota. 
Both passed their certification exam the first time. You can get more 
information from this link.

 https://med.und.edu/histotechnology/admission-requirements.html

Best of luck finding a program that works for you!

Toni





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e-mail, any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail and its 
attachments, if any, is strictly prohibited. If you have received this 
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reply e-mail, and permanently delete this e-mail and the attachments, if any, 
and destroy any printouts.

-Original Message-
From: Diana Martinez-Longoria via Histonet 
Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2024 12:48 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL Certification


*** This is an External Email ***

Good day all,


I have a question that hopefully I get some guidance on. I have an HT 
certification, but I wanted to try to study for the HTL certification, but it 
has been a very long time since I had to study for the boards therefore, I was 
wondering if you guys that are so knowledgeable can give me guidance on how to 
pursue my endeavor. I am a type of person that needs structure and an outline 
on how to study, so preferably I would need like an online school that can help 
me for the HTL.  Any recommendations?


Thank you,

Diana Martinez-Longoria

El Centro Regional Medical Center

Lead Histotechnician (ASCP)cm, B.S, A.S

Laboratory – Pathology Department
1415 Ross Ave | El Centro, CA  92243

(: 760.339.7267  | *: diana.martinez-longo...@ecrmc.org



P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail



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[Histonet] HTL Certification

2024-06-27 Thread Diana Martinez-Longoria via Histonet
Good day all,


I have a question that hopefully I get some guidance on. I have an HT 
certification, but I wanted to try to study for the HTL certification, but it 
has been a very long time since I had to study for the boards therefore, I was 
wondering if you guys that are so knowledgeable can give me guidance on how to 
pursue my endeavor. I am a type of person that needs structure and an outline 
on how to study, so preferably I would need like an online school that can help 
me for the HTL.  Any recommendations?


Thank you,

Diana Martinez-Longoria

El Centro Regional Medical Center

Lead Histotechnician (ASCP)cm, B.S, A.S

Laboratory – Pathology Department
1415 Ross Ave | El Centro, CA  92243

(: 760.339.7267  | *: diana.martinez-longo...@ecrmc.org



P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail



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recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any 
unauthorized review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are 
not the intended recipient, please contact the sender at the phone number above 
and promptly destroy this e-mail and its attachments.




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[Histonet] HTL

2022-11-09 Thread Kelsey Cox via Histonet
Hello all!

I recently took the HTL and unfortunately did not pass. I am waiting to
retake it and I'd appreciate any tips and tricks to help me pass! I work in
a very specialized research lab so I have basically had to relearn
everything for this exam.

Thanks!
Kelsey
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[Histonet] HTL exam 2020 best study guides and methods

2020-08-15 Thread Sara Wells via Histonet
Hello,

I am studying to take my HTL and I was wondering what recent HTL's used to
study for the 2019-2020 exam?

Thanks!
Sara Wells
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Re: [Histonet] HTL Career Path

2015-08-18 Thread Teri Johnson via Histonet
 Special Studies Department of 
Pathology UC San Francisco Medical Center




-Original Message-
From: Anna Huntley Coffey via Histonet 
[mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2015 6:12 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL Career Path

Hello Histonet,

I have been following this listserve for a couple years now and have found it 
to be a very interesting and helpful forum for sharing ideas and information 
among individuals with varied career histories in the histopath field. I sort 
of fell into histology work while working on my MS thesis in marine biology, 
making my own HE slides for diagnosis of a parasite found in blue crabs. Since 
I graduated in 2011, I've worked mostly in research histology labs and just got 
my HTL certification last spring, working on my qIHC this fall.

I like the histology field and have had the pleasure of working with some 
really great people. However, I've felt discouraged at times with what seems 
like a lack of opportunity for professional growth and advancement and 
sometimes it feels like the only way to get new experiences and higher pay is 
to go back to school for another degree or completely change jobs and move to a 
new institution. I realize that I got into histology almost accidentally and 
that some of my experiences may be unique to the research field, but I'd be 
very interested to hear about your experiences regarding research vs. clinical 
work, how you were able to be intentional about your career path, what 
advancement opportunities you've found, etc. if you're willing to share them.

Thanks,
Anna



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[Histonet] HTL Career Path

2015-08-18 Thread Anna Huntley Coffey via Histonet
Hello Histonet,

I have been following this listserve for a couple years now and have found
it to be a very interesting and helpful forum for sharing ideas and
information among individuals with varied career histories in the histopath
field. I sort of fell into histology work while working on my MS thesis in
marine biology, making my own HE slides for diagnosis of a parasite found
in blue crabs. Since I graduated in 2011, I've worked mostly in research
histology labs and just got my HTL certification last spring, working on my
qIHC this fall.

I like the histology field and have had the pleasure of working with some
really great people. However, I've felt discouraged at times with what
seems like a lack of opportunity for professional growth and advancement
and sometimes it feels like the only way to get new experiences and higher
pay is to go back to school for another degree or completely change jobs
and move to a new institution. I realize that I got into histology almost
accidentally and that some of my experiences may be unique to the research
field, but I'd be very interested to hear about your experiences regarding
research vs. clinical work, how you were able to be intentional about your
career path, what advancement opportunities you've found, etc. if you're
willing to share them.

Thanks,
Anna
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[Histonet] HTL exam

2015-01-23 Thread Maryann Morissette

Hi all. Was just wondering if anyone has just taken the HTL exam. I passed the 
HT with just reading an older Frieda Carson book.  Can someone give me some 
advice on books that really helped them? Thanks!
Sent from my iPhone

 On Jan 23, 2015, at 1:01 PM, histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:
 
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 When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
 than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...
 
 
 Today's Topics:
 
   1. RE: rodent eye (Gowan,Christie C)
   2. Cracking paraffin blocks (Wheelock, Timothy R.)
   3. RE: Cheap Disposable Blades for Facing In (Bea DeBrosse-Serra)
   4. Re: Cracking paraffin blocks (Hans B Snyder)
   5. Amyloid by Congo Red (Jeffrey Robinson)
   6. Thermo  IHC (Cheri Miller)
   7. Problem  with cracked paraffin blocks (Wheelock, Timothy R.)
   8. Re: Amyloid by Congo Red (Michael Ann Jones)
 
 
 --
 
 Message: 1
 Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2015 16:23:06 +
 From: Gowan,Christie C christiecgo...@dermatology.med.ufl.edu
 Subject: RE: [Histonet] rodent eye
 To: Casie Phillips casie4...@gmail.com,
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Message-ID:
ccc0568455733548a03568ac55691f76259...@ahc-mb02.ad.ufl.edu
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 Hi Casie,
 Hope by now you have rec'd some good tips on rodent eye prep. The only thing 
 I have to offer is that we always used Davidson's fixative for 24 hours and 
 then transferred to 70% ETOH. This worked beautifully preserving all eye 
 components. Good luck and don't forget to check the Histonet archives where I 
 know rodent eyes have been discussed in the past.
 
 Christie Gowan HT (ASCP)
 
 Department of Dermatology
 4037 NW 86th Terrace, 4th Fl
 Mohs Laboratory
 Gainesville, FL 32606
 Phone: 352 594-1529
 
 
 
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
 [histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] on behalf of Casie Phillips 
 [casie4...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2015 2:53 PM
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] rodent eye
 
 Good afternoon,
 
 I am currently working with Lewis rats performing corneal alkali injuries
 at varying strengths. Is there someone there that has prior experience
 working with a rat eye and would be willing to share information on the
 most effective ways to preserve, fix and cut the cornea sample.
 
 We are interested in using the cornea without using the whole globe if
 possible. For now we will be using basic HE staining with a possibility of
 immunohistochemistry at a later time. The main outcome we are looking for
 is to find the presence of neutrophils in the cornea. A second objective is
 to look for any damaged or newly reconstructed tissue.
 
 I would greatly appreciate any advice relating to the type of paraffin
 used, the ideal length of time to save the tissue and any assistance you
 can suggest for completing this process  successfully.
 
 Thank you for your time. Any assistance will be greatly appreciated.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Casie Phillips
 casie4...@gmail.com
 ___
 Histonet mailing list
 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
 
 
 
 --
 
 Message: 2
 Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 14:57:15 +
 From: Wheelock, Timothy R. twheel...@mclean.harvard.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] Cracking paraffin blocks
 To: 'Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu'
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Message-ID:
69718c0b0b3c414d9f8e7214ad400cc9773ea...@phsx10mb11.partners.org
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 Hi Everyone:
 
 Recently, I purchased the Medite Valida Embedding Center, which I demoed 
 previously without a problem, if I recall right.
 I am having problems now with blocks developing cracks on the cold plate.
 The cracks run either through the wax right next to the specimen, or more 
 frequently, right through the tissue itself.
 I use Surgipath Embedding Media (EM-400).
 The surface of the Valida's cold plate is -14C.
 
 The company has not seen this happening before, but they are looking into 
 this further.
 Also, I had the same problem when I demoed the Thermo-Fisher HistoStar.
 I do not think that this is a problem inherent with any particular machine.
 Has anyone encountered this problem before?
 If so, how did you resolve it?
 
 Is it possible that the -14C cold plate is too cold? Should I warm it up a 
 bit?
 The surface of the Valida cold plate is, I 

RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2015-01-23 Thread Jeffrey Robinson
I used the NSH booklets on the various Histology subjects.  I don't know about 
their current availability- I think they were on a CD now but I haven't checked 
lately.  I learned a lot from the booklets as they not only give the correct 
answer they also described why the other answers were wrong along with some 
background pertaining to related subjects.  With the test being online now I 
don't know how important the color plates of the various special stains are but 
I found it extremely helpful to know all of the stains by sight backwards and 
forwards- even stains that we did not run in our lab as there were a lot of 
questions that would refer to different methods of staining for the same 
structure or organism, etc.  I used Sheehan and Bancroft as my texts.  Bancroft 
is British so there is a different slant to his writing that I find 
interesting.  I have read Carson's but I do not feel it has enough background 
information.  Lee Luna's last book has great color plates but the organization 
is poor and it can be hard to find things- I think someone finished it up after 
he passed away.

Jeff Robinson HT, HTL, Senior Histotechnologist, Sierra Pathology Lab, Clovis, 
CA.

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Maryann 
Morissette
Sent: Friday, January 23, 2015 10:43 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam


Hi all. Was just wondering if anyone has just taken the HTL exam. I passed the 
HT with just reading an older Frieda Carson book.  Can someone give me some 
advice on books that really helped them? Thanks!
Sent from my iPhone

 On Jan 23, 2015, at 1:01 PM, histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:
 
 Send Histonet mailing list submissions to
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 
 To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
 or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 
 You can reach the person managing the list at
histonet-ow...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 
 When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific 
 than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...
 
 
 Today's Topics:
 
   1. RE: rodent eye (Gowan,Christie C)
   2. Cracking paraffin blocks (Wheelock, Timothy R.)
   3. RE: Cheap Disposable Blades for Facing In (Bea DeBrosse-Serra)
   4. Re: Cracking paraffin blocks (Hans B Snyder)
   5. Amyloid by Congo Red (Jeffrey Robinson)
   6. Thermo  IHC (Cheri Miller)
   7. Problem  with cracked paraffin blocks (Wheelock, Timothy R.)
   8. Re: Amyloid by Congo Red (Michael Ann Jones)
 
 
 --
 
 Message: 1
 Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2015 16:23:06 +
 From: Gowan,Christie C christiecgo...@dermatology.med.ufl.edu
 Subject: RE: [Histonet] rodent eye
 To: Casie Phillips casie4...@gmail.com,
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Message-ID:
ccc0568455733548a03568ac55691f76259...@ahc-mb02.ad.ufl.edu
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 Hi Casie,
 Hope by now you have rec'd some good tips on rodent eye prep. The only thing 
 I have to offer is that we always used Davidson's fixative for 24 hours and 
 then transferred to 70% ETOH. This worked beautifully preserving all eye 
 components. Good luck and don't forget to check the Histonet archives where I 
 know rodent eyes have been discussed in the past.
 
 Christie Gowan HT (ASCP)
 
 Department of Dermatology
 4037 NW 86th Terrace, 4th Fl
 Mohs Laboratory
 Gainesville, FL 32606
 Phone: 352 594-1529
 
 
 
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
 [histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] on behalf of Casie 
 Phillips [casie4...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2015 2:53 PM
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] rodent eye
 
 Good afternoon,
 
 I am currently working with Lewis rats performing corneal alkali 
 injuries at varying strengths. Is there someone there that has prior 
 experience working with a rat eye and would be willing to share 
 information on the most effective ways to preserve, fix and cut the cornea 
 sample.
 
 We are interested in using the cornea without using the whole globe if 
 possible. For now we will be using basic HE staining with a 
 possibility of immunohistochemistry at a later time. The main outcome 
 we are looking for is to find the presence of neutrophils in the 
 cornea. A second objective is to look for any damaged or newly reconstructed 
 tissue.
 
 I would greatly appreciate any advice relating to the type of paraffin 
 used, the ideal length of time to save the tissue and any assistance 
 you can suggest for completing this process  successfully.
 
 Thank you for your time. Any assistance will be greatly appreciated.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Casie

Re: [Histonet] HTL wage range

2014-07-09 Thread Rene J Buesa
Salaries vary wildly and depend on the area you are working. Having said that 
my advise is always that you should decide first how much would you need for 
your living expenses and make that amount your bottom salary and then apply for 
a position and try to obtain that amount REGARDLESS of what they are offering 
and the market place is.
You have to be aggressive in your pursue of a salary that will allow you to 
live as you desire. Remember that working for an amount of money that will let 
you just get by is one of the most frustrating experiences there are.
Having said that under separate cover I am forwarding you an article I wrote on 
the subject.
René J.   


On Tuesday, July 8, 2014 4:38 PM, Gast, Betty L betty.g...@hshs.org wrote:
  


Hi, I was wondering if anyone would share your salary range for a new HTL grad. 
I have the ASCP 2013 survey and wanted to compare. Thanks!



Betty Gast HT(ASCP)

betty.g...@hshs.orgmailto:betty.g...@hshs.org

Histology Facilitator

St. Mary's PAthology Department

Green Bay, WI 54303



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Re: [Histonet] HTL wage range

2014-07-09 Thread Jay Lundgren
It's not so much about the money.  It's more about the speedboats and
supermodels.  http://www.ascp.org/PDF/Advocacy/2012-Vacancy-Survey.pdf

Sincerely,

Jay A. Lundgren,  M.S., HTL, (ASCP)


On Tue, Jul 8, 2014 at 3:37 PM, Gast, Betty L betty.g...@hshs.org wrote:

 Hi, I was wondering if anyone would share your salary range for a new HTL
 grad. I have the ASCP 2013 survey and wanted to compare. Thanks!



 Betty Gast HT(ASCP)

 betty.g...@hshs.orgmailto:betty.g...@hshs.org

 Histology Facilitator

 St. Mary's PAthology Department

 Green Bay, WI 54303



 LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This message and all attachments may be confidential or
 protected by privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, you are
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[Histonet] HTL wage range

2014-07-08 Thread Gast, Betty L
Hi, I was wondering if anyone would share your salary range for a new HTL grad. 
I have the ASCP 2013 survey and wanted to compare. Thanks!



Betty Gast HT(ASCP)

betty.g...@hshs.orgmailto:betty.g...@hshs.org

Histology Facilitator

St. Mary's PAthology Department

Green Bay, WI 54303



LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This message and all attachments may be confidential or 
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[Histonet] HTL program

2014-06-04 Thread Bilger, Andrea
I have several techs who used Indiana University's on line course and they are 
all great techs!  Have not been impressed with techs from Harford Community's 
program.

Andrea Bilger, HTL
Team Leader, Histology
York Hospital
1001 S. George St.
York, Pa.  17405
(717) 851-5040


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[Histonet] HTL

2014-05-21 Thread madary

   nb=  sp;WHen  I  took  mine  i did both parts. for the written carson
   cover  to cover= and the thick bancroft and stevens(sp?) 2 times cover
   to cover.



   Nick(Rocky) Madar= y, HT/HTL(ASCP)QIHC
   Joni Madary, PhD(in life)

   = div style=border-top:1px solid #bcbcbc;margin:5px 0px;

   On 05/20/14, hist= onet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:



   
   Send Histonet = mailing list submissions to
[1]histonet@lists.utsout= hwestern.edu
   To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide = Web, visit
[2]http://lists.utsouthwe= stern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
   or, via email, send a message = with subject or body 'help' to
[3]histonet-r= equ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   You can reach the person man= aging the list at
[4]histonet-ow...@lists.utso= uthwestern.edu
   When replying, please edit your Subject line = so it is more specific
   than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...q= uot;
   Today's Topics:
   1. HTL certification (C= ecy Stan)
   2. RE: HTL certification (Esther C Peters)
   3. pos= itive control indoleamine 2-3 dioxygenase
   (Pathology-Histology S= r. Supervisor)
   4.  immunohistochemisty  coding (Michael LaFriniere) 5. antibody vials
   (Clare Thornton)
   6. RE: antibody vials (Mu= rphy, Valerie)
   7. HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Daks= hnapriya)
   8. new processor (anita)
   9. RE: antibody vials (A= nne Murvosh)
   10. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Da= kshnapriya)
   11. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Dak= shnapriya)
   ---   ---
   Message: 1
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 1= 2:32:36 -0500
   From: Cecy Stan [5]cecysta...@gmail.com
   Subject: [Histonet] HTL certification
   To: [6]histone= t...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Message-ID:
CACh=0wgaaEfV   
DFmsuB-Jw8OKo=LKUP[7]apgujjkoeagjazasx...@mail.gmail.com= 
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
   Hello ev= eryone,
   I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am v= ery nervous
   and anxious but also very excited about this decision to g= o for it).
   I  was  just  curious  to know how you guys prepared for = it, and how
   long it
   took  for  you  to  prepare  before  taking  the test. Wi= ll 6 months
   preparation
   be enough? (I know that may depend on the indi= vidual; it's just that
   I
   had  my  Masters  over  10 years ago and I haven'= t studied this much
   since
   then).
   I  have  Freida  L.  Carson's  = 3rd Edition book -- quite daunting to
   memorize --
   but  the  outline ASCP= has provided for study seems to be helpful. Do
   you
   have any other bo= ok/study aid suggestions?
   Thank you in advance for your input an= d advice!
   C.A.
   --
   Message: 2
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 17:46:47 +
   From: Esther= C Peters [8]epete...@gmu.edu
   Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL ce= rtification
   To: Cecy Stan [9]cecysta...@gmail.com,
   =[10]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[11]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Me= ssage-ID: [12]1400521609188.54...@gmu.edu
   Content-= Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
   Hi C.A.,
   I  don't have the HT or HTL, but from my college teaching experiencein  
histology  and  histotechniques, I just wanted to caution you that
   memoriz=  ing  is not what you should be doing. You need to understand
   concepts, so th= at when you need to troubleshoot problems you will be
   able to think through= things, rule some things out, and make sense of
   the situation. I see this = all the time with my students, they forget
   things  they  memorize,  but then t= hey finally understand things and
   can  figure  things  out.  One  of  the new tea= ching tools is having
   students  prepare  concept maps, to see the= relationships of topics
   and  terms,  and  these  linkages  will help you in the= long run. For
   histology examples, see:
   [13]http://www.biologycorner.com/anatomy/tissues/tissue_conce   
pt_map_samples.html
   I don't know of any concept maps for his= totechnology on the web, but
   I am going to add this to my course next year!   Esther
   Esther C. Peters, Ph.D.
   Assistant Profes= sor
   Environmental Science  Policy
   George Mason University
   4400 University Drive, MS 5F2
   Fairfax, VA 22030-
   Office: D= avid King Hall, Room 3050
   Phone: 703-993-3462
   Fax: 703-993-1066e-mail: [14]epete...@gmu.edu
   [15]https://bluprd0511.outlook.com/owa/redir.aspx?C   
=ET8XhF-xC0ytBErXdaN3U3lGqWmZNdAI_N-4nsEb0IjgUpeIoQa7EcVMJMh2oePPPKr
   rDjhw= Ovk.URL=http%3a%2f%2fesp.gmu.edu
   __= __
   From: [16]histonet-bo= un...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu [17]histonet-b   
oun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu  on  behalf  of  Cecy  Stan [18]cec   
ysta...@gmail.com
   Sent: Monday, May 19, 2014 1:32 PM
   To: = [19]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Subject: [Hist= onet] HTL certification
   Hello everyone,
   I'm

RE: [Histonet] HTL

2014-05-21 Thread Weems, Joyce K.
Also the booklets from NSH ..

Joyce Weems
Pathology Manager
678-843-7376 Phone
678-843-7831 Fax
joyce.we...@emoryhealthcare.org



www.saintjosephsatlanta.org
5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Road
Atlanta, GA 30342

This e-mail, including any attachments is the property of Saint Joseph’s 
Hospital and is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient(s).  It may 
contain information that is privileged and confidential.  Any unauthorized 
review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the 
intended recipient, please delete this message, and reply to the sender 
regarding the error in a separate email.

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
mad...@verizon.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 6:54 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL


   nb=;WHen  I  took  mine  i did both parts. for the written carson
   cover  to cover=d the thick bancroft and stevens(sp?) 2 times cover
   to cover.



   Nick(Rocky) Madar= HT/HTL(ASCP)QIHC
   Joni Madary, PhD(in life)

   =v style=border-top:1px solid #bcbcbc;margin:5px 0px;

   On 05/20/14, hist=et-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:




   Send Histonet =iling list submissions to
[1]histonet@lists.utsout=estern.edu
   To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide =b, visit
[2]http://lists.utsouthwe=ern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
   or, via email, send a message =th subject or body 'help' to
[3]histonet-r=u...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   You can reach the person man=ing the list at
[4]histonet-ow...@lists.utso=hwestern.edu
   When replying, please edit your Subject line = it is more specific
   than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...q=t;
   Today's Topics:
   1. HTL certification (C�y Stan)
   2. RE: HTL certification (Esther C Peters)
   3. pos=ive control indoleamine 2-3 dioxygenase
   (Pathology-Histology S= Supervisor)
   4.  immunohistochemisty  coding (Michael LaFriniere) 5. antibody vials
   (Clare Thornton)
   6. RE: antibody vials (Mu=hy, Valerie)
   7. HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Daks=apriya)
   8. new processor (anita)
   9. RE: antibody vials (A=e Murvosh)
   10. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Da=hnapriya)
   11. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Dak=napriya)
   ---   ---
   Message: 1
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 1=32:36 -0500
   From: Cecy Stan [5]cecysta...@gmail.com
   Subject: [Histonet] HTL certification
   To: [6]histone=lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Message-ID:
CACh=0wgaaEfV   
DFmsuB-Jw8OKo=LKUP[7]apgujjkoeagjazasx...@mail.gmail.com=
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
   Hello ev=yone,
   I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am v=y nervous
   and anxious but also very excited about this decision to g=or it).
   I  was  just  curious  to know how you guys prepared for =, and how
   long it
   took  for  you  to  prepare  before  taking  the test. Wi= 6 months
   preparation
   be enough? (I know that may depend on the indi=dual; it's just that
   I
   had  my  Masters  over  10 years ago and I haven'=tudied this much
   since
   then).
   I  have  Freida  L.  Carson's  =d Edition book -- quite daunting to
   memorize --
   but  the  outline ASCP=s provided for study seems to be helpful. Do
   you
   have any other bo=/study aid suggestions?
   Thank you in advance for your input an�dvice!
   C.A.
   --
   Message: 2
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 17:46:47 +
   From: Esther=eters [8]epete...@gmu.edu
   Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL ce=ification
   To: Cecy Stan [9]cecysta...@gmail.com,
   =9[10]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[11]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Me=age-ID: [12]1400521609188.54...@gmu.edu
   Content-=pe: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
   Hi C.A.,
   I  don't have the HT or HTL, but from my college teaching experiencein  
histology  and  histotechniques, I just wanted to caution you that
   memoriz=g  is not what you should be doing. You need to understand
   concepts, so th= when you need to troubleshoot problems you will be
   able to think through=ings, rule some things out, and make sense of
   the situation. I see this =l the time with my students, they forget
   things  they  memorize,  but then t=y finally understand things and
   can  figure  things  out.  One  of  the new tea=ing tools is having
   students  prepare  concept maps, to see the=lationships of topics
   and  terms,  and  these  linkages  will help you in the=ng run. For
   histology examples, see:
   [13]http://www.biologycorner.com/anatomy/tissues/tissue_conce   
pt_map_samples.html
   I don't know of any concept maps for his=technology on the web, but
   I am going to add this to my course next year!   Esther
   Esther C. Peters, Ph.D.
   Assistant Profes=r
   Environmental Science  Policy

RE: [Histonet] HTL

2014-05-21 Thread Weems, Joyce K.
My story - I finished my degree late in my career and just wanted to take the 
registry to see how it was -  then I was going to know how to study. I didn't 
spend much time studying - just brushing up as I took it soon after I graduated 
and had been doing thesis type reports, etc. I got to the exam - I had to go 
100 mi to Knoxville from Kingsport, TN  - and they had scheduled me for the 
wrong day and had all the nursing students there taking their Boards. They told 
me I could stay and wait till a computer was available - I did. I had taken  
those books with me, and reviewed as I sat there -  learned all kinds of things 
I used on the test! I passed and didn't have to take it again. It was a 
miracle!! j

Joyce Weems
Pathology Manager
678-843-7376 Phone
678-843-7831 Fax
joyce.we...@emoryhealthcare.org



www.saintjosephsatlanta.org
5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Road
Atlanta, GA 30342

This e-mail, including any attachments is the property of Saint Joseph’s 
Hospital and is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient(s).  It may 
contain information that is privileged and confidential.  Any unauthorized 
review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the 
intended recipient, please delete this message, and reply to the sender 
regarding the error in a separate email. 


-Original Message-
From: Campbell, Tasha M. [mailto:tmcampb...@fmh.org] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 9:48 AM
To: Weems, Joyce K.; mad...@verizon.net; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL

Definitely the booklets from NSH.  Probably the most important, I think.

 
 
 
Tasha Campbell, B.S.,HTL(ASCP)
Frederick Gastroenterology Associates
310 W. 9th St.
Frederick, MD 21701
301-695-6800 ext. 144 (w)
304-685-9307 (c)

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Weems, Joyce K.
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 8:26 AM
To: 'mad...@verizon.net'; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL

Also the booklets from NSH ..

Joyce Weems
Pathology Manager
678-843-7376 Phone
678-843-7831 Fax
joyce.we...@emoryhealthcare.org



www.saintjosephsatlanta.org
5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Road
Atlanta, GA 30342

This e-mail, including any attachments is the property of Saint Joseph’s 
Hospital and is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient(s).  It may 
contain information that is privileged and confidential.  Any unauthorized 
review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the 
intended recipient, please delete this message, and reply to the sender 
regarding the error in a separate email.

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
mad...@verizon.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 6:54 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL


   nb=;WHen  I  took  mine  i did both parts. for the written carson
   cover  to cover=d the thick bancroft and stevens(sp?) 2 times cover
   to cover.



   Nick(Rocky) Madar= HT/HTL(ASCP)QIHC
   Joni Madary, PhD(in life)

   =v style=border-top:1px solid #bcbcbc;margin:5px 0px;

   On 05/20/14, hist=et-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:




   Send Histonet =iling list submissions to
[1]histonet@lists.utsout=estern.edu
   To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide =b, visit
[2]http://lists.utsouthwe=ern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
   or, via email, send a message =th subject or body 'help' to
[3]histonet-r=u...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   You can reach the person man=ing the list at
[4]histonet-ow...@lists.utso=hwestern.edu
   When replying, please edit your Subject line = it is more specific
   than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...q=t;
   Today's Topics:
   1. HTL certification (C y Stan)
   2. RE: HTL certification (Esther C Peters)
   3. pos=ive control indoleamine 2-3 dioxygenase
   (Pathology-Histology S= Supervisor)
   4.  immunohistochemisty  coding (Michael LaFriniere) 5. antibody vials
   (Clare Thornton)
   6. RE: antibody vials (Mu=hy, Valerie)
   7. HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Daks=apriya)
   8. new processor (anita)
   9. RE: antibody vials (A=e Murvosh)
   10. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Da=hnapriya)
   11. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Dak=napriya)
   ---   ---
   Message: 1
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 1=32:36 -0500
   From: Cecy Stan [5]cecysta...@gmail.com
   Subject: [Histonet] HTL certification
   To: [6]histone=lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Message-ID:
CACh=0wgaaEfV   
DFmsuB-Jw8OKo=LKUP[7]apgujjkoeagjazasx...@mail.gmail.com=
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
   Hello ev=yone,
   I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am v=y nervous
   and anxious but also very excited about this decision to g

RE: [Histonet] HTL

2014-05-21 Thread Campbell, Tasha M.
Definitely the booklets from NSH.  Probably the most important, I think.

 
 
 
Tasha Campbell, B.S.,HTL(ASCP)
Frederick Gastroenterology Associates
310 W. 9th St.
Frederick, MD 21701
301-695-6800 ext. 144 (w)
304-685-9307 (c)

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Weems, Joyce K.
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 8:26 AM
To: 'mad...@verizon.net'; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL

Also the booklets from NSH ..

Joyce Weems
Pathology Manager
678-843-7376 Phone
678-843-7831 Fax
joyce.we...@emoryhealthcare.org



www.saintjosephsatlanta.org
5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Road
Atlanta, GA 30342

This e-mail, including any attachments is the property of Saint Joseph’s 
Hospital and is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient(s).  It may 
contain information that is privileged and confidential.  Any unauthorized 
review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the 
intended recipient, please delete this message, and reply to the sender 
regarding the error in a separate email.

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
mad...@verizon.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 6:54 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL


   nb=;WHen  I  took  mine  i did both parts. for the written carson
   cover  to cover=d the thick bancroft and stevens(sp?) 2 times cover
   to cover.



   Nick(Rocky) Madar= HT/HTL(ASCP)QIHC
   Joni Madary, PhD(in life)

   =v style=border-top:1px solid #bcbcbc;margin:5px 0px;

   On 05/20/14, hist=et-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:




   Send Histonet =iling list submissions to
[1]histonet@lists.utsout=estern.edu
   To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide =b, visit
[2]http://lists.utsouthwe=ern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
   or, via email, send a message =th subject or body 'help' to
[3]histonet-r=u...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   You can reach the person man=ing the list at
[4]histonet-ow...@lists.utso=hwestern.edu
   When replying, please edit your Subject line = it is more specific
   than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...q=t;
   Today's Topics:
   1. HTL certification (C�y Stan)
   2. RE: HTL certification (Esther C Peters)
   3. pos=ive control indoleamine 2-3 dioxygenase
   (Pathology-Histology S= Supervisor)
   4.  immunohistochemisty  coding (Michael LaFriniere) 5. antibody vials
   (Clare Thornton)
   6. RE: antibody vials (Mu=hy, Valerie)
   7. HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Daks=apriya)
   8. new processor (anita)
   9. RE: antibody vials (A=e Murvosh)
   10. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Da=hnapriya)
   11. Re: HELP- Cryosectioning FAT! (Balasubbramanian, Dak=napriya)
   ---   ---
   Message: 1
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 1=32:36 -0500
   From: Cecy Stan [5]cecysta...@gmail.com
   Subject: [Histonet] HTL certification
   To: [6]histone=lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Message-ID:
CACh=0wgaaEfV   
DFmsuB-Jw8OKo=LKUP[7]apgujjkoeagjazasx...@mail.gmail.com=
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
   Hello ev=yone,
   I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am v=y nervous
   and anxious but also very excited about this decision to g=or it).
   I  was  just  curious  to know how you guys prepared for =, and how
   long it
   took  for  you  to  prepare  before  taking  the test. Wi= 6 months
   preparation
   be enough? (I know that may depend on the indi=dual; it's just that
   I
   had  my  Masters  over  10 years ago and I haven'=tudied this much
   since
   then).
   I  have  Freida  L.  Carson's  =d Edition book -- quite daunting to
   memorize --
   but  the  outline ASCP=s provided for study seems to be helpful. Do
   you
   have any other bo=/study aid suggestions?
   Thank you in advance for your input an�dvice!
   C.A.
   --
   Message: 2
   Date: Mon, 19 May 2014 17:46:47 +
   From: Esther=eters [8]epete...@gmu.edu
   Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL ce=ification
   To: Cecy Stan [9]cecysta...@gmail.com,
   =9[10]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[11]histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   Me=age-ID: [12]1400521609188.54...@gmu.edu
   Content-=pe: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
   Hi C.A.,
   I  don't have the HT or HTL, but from my college teaching experiencein  
histology  and  histotechniques, I just wanted to caution you that
   memoriz=g  is not what you should be doing. You need to understand
   concepts, so th= when you need to troubleshoot problems you will be
   able to think through=ings, rule some things out, and make sense of
   the situation. I see this =l the time with my students, they forget
   things  they  memorize,  but then t=y finally understand things and
   can  figure  things  out.  One

[Histonet] HTL certification

2014-05-19 Thread Cecy Stan
Hello everyone,

I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am very nervous
and anxious but also very excited about this decision to go for it).

I was just curious to know how you guys prepared for it, and how long it
took for you to prepare before taking the test. Will 6 months preparation
be enough? (I know that may depend on the individual; it's just that I
had my Masters over 10 years ago and I haven't studied this much since
then).

I have Freida L. Carson's 3rd Edition book -- quite daunting to memorize --
but the outline ASCP  has provided for study seems to be helpful. Do you
have any other book/study aid suggestions?

Thank you in advance for your input and advice!
C.A.
___
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet


RE: [Histonet] HTL certification

2014-05-19 Thread Esther C Peters
Hi C.A.,

I don't have the HT or HTL, but from my college teaching experience in 
histology and histotechniques, I just wanted to caution you that memorizing is 
not what you should be doing. You need to understand concepts, so that when you 
need to troubleshoot problems you will be able to think through things, rule 
some things out, and make sense of the situation. I see this all the time with 
my students, they forget things they memorize, but then they finally understand 
things and can figure things out. One of the new teaching tools is having 
students prepare concept maps, to see the relationships of topics and terms, 
and these linkages will help you in the long run. For histology examples, see: 
http://www.biologycorner.com/anatomy/tissues/tissue_concept_map_samples.html

I don't know of any concept maps for histotechnology on the web, but I am going 
to add this to my course next year!

Esther

Esther C. Peters, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Environmental Science  Policy
George Mason University
4400 University Drive, MS 5F2
Fairfax, VA 22030-
Office: David King Hall, Room 3050
Phone: 703-993-3462
Fax: 703-993-1066
e-mail: epete...@gmu.edu
https://bluprd0511.outlook.com/owa/redir.aspx?C=ET8XhF-xC0ytBErXdaN3U3lGqWmZNdAI_N-4nsEb0IjgUpeIoQa7EcVMJMh2oePPPKrrDjhwOvk.URL=http%3a%2f%2fesp.gmu.edu



From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu on behalf of Cecy Stan 
cecysta...@gmail.com
Sent: Monday, May 19, 2014 1:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL certification

Hello everyone,

I'm starting to prepare for my HTL certification (I am very nervous
and anxious but also very excited about this decision to go for it).

I was just curious to know how you guys prepared for it, and how long it
took for you to prepare before taking the test. Will 6 months preparation
be enough? (I know that may depend on the individual; it's just that I
had my Masters over 10 years ago and I haven't studied this much since
then).

I have Freida L. Carson's 3rd Edition book -- quite daunting to memorize --
but the outline ASCP  has provided for study seems to be helpful. Do you
have any other book/study aid suggestions?

Thank you in advance for your input and advice!
C.A.
___
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

___
Histonet mailing list
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RE: [Histonet] HTL / CG

2013-10-24 Thread joelle weaver
Mark
Sounds like I will be in similar circumstance soon. I am not a molecular person 
and I am not certified in molecular OR cytogenetics. Just HTL/QIHC, I do have 
degrees but it never made that much difference really so far. I have been 
trained in FISH and FISH enumeration (barely- just starting).  I do the IHC and 
ISH, routine histology,  specials, training, hiring, SOP writing, validation, 
purchasing, CAP stuff,  etc. I am a bench Histotechnologist only. Believe me, 
all they ever say to me is that they wish I knew more cytogenetics/FISH, flow 
cytometry and/or PCR. So seems to me, that whatever you know/do outside 
histology DOES in fact put you in higher demand.  Bravo to you. Sure you don't 
want to come and help me out? 




Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
 
Date: Thu, 24 Oct 2013 11:55:28 -0700
Subject: Re: [Histonet] HTL / CG
From: marktara...@gmail.com
To: joellewea...@hotmail.com

haha I hope that is true.  I'm the de facto lead tech in my department and I'm 
trying to get everyone up to speed on cutting and FISH pretreatment/scoring.  
Its going pretty well.  I think it's VERY helpful to have someone who can move 
between both areas.  Histology asked me to cut the molecular orders today since 
they're short-handed.  I love helping out in histology and IHC.  

If the pay was right I would move about anywhere but I don't know that I'm 
exactly what you're looking for.  I don't have my BA/BS and am not certified in 
molecular.  I also don't have experience in conventional cytogenetics 
(g-banding).  I'm also not the best PCR tech although I help out in that area 
too.

Mark

On Wed, Oct 23, 2013 at 4:04 PM, joelle weaver joellewea...@hotmail.com wrote:




That is what they want, but they also want a BA/BS and prefer certification. 
Yes, I had a feeling it is pretty rare. You must be in HIGH demand. Do you 
perform manually? have a scanner? do the slide analysis and scoring? 






Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
 
Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2013 15:41:24 -0700
Subject: Re: [Histonet] HTL / CG
From: marktara...@gmail.com

To: joellewea...@hotmail.com

I'm not certified as a CG(ASCP) but I do FISH all day long on tissue and cell 
based preps.  I would say it's pretty uncommon to find someone who has a 
molecular and histology background.  



On Wed, Oct 23, 2013 at 10:35 AM, joelle weaver joellewea...@hotmail.com 
wrote:


 Hello fellow histology netters

I have been asked by my employer to search for and retain an individual who 
possesses an HTL (ASCP) certification, but who also has a CG (ASCP) 
certification ( or at least have solid experience in the arena of FISH  
cytogenetics).  I have not personally come across anyone like that in my own 
personal, mostly clinical histology career. Perhaps it is more common in 
research?





Can anyone offer an opinion or insight into how common the above combination of 
education, training and certification(s) may be?

I tried to contact the BOR/BOC for a non-identified statistic on that, but have 
not gotten a reply.

Appreciate any assistance.









Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC



 From: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com

 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu

 Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 19:31:20 -0500

 Subject: [Histonet] Desperately seeking information!!!



 Hello all,

 A few weeks ago I sent out an information seeking email regarding IHC 
 turnaround time. I did not get much in the way of responses. I figured there 
 was not enough information provided to answer the general questions I was 
 asking. I am having trouble obtaining an national average for IHC turnaround 
 time.



 I am wondering if all you fellow histoneters out there would be willing to 
 give me some info so I can see were we stand in comparison to facilities of 
 similar size. The facility I work at turns out anywhere from 90-150 IHC 
 stained slides daily. We have an average of 160 cases with around 700 HE 
 stained slides daily. I have listed a few questions below, if any of you 
 would be so kind as to take the time to answer them it would be greatly 
 appreciated.





 What is the rough estimate of cases and initial HE stained slides that are 
 turned out daily?



 Roughly, how many IHC stained slides do you turn out in a day?



 On average, what is your IHC turnaround time?



 What tissues are you working with (general surgical, dermatology's, research 
 etc)?



 How many techs do you have that can perform IHC staining?



 Who is your instrumentation through?



 At the end of the day/run, is there a stain log printed?



 If so, who signs off on the positive/negative?



 If there are any other processes/procedures you feel are imperative to your 
 IHC turnaround time please feel free to comment or offer suggestions.



 Thank you for taking the time to help us to improve our processes. If you 
 have any questions or concerns please let me know.

 Again, thank you for your help,





 Emily K. McKenzie BS, HT(ASCP)



 Memorial Medical Center│701 North First Street

[Histonet] HTL / CG

2013-10-23 Thread joelle weaver
 Hello fellow histology netters
I have been asked by my employer to search for and retain an individual who 
possesses an HTL (ASCP) certification, but who also has a CG (ASCP) 
certification ( or at least have solid experience in the arena of FISH  
cytogenetics).  I have not personally come across anyone like that in my own 
personal, mostly clinical histology career. Perhaps it is more common in 
research?
 
Can anyone offer an opinion or insight into how common the above combination of 
education, training and certification(s) may be?
I tried to contact the BOR/BOC for a non-identified statistic on that, but have 
not gotten a reply.
Appreciate any assistance.
 



Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
 
 From: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 19:31:20 -0500
 Subject: [Histonet] Desperately seeking information!!!
 
 Hello all,
 A few weeks ago I sent out an information seeking email regarding IHC 
 turnaround time. I did not get much in the way of responses. I figured there 
 was not enough information provided to answer the general questions I was 
 asking. I am having trouble obtaining an national average for IHC turnaround 
 time.
 I am wondering if all you fellow histoneters out there would be willing to 
 give me some info so I can see were we stand in comparison to facilities of 
 similar size. The facility I work at turns out anywhere from 90-150 IHC 
 stained slides daily. We have an average of 160 cases with around 700 HE 
 stained slides daily. I have listed a few questions below, if any of you 
 would be so kind as to take the time to answer them it would be greatly 
 appreciated.
 
 What is the rough estimate of cases and initial HE stained slides that are 
 turned out daily?
 
 Roughly, how many IHC stained slides do you turn out in a day?
 
 On average, what is your IHC turnaround time?
 
 What tissues are you working with (general surgical, dermatology's, research 
 etc)?
 
 How many techs do you have that can perform IHC staining?
 
 Who is your instrumentation through?
 
 At the end of the day/run, is there a stain log printed?
 
 If so, who signs off on the positive/negative?
 
 If there are any other processes/procedures you feel are imperative to your 
 IHC turnaround time please feel free to comment or offer suggestions.
 
 Thank you for taking the time to help us to improve our processes. If you 
 have any questions or concerns please let me know.
 Again, thank you for your help,
 
 
 Emily K. McKenzie BS, HT(ASCP)
 
 Memorial Medical Center│701 North First Street│Springfield, IL 62781
 Ph: 217-788-3991│email: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
 
 
 
 
   
 This message (including any attachments) contains confidential information 
 intended for a specific individual and purpose, and is protected by law. If 
 you are not the intended recipient, you should delete this message. Any 
 disclosure, copying, or distribution of this message, or the taking of any 
 action based on it, is strictly prohibited.
 ___
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RE: [Histonet] HTL / CG

2013-10-23 Thread joelle weaver
Thank you for the information and insight. You are indeed multi-talented. 
Sounds like whatever direction you go, you will be successful. I am not 
expecting to find such a combination as HTL/CG, with extensive experience 
easily. I just wanted to have some numbers, opinions,  and information to 
return if it takes a long while- and some kind of explanation for being 
empty-handed when them come asking.
 




Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
 
 From: taylor.cliff...@va.gov
 To: joellewea...@hotmail.com
 Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2013 15:22:34 -0400
 Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL / CG
 
 I would say pretty uncommon! 
 
 I graduated with my Bachelor's in Agricultural Biotechnology and as a side 
 bar did my AAS in Histotechnology so my current supervisor was incredibly 
 pleased with the fact that I had a solid background in both biomolecular 
 science and current biotechnology techniques as well as the 
 histology/histotechnology background. He's the PI of a neuropathology lab 
 where he has done basic and advanced immunohistochemistry and various 
 biomolecular testing for 40+ years and he said I was the first HT to also 
 have the biotechnology background.
 
 I graduated from SUNY Cobleskill where Dr. Colony has been the program 
 director for a number of years and I was also her first student to do both 
 programs (Benefitted the program greatly to have a student tutor the 
 following year on campus since most students finish their AAS and are gone). 
 I have looked into continuing my education for the CG  certification but I'm 
 still getting my foot in the door here at the research lab and studying for 
 GRE's for entrance into either a PhD or DVM program so I don't want to add 
 any more to my plate at the moment!
 
 Good luck on your search!!
 
 
 Taylor CM Clifford
 Research Associate
 Albany Research Institute
 113 Holland Avenue
 Albany, NY 12208
 518-626-5664
 taylor.cliff...@va.gov
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
 [mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of joelle weaver
 Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2013 1:35 PM
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL / CG
 
  Hello fellow histology netters
 I have been asked by my employer to search for and retain an individual who 
 possesses an HTL (ASCP) certification, but who also has a CG (ASCP) 
 certification ( or at least have solid experience in the arena of FISH  
 cytogenetics).  I have not personally come across anyone like that in my own 
 personal, mostly clinical histology career. Perhaps it is more common in 
 research?
  
 Can anyone offer an opinion or insight into how common the above combination 
 of education, training and certification(s) may be?
 I tried to contact the BOR/BOC for a non-identified statistic on that, but 
 have not gotten a reply.
 Appreciate any assistance.
  
 
 
 
 Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
  
  From: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
  To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
  Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 19:31:20 -0500
  Subject: [Histonet] Desperately seeking information!!!
  
  Hello all,
  A few weeks ago I sent out an information seeking email regarding IHC 
  turnaround time. I did not get much in the way of responses. I figured 
  there was not enough information provided to answer the general questions I 
  was asking. I am having trouble obtaining an national average for IHC 
  turnaround time.
  I am wondering if all you fellow histoneters out there would be willing to 
  give me some info so I can see were we stand in comparison to facilities of 
  similar size. The facility I work at turns out anywhere from 90-150 IHC 
  stained slides daily. We have an average of 160 cases with around 700 HE 
  stained slides daily. I have listed a few questions below, if any of you 
  would be so kind as to take the time to answer them it would be greatly 
  appreciated.
  
  What is the rough estimate of cases and initial HE stained slides that are 
  turned out daily?
  
  Roughly, how many IHC stained slides do you turn out in a day?
  
  On average, what is your IHC turnaround time?
  
  What tissues are you working with (general surgical, dermatology's, 
  research etc)?
  
  How many techs do you have that can perform IHC staining?
  
  Who is your instrumentation through?
  
  At the end of the day/run, is there a stain log printed?
  
  If so, who signs off on the positive/negative?
  
  If there are any other processes/procedures you feel are imperative to your 
  IHC turnaround time please feel free to comment or offer suggestions.
  
  Thank you for taking the time to help us to improve our processes. If you 
  have any questions or concerns please let me know.
  Again, thank you for your help,
  
  
  Emily K. McKenzie BS, HT(ASCP)
  
  Memorial Medical Center│701 North First Street│Springfield, IL 62781
  Ph: 217-788-3991│email: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
  
  
  
  

  This message (including

RE: [Histonet] HTL / CG

2013-10-23 Thread Morken, Timothy
Joelle, I think you will have a very hard time finding someone with both, 
especially dual ASCP certification. I've met or hear of anyone with dual 
certification, or even working in both. It may be the best you will find is 
someone who has certification in one and some practical experience in the 
other. Or someone willing to cross-train. 

Good luck!


Tim Morken
Supervisor, Electron Microscopy/Neuromuscular Special Studies
Department of Pathology
UC San Francisco Medical Center



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of joelle weaver
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2013 10:35 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL / CG

 Hello fellow histology netters
I have been asked by my employer to search for and retain an individual who 
possesses an HTL (ASCP) certification, but who also has a CG (ASCP) 
certification ( or at least have solid experience in the arena of FISH  
cytogenetics).  I have not personally come across anyone like that in my own 
personal, mostly clinical histology career. Perhaps it is more common in 
research?
 
Can anyone offer an opinion or insight into how common the above combination of 
education, training and certification(s) may be?
I tried to contact the BOR/BOC for a non-identified statistic on that, but have 
not gotten a reply.
Appreciate any assistance.
 



Joelle Weaver MAOM, HTL (ASCP) QIHC
 
 From: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 19:31:20 -0500
 Subject: [Histonet] Desperately seeking information!!!
 
 Hello all,
 A few weeks ago I sent out an information seeking email regarding IHC 
 turnaround time. I did not get much in the way of responses. I figured there 
 was not enough information provided to answer the general questions I was 
 asking. I am having trouble obtaining an national average for IHC turnaround 
 time.
 I am wondering if all you fellow histoneters out there would be willing to 
 give me some info so I can see were we stand in comparison to facilities of 
 similar size. The facility I work at turns out anywhere from 90-150 IHC 
 stained slides daily. We have an average of 160 cases with around 700 HE 
 stained slides daily. I have listed a few questions below, if any of you 
 would be so kind as to take the time to answer them it would be greatly 
 appreciated.
 
 What is the rough estimate of cases and initial HE stained slides that are 
 turned out daily?
 
 Roughly, how many IHC stained slides do you turn out in a day?
 
 On average, what is your IHC turnaround time?
 
 What tissues are you working with (general surgical, dermatology's, research 
 etc)?
 
 How many techs do you have that can perform IHC staining?
 
 Who is your instrumentation through?
 
 At the end of the day/run, is there a stain log printed?
 
 If so, who signs off on the positive/negative?
 
 If there are any other processes/procedures you feel are imperative to your 
 IHC turnaround time please feel free to comment or offer suggestions.
 
 Thank you for taking the time to help us to improve our processes. If you 
 have any questions or concerns please let me know.
 Again, thank you for your help,
 
 
 Emily K. McKenzie BS, HT(ASCP)
 
 Memorial Medical Center│701 North First Street│Springfield, IL 62781
 Ph: 217-788-3991│email: mckenzie.em...@mhsil.com
 
 
 
 
   
 This message (including any attachments) contains confidential information 
 intended for a specific individual and purpose, and is protected by law. If 
 you are not the intended recipient, you should delete this message. Any 
 disclosure, copying, or distribution of this message, or the taking of any 
 action based on it, is strictly prohibited.
 ___
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 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
  
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[Histonet] HTL Currently Seeking Employment

2013-06-18 Thread Ryan Hickey
Hello Histonet, and thank you for the opportunity to introduce myself:


My name is Ryan Hickey, and I will soon be graduating from a
NAACLS-accredited 1-year program in Histotechnology from The University of
Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center School of Health Professions. I am in the
final stage of my clinical rotations both in immunohistochemistry and
biorepository research, after accruing experience in immunohistochemistry,
special stains, microtomy, cryotomy, grossing, and laboratory operations.
Throughout the duration of the program, I feel that I have received a
strong foundation of knowledge and clinical practice in histotechnology.

Prior to my clinical education in histotechnology, I spent significant time
in a molecular profiling and diagnostics laboratory practicing
immunohistochemical and immunofluorescence assays. My work comprised
protocol validation and optimization in regards to the characterization of
biomarkers related to squamous cell carcinomas.

In August, I will be eligible for ASCP Histotechnologist Certification
(HTL); my application for the certification exam has been submitted. If
selected, I am able to begin work immediately.

Please feel free to contact me if you or any of your colleagues or
associates are seeking a well-qualified, dedicated histotechnologist. Thank
you for taking the time to review my information and consider my request;
as always, I look forward to contributing constructively to the Histonet in
the near future.


Kind regards,

Ryan M. Hickey, BS
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[Histonet] HTL Exam

2013-04-17 Thread Smith, Denise
Hi,

I'm new around here!  I am currently a research technician but want to pursue 
my career into Histology since I have been doing sectioning, stainings, and 
embedding.

I have been studying for HTL exam and will take it soon.  I have discussed with 
Histology Core at my work and they highly recommended for me to take HTL exam 
instead of HT because of my degree and experience.  I'm wondering if anyone 
recently has took the HTL exam and how did it go?  Was it harder than you 
thought it was?

What materials should I focus on the most?  I have checked on ASCP website and 
printed out study guide.  I do have Histotechnology A Self Instructional Text 
3rd edition.  I'm getting more nervous because I don't want to fail it at first 
time.

Thank you,

Denise Smith

smit...@kids.wustl.edu



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[Histonet] HTL day job in Texas - direct hire

2012-09-17 Thread Cheryl
Yup, me again!
 
Another facility we support is looking for a HTL(ASCP) or a HT with a bachelors 
degree.  This is a day position in Texas.  There is a full range of duties so 
you'll not be bored!
 
 
 
Please call for answers to your questions--
 
 
In service-
 
 
Cheryl

Cheryl Kerry, HT(ASCP) 
Full Staff Inc. 
Staffing the AP Lab by helping one GREAT Tech at a time.  
281.852.9457 Office
800.756.3309 Phone  Fax 
ad...@fullstaff.org 

Sign up for the FREE newsletter AP News--updates, tricks of the trade and 
current issues for Anatomic Pathology Clinical Labs. Send a 'subscribe' request 
to apn...@fullstaff.org. Please include your name and specialty in the body of 
the email.
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[Histonet] HTL needed - FT Days--flexible hours

2012-06-13 Thread Cheryl
Small community hospital with a nice family feel (great schools/parks/cost of 
living) is seeking a registered HTL with a BS in one of the sciences.  The 
conversation is simple and you can talk with the facility folks without any 
committment...we're looking for the perfect fit for the hospital AND for you.
 
My most favorite jobs have been small community hospitals...knowing you've made 
a difference for your pathologist and your patient doesn't get any better than 
in small town hospitals.
 
Give me a call--if this doesn't fit we'll work to find you a job that does!
 
Cheryl
 
 
Cheryl Kerry, HT(ASCP) 
Full Staff Inc. 
Staffing the AP Lab by helping one GREAT Tech at a time.  
281.852.9457 Office
800.756.3309 Phone  Fax 
ad...@fullstaff.org 

Sign up for the FREE newsletter AP News--updates, tricks of the trade and 
current issues for Anatomic Pathology Clinical Labs. Send a 'subscribe' request 
to apn...@fullstaff.org. Please include your name and specialty in the body of 
the email.
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RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2012-05-22 Thread Amanda Phipps
Heather,

I took the exam last year and used the ASCP guidelines along with the 
Carson/Hladik (3rd edition) text, the Carson/Hladik Histodeck flash cards, and 
NSH practice question booklets. I am not sure how old the NSH booklets are 
because another tech (thankfully!) let me borrow them, but they were extremely 
helpful.
The HistoDeck cards were nice for studying, however the quality of HistoDeck 
pictures are *much* better than those of the exam.

Here is a link to some study materials from NSH

http://www.nsh.org/content/certification-exam-study-aids

Goodluck!!!

Amanda Phipps, HTL (ASCP)cm
Histotechnologist
Licking Memorial Hospital





From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Heather 
[hcaouett...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, May 21, 2012 11:12 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

Hi,
I am taking the HTL exam in about three months and would really appreciate any 
guidance that anyone has, study tips, etc. I have already downloaded the ASCP 
information on the test.
Thanks!
-Heather



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not the intended recipient, nor authorized to receive for the intended 
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arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. The sender therefore does not 
accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, 
which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. Thank you.

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Re: [Histonet] HTL exam

2012-05-22 Thread Carl
I did the BOR Study guide Second Edition and passed 4 years ago.

Carl Ryan Nituda, HTL(ASCP) QIHC
Pathology Sciences Medical


Sent from my iPhone

On May 22, 2012, at 8:21, Amanda Phipps aphi...@lmhealth.org wrote:

 Heather,
 
 I took the exam last year and used the ASCP guidelines along with the 
 Carson/Hladik (3rd edition) text, the Carson/Hladik Histodeck flash cards, 
 and NSH practice question booklets. I am not sure how old the NSH booklets 
 are because another tech (thankfully!) let me borrow them, but they were 
 extremely helpful.
 The HistoDeck cards were nice for studying, however the quality of HistoDeck 
 pictures are *much* better than those of the exam.
 
 Here is a link to some study materials from NSH
 
 http://www.nsh.org/content/certification-exam-study-aids
 
 Goodluck!!!
 
 Amanda Phipps, HTL (ASCP)cm
 Histotechnologist
 Licking Memorial Hospital
 
 
 
 
 
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
 [histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Heather 
 [hcaouett...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, May 21, 2012 11:12 PM
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam
 
 Hi,
 I am taking the HTL exam in about three months and would really appreciate 
 any guidance that anyone has, study tips, etc. I have already downloaded the 
 ASCP information on the test.
 Thanks!
 -Heather
 
 
 
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 This e-mail, including attachments, is intended for the sole use of the 
 individual and/or entity to whom it is addressed, and contains information 
 from Licking Memorial Health Systems which is confidential or privileged. If 
 you are not the intended recipient, nor authorized to receive for the 
 intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution or 
 use of the contents of this e-mail and attachments is prohibited. If you have 
 received this in error, please advise the sender by reply e-mail and delete 
 the message immediately. You may also contact the LMH Process Improvement 
 Center at 740-348-4641. E-mail transmissions cannot be guaranteed to be 
 secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, 
 destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. The sender 
 therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the 
 contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. 
 Thank you.
 
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[Histonet] HTL exam

2012-05-21 Thread Heather
Hi,
I am taking the HTL exam in about three months and would really appreciate any 
guidance that anyone has, study tips, etc. I have already downloaded the ASCP 
information on the test. 
Thanks!
-Heather



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[Histonet] HTL Lead Job Opening

2011-11-17 Thread Morocho, Jennifer
The University of MN Medical Center, Fairview has an exciting and immediate job 
opportunity as an HTL Technical Lead in Minneapolis, MN.  Check out the 
Fairview web site www.fairview.orghttp://www.fairview.org and look for job 
11-36731.  Or contact me, Jennifer Morocho, HTL (ASCP)CM at 
jmoro...@fairview.orgmailto:jmoro...@fairview.org for more details.  The 
Pathology Supervisor and I who would love to talk opportunity with you!


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[Histonet] HTL exam

2011-11-14 Thread madary

   nb= sp;Although I paased it when there was still a practical, I found
   that  read=  ing  ALL  of  the  recommended texts provided me with the
   information  needed  to= pass the exam without the need to memorize. I
   esp  found  the  BS and th= e Carson text particularly helpful and it
   was  great  to  read  them  again.If  y= ou work in a histolab and pay
   attention  to what you are doing, you will lik= ely pas the exam or at
   least  get  half  the  answers  from  just being engaged o= n the job.
   Memorization  will  not  help  with  questions that require you to re   
cognize what a stain is, an artifact, troubleshooting etc.
   
   Nick(Rocky) Madary, HT/HTL(ASCP)QIHC

   On 11/14/11, histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu wrote:
   Send Histonet mailing list submissions to
   [1]histonet@lists.utsouthwest= ern.edu
   To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visi= t
   [2]http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/li= stinfo/histonet
   or, via email, send a message with subject or body '= help' to
   [3]histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
   You can reach the person managing the list at
   histonet-owner@lis= ts.utsouthwestern.edu
   When replying, please edit your Subject li= ne so it is more specific
   than Re: Contents of Histonet digest...
   = BR
   Today's Topics:
   1. RE: HTL Exam (joelle weaver)
   2. Whisker= s (Adam Boanas)
   3. using Aquoes mounting media (Remedy Bi)
   4. RE: HTL= Exam (joelle weaver)
   5. (no subject) (Freeman, Carol)
   6. RE: 15 year= s of Histonet (Morken, Timothy)
   7. counterstain for fast red (Kim Merria= m)
   8. HT training -competency checklist (joelle weaver)
   -   -
   Me= ssage: 1
   Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2011 14:11:19 +
   From: joelle weaver l= t;[4]joelleweaver@hotmail.= com
   Subject: [Histonet] RE: HTL Exam
   To: [5]aaperg...@uspath.com, Histonet
   = A class=parsedEmail
   href=mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu;   tar=  get=_blank
   _djrealurl=mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu;histon   
e...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu,
   [6]histonet-bounces@lis= ts.utsouthwestern.edu
   Message-ID: SNT135-W65BE521[7]080A40866F1DB35D8C00@phx.g= bl
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
   A=  drienneThanks  for your thoughts, however I was not in need of any
   study hel= p, having passed the exam some time ago, but was posting in
   response  to  stu=  dents questions to try to help and support them. I
   think  your system is goo= d if your goal is memorization. My personal
   feeling  is  that  while  this  may  = allow you to select the correct
   answer  on  any  MC  test  in  the  short  term; if= you only memorize
   information  it  will  leave short term recall very quickly= , and you
   will  be  lacking  when  called upon to use this information for appl   
ication,  synthesis,  troubleshooting  etc.,  in a real lab situation.
   Memoriza=  tion is a learning first step, but good to move beyond this
   level  of unders= tanding in your learning process. I am glad that you
   were  able  to  pass,  and= I hope you go on to build on your learning
   through your work in the lab. B= est of luck.
   Joelle Weaver MAOM, BA, (HTL) ASCP
   [8]http://www.linkedin.c= om/in/joelleweaver
Date: Fri, 11 Nov 2011 12:38:24 -0700
From: [9]aaperg...@uspath.co= m
To: [10]joell= ewea...@hotmail.com
Subject: HTL Exam
   
Hi Joell= e,
   
   
 I  took the HTL exam in April. I thought I did = terribly but ended
   up passing (go figure).
   
I honestly thi= nk it's a lot of memorization.
   
 I got the flash-cards that= compliment the Carson text. Some images
   were  repeats of the book but most = were new. And it was an excellent
   study  guide  for  questions  like: what is t= his stain, what's wrong
   with  this  stain/section,  what's the best fixative f= or this stain,
   etc.  I  also made my own flashcards, of which I had probably = around
   500. Not an easy task.
   
 I read and high-lighted the= Carson and Barncroft text. Then I went
   through and made an outline of the = text (a lng outline).
After reviewing that a few times, I made= my flashcards.
   
 Going  through  the flashcards over the wee= ks, I could eventually
   cut  out  the  ones  that I knew the answers to and kept= studying the
   more difficult ones.
   
 The  Barncroft  text  was= an excellent supplemental for Carson and
   also had nice images.
   
 If  you would like my outline, let me know and I will send it over.
   $5= 00. Kidding.
   
Best of luck!
   
Adrienne
   = 
--
   
   
   
Adrienne Kavanagh HTL = (ASCP)
US PATH
30 W. Century Road
Suite 255
   =  Paramus NJ 07652
   --
   Mes= sage: 2
   Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2011 15:13:05 +
   From: Adam Boanas = A class=parsedEmail
   href=mailto:a.boa...@epistem.co.uk;target=_blan=k
   

[Histonet] HTL exam

2011-06-16 Thread Karla Arrington
Histonetters:

I have a co-hort that is going to be taking the HTL exam shortly.  As far as 
studying goes, what content of IHC does
he need to know... example IHC stains.  The list just states IHC stains.  There 
are lots of them so I would like some
information as to how much of stains are on the exam if anyone can enlighte 
me 


Thanks!!
Karla
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Re: [Histonet] HTL exam

2011-06-16 Thread Jennifer MacDonald
Have you looked at the examination guidelines posted at 
http://www.ascp.org/pdf/BOR-PDFs/Guidelines/ExaminationContentGuidelineHT.aspx




Karla Arrington freckles9...@yahoo.com 
Sent by: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
06/16/2011 12:33 PM

To
Histonet histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
cc

Subject
[Histonet] HTL exam






Histonetters:

I have a co-hort that is going to be taking the HTL exam shortly.  As far 
as 
studying goes, what content of IHC does
he need to know... example IHC stains.  The list just states IHC stains.  
There 
are lots of them so I would like some
information as to how much of stains are on the exam if anyone can 
enlighte 
me 


Thanks!!
Karla 
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Re: [Histonet] HTL exam

2011-06-16 Thread Rene J Buesa
I believe that IHC stains (by the way, they are not stains but detectable 
immunohistochemical reactions) refers to the method itself and its methodology.
René J.

From: Karla Arrington freckles9...@yahoo.com
To: Histonet histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Sent: Thursday, June 16, 2011 3:32 PM
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

Histonetters:

I have a co-hort that is going to be taking the HTL exam shortly.  As far as 
studying goes, what content of IHC does
he need to know... example IHC stains.  The list just states IHC stains.  There 
are lots of them so I would like some
information as to how much of stains are on the exam if anyone can enlighte 
me 


Thanks!!
Karla
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Re: [Histonet] HTL exam

2011-06-16 Thread Eric Eades
René is correct.  IHC stains are named according to the primary antibody
used, but it would be useless to ask questions about individual antibodies
because new ones are continuously developed.  Study the general method and
how it might vary (pretreatments, detection systems, chromogens.)

-Eric

On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 1:24 PM, Rene J Buesa rjbu...@yahoo.com wrote:

 I believe that IHC stains (by the way, they are not stains but detectable
 immunohistochemical reactions) refers to the method itself and its
 methodology.
 René J.

 From: Karla Arrington freckles9...@yahoo.com
 To: Histonet histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Sent: Thursday, June 16, 2011 3:32 PM
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

 Histonetters:

 I have a co-hort that is going to be taking the HTL exam shortly.  As far
 as
 studying goes, what content of IHC does
 he need to know... example IHC stains.  The list just states IHC stains.
 There
 are lots of them so I would like some
 information as to how much of stains are on the exam if anyone can enlighte
 me


 Thanks!!
 Karla
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 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
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 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

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[Histonet] HTL Certification - Distance Education at MUSC

2011-05-10 Thread Geils, Karen Brinker
The Medical University of South Carolina offers a distance education option for 
practicing histotechnicians who wish to sit for the HTL certification exam. The 
program is designed so that current employees in a histotechnology laboratory 
can maintain their employment and gain the educational requirements needed for 
the ASCP's BOR certification eligibility. All didactic and program material is 
delivered via the web and clinical experience is gained in the techs 
laboratory.  The program is one year in length commencing in September and 
April of each year. Our 
websitehttp://academicdepartments.musc.edu/histotechnology/index.htm has more 
information about the program.

Karen Brinker Geils, MS, HT(ASCP), CT(ASCP)
Director, Histotechnology Program
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Medical University of South Carolina
843-792-4013

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[Histonet] HTL/HT job opening

2011-05-02 Thread Konni Black
HT/ HTL position in Columbia, SC. This is a fulltime position for a licensed 
HT/ HTL with minimum 3 to 5 years experience. Flexible schedule and great 
working conditions in a beautiful new lab. If you are interested, please 
contact Konni Black. kbl...@digestivehlth.com Thank you for your interest.
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[Histonet] HTL positions open at UNC Hospitals

2011-04-22 Thread Deloney, Sheila
Hi Histonetters!!
 

UNC Hospitals is currently searching for:

 

A Histotechnologists proficient in all aspects of routine Histology,
including tissue processing, embedding, sectioning, and maintenance of
equipment. In addition, advanced skills in Muscle processing and
Histochemistry, Immunohistochemistry, special stains and frozen tissue
sectioning are preferred. Requirements include a minimum of one (1) year
of histology experience, with HTL (ASCP) certification or eligibility as
defined by the ASCP. Uncertified candidates must obtain certification
within 18 months of hire. Various shifts available. Scheduled work hours
may vary for training purposes and departmental coverage needs. 

 

A Histotechnologist for Electron Microscopy and Muscle Pathology
services. The HTL-EM/Muscles must be technically proficient in all
aspects of clinical electron microscopy. Skills required include tissue
collection, freezing, fixation, processing, plastic embedding, block
trimming, ultra-microtomy, staining, EM scanning and micrography.
Experience with muscle pathology or routine histology procedures is a
plus. This individual must be able to work independently and function
with minimal supervision. Work hours are Monday-Friday, with varying
start times ranging from 6:00 AM to 8:00 AM depending on EM scope
availability and case volume, with occasional rotating Saturdays.
Scheduled work hours may vary for training purposes and departmental
coverage needs.

 

To apply or learn more about our career opportunities, please visit our
website at www.unchealthcare.org/jobs. 

 

Sheila L Deloney
Histology Laboratory Supervisor
UNC Hospitals/ McLendon Clinical Labs
101 Manning Drive WC Hospitals RM CH30231
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Ph: 919-843-1082 / 966-6288 fax
Pager: 919-347-1677
Email: sdelo...@unch.unc.edu mailto:sdelo...@unch.unc.edu 

 

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[Histonet] HTL Distance Education Program

2011-01-04 Thread Geils, Karen Brinker
The Medical University of South Carolina now offers a distance education (DE) 
option for HTL training. We currently have two DE students enrolled. The format 
of the program is designed for current employees in a histotechnology 
laboratory. The focus of the education is on the theory of histotechnology in 
order to prepare students for the HTL BOR exam. Evidence of clinical competence 
must be submitted throughout the program. Two start dates are available for DE 
students, April and September. We are currently accepting applications for the 
April 5th start date. For more information about the program, please see our 
websitehttp://academicdepartments.musc.edu/histotechnology/index.htm.

If you have any questions about the program you may contact me via email or 
phone.

Karen Geils


Karen Brinker Geils, MS, HT(ASCP), CT(ASCP)
Director, Histotechnology Program
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Medical University of South Carolina
843-792-4013

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Re: [Histonet] HTL Distance Education Program

2011-01-04 Thread godsgal...@aol.com
What are the prerequisites to get in and what kind of degree if any, is 
obtained upon completion?

Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone

- Reply message -
From: Geils, Karen Brinker brink...@musc.edu
Date: Tue, Jan 4, 2011 9:36 am
Subject: [Histonet] HTL Distance Education Program
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu

The Medical University of South Carolina now offers a distance education (DE) 
option for HTL training. We currently have two DE students enrolled. The format 
of the program is designed for current employees in a histotechnology 
laboratory. The focus of the education is on the theory of histotechnology in 
order to prepare students for the HTL BOR exam. Evidence of clinical competence 
must be submitted throughout the program. Two start dates are available for DE 
students, April and September. We are currently accepting applications for the 
April 5th start date. For more information about the program, please see our 
websitehttp://academicdepartments.musc.edu/histotechnology/index.htm.

If you have any questions about the program you may contact me via email or 
phone.

Karen Geils


Karen Brinker Geils, MS, HT(ASCP), CT(ASCP)
Director, Histotechnology Program
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Medical University of South Carolina
843-792-4013

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[Histonet] HTL exam

2010-07-29 Thread brian1975


Does anyone have any advice on good study aids, areas of prep to concentrate 
on, or any test taking strategies that helped them? I have been pouring  over 
the 3rd ed of histotechnology, a self instructional text for months but since 
I have started to look at the ASCP/ NSH discussion boards im getting the 
feeling that it is just not enough. Thanks for any help.

-Brian 


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RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2010-07-29 Thread Morken, Tim
Brian, 

What helped me a lot with stains, fixatives, etc, was to make a chart of each 
of the stain or fixative families (silver, trichromes, etc) and list the 
method steps of each, components used, and purpose of the components. That put 
in perspective the reasons for the differences, which are mysteries otherwise!

I also used the NSH study guides, and any other book or study guide I could 
find to refer to. 

I was also lucky that I had a group of four people who were studying for the 
test and we spent a YEAR in a once-weekly study group going through each 
chapter in detail (Sheehan at that time). That was great for motivation and 
staying on track.

Tim Morken
Supervisor, Histology / IPOX
UCSF Medical Center
San Francisco, CA  
 

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
brian1...@email.com
Sent: Thursday, July 29, 2010 2:08 PM
To: Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam



Does anyone have any advice on good study aids, areas of prep to concentrate 
on, or any test taking strategies that helped them? I have been pouring  over 
the 3rd ed of histotechnology, a self instructional text for months but since 
I have started to look at the ASCP/ NSH discussion boards im getting the 
feeling that it is just not enough. Thanks for any help.

-Brian 


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[Histonet] HTL exam

2010-04-14 Thread Carrie Disbrow
Hi. I'll be taking the ASCP HTL exam in three months.
Does anyone know what the percentage of  enzyme histochemistry, electron 
microscopy, and cytology questions are for the HTL?
Thanks,
Carrie 
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RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2010-04-14 Thread Lee Peggy Wenk
That's really hard to say. There are no categories for Enzymes, EM or
Cytology.

The HT and HTL exams have 5 categories, 100 questions total. The number of
questions that a candidate is asked in each category is:
- Fixation = 10-25
- Processing/Embedding = 10-14
- Microtomy = 10-14
- Staining = 40-50
- Lab Operations (safety, math, equipment, regulations, etc.) = 10-15

Now, let's talk cytology questions. Was the question about:
- what solution the cells were placed in (alcohol, saccomano, etc) =
fixative question
- the Pap stain, or the Diff Quik = staining question
- bloodborne pathogens (BBP), centrifuge, staining GYN and non-GYN
separately = lab op questions

Same with Enzymes or IHC or EM:
- fresh tissue or fixed, and in what = fixation question
- time in processing or frozen, paraffin or resin = processing questions
- how thick to cut section, or frozen sectioning = microtomy questions
- how to do the stains, tissue ID = staining questions
- dilutions (math), molar solutions (math), BBP (safety), chemical disposal
(safety and regulations), how long to fix breast for ER/PR (regulations),
cryostat/microtome/processor (instrument), etc = lab op questions

Since there are 1000+ questions in the pool, and since candidates only
receive 100, random but in the above percentages, one person might get no
questions on, say, cytology, but another person could get 6, someone else 2.
Luck of the draw, so to speak.

So the person who says I got 6 cytology questions - really didn't. They
got, say, 2 fixation questions, 3 staining questions, and 1 regulation
question. The questions just happened to be on cytology. They could have
just as easily been on Gomori Trichrome.

Peggy A. Wenk, HTL(ASCP)SLS
Schools of Histotechnology
Beaumont Hospital
Royal Oak, MI 48073

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Carrie
Disbrow
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 3:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

Hi. I'll be taking the ASCP HTL exam in three months.
Does anyone know what the percentage of  enzyme histochemistry, electron
microscopy, and cytology questions are for the HTL?
Thanks,
Carrie
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RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2010-04-14 Thread Carrie Disbrow
Hi,
Come to think of it, there is a study guide and area of interest for most ASCP 
exams.
Thanks!
Carrie

 Podawiltz, Thomas tpodawi...@lrgh.org 4/14/2010 3:53 PM 
I believe you can down load that from the ASCP site. 


Tom Podawiltz HT (ASCP) 
Histology Section Head/Laboratory Safety Officer
LRGHealthcare
603-524-3211 ext: 3220



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Carrie Disbrow
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 3:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

Hi. I'll be taking the ASCP HTL exam in three months.
Does anyone know what the percentage of  enzyme histochemistry, electron 
microscopy, and cytology questions are for the HTL?
Thanks,
Carrie 
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RE: [Histonet] HTL exam

2010-04-14 Thread Carrie Disbrow
Hi Peggy,
Wow, your response is why I love this board. I'm glad I have three months to 
review the areas not in my daily routine work.
Wish me luck,
Carrie

 Lee  Peggy Wenk lpw...@sbcglobal.net 4/14/2010 10:27 PM 
That's really hard to say. There are no categories for Enzymes, EM or
Cytology.

The HT and HTL exams have 5 categories, 100 questions total. The number of
questions that a candidate is asked in each category is:
- Fixation = 10-25
- Processing/Embedding = 10-14
- Microtomy = 10-14
- Staining = 40-50
- Lab Operations (safety, math, equipment, regulations, etc.) = 10-15

Now, let's talk cytology questions. Was the question about:
- what solution the cells were placed in (alcohol, saccomano, etc) =
fixative question
- the Pap stain, or the Diff Quik = staining question
- bloodborne pathogens (BBP), centrifuge, staining GYN and non-GYN
separately = lab op questions

Same with Enzymes or IHC or EM:
- fresh tissue or fixed, and in what = fixation question
- time in processing or frozen, paraffin or resin = processing questions
- how thick to cut section, or frozen sectioning = microtomy questions
- how to do the stains, tissue ID = staining questions
- dilutions (math), molar solutions (math), BBP (safety), chemical disposal
(safety and regulations), how long to fix breast for ER/PR (regulations),
cryostat/microtome/processor (instrument), etc = lab op questions

Since there are 1000+ questions in the pool, and since candidates only
receive 100, random but in the above percentages, one person might get no
questions on, say, cytology, but another person could get 6, someone else 2.
Luck of the draw, so to speak.

So the person who says I got 6 cytology questions - really didn't. They
got, say, 2 fixation questions, 3 staining questions, and 1 regulation
question. The questions just happened to be on cytology. They could have
just as easily been on Gomori Trichrome.

Peggy A. Wenk, HTL(ASCP)SLS
Schools of Histotechnology
Beaumont Hospital
Royal Oak, MI 48073

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Carrie
Disbrow
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 3:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
Subject: [Histonet] HTL exam

Hi. I'll be taking the ASCP HTL exam in three months.
Does anyone know what the percentage of  enzyme histochemistry, electron
microscopy, and cytology questions are for the HTL?
Thanks,
Carrie
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[Histonet] HTL certification

2010-01-13 Thread Jeffrey Silverman
From the ASCP website (just google ASCP and HTL certification)
 
Histotechnologist, HTL(ASCP)
Application Fee: $210
To be eligible for this examination category, an applicant must satisfy the 
requirements of at least one of the following routes:
Route 1: Baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited college/university 
with a combination of 30 semester hours (45 quarter hours) of biology and 
chemistry AND successful completion of a NAACLS accredited Histotechnician or 
Histotechnology program within the last 5 years; or
Route 2: Baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited college/university 
with a combination of 30 semester hours (45 quarter hours) of biology and 
chemistry AND one year full time acceptable experience in a histopathology 
laboratory in the U.S., Canada or a CAP/The Joint Commission (JCAHO) accredited 
laboratory within the last ten years. This year of experience must be under the 
supervision of a pathologist (certified by the American Board of Pathology in 
Anatomic Pathology) or an appropriately board certified medical scientist.
Clinical Laboratory Experience
To fulfill the experience requirement for the Histotechnologist examination, 
you must have experience, within the last ten years, in the following areas:

Fixation 
Microtomy 
Processing 
Staining 
Jeff Silverman
 
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[Histonet] HTL and HT Thank all of you

2009-07-16 Thread Feher, Stephen
Thank all of you who posted a response to my question about BS degree's
and Histotechnologist.  I especially appreciate the number of responses
that came from seasoned HTL's.  Because of your impute I was able to
convince my hospital and craft a job description that leaves no one out
from consideration for the position.  Like may of you, I have been
burned in the past by having the experience but not the required
credentials to be paid properly for the work that I was doing.
Unfortunately, this is not likely to change.  The success that the USA
has shown in matters of QA and QC accuracy have been attributed to our
certification and accreditation processes.   
 
The increased sophistication of all aspects of Histotechnology and the
advent of molecular testing provide an excellent forum for all of us to
lobby our certification agencies to include or create additional
certifications for Histotechnologist to take part in Cytogenetic,
Molecular Pathology and the like.  Sure it may require some extra
training or college credit but that's exactly what every other field in
clinical laboratory medicine has had to do.  Every time I'm exposed to
another aspect of special staining or IHC it becomes clearer and clearer
that the scientific knowledge is there in our technologists.  We just
need to rally around that point and begin to have our State and National
Histology Associations to present a unified front to ASCP, CAP and the
like, for more recognition (and pay) based on the tasks that are already
being done.
 
We are getting ready to post a position for a Histotechnologist (HTL)
position (Manchester, New Hampshire) that will be the point person in
crafting the histology laboratory procedures and process for all aspects
of the lab.  The expected hire date will be in October.  We will not
be taking patient specimens until February of 2010 so this person will
not be engaged in wet work for some time.  As the year progresses we
will add 2 HT or above positions and 2 Path Tech (Assistant) positions
as well.   
 
Thanks again for all your help.
 
Steve
 

Stephen A. Feher, MS, SCT (ASCP)

Pathology Supervisor

Catholic Medical Center

100 McGregor Street

Manchester, NH 03102

603-663-6707

sfe...@cmc-nh.org mailto:sfe...@cmc-nh.org 

 
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RE: [Histonet] HTL

2009-07-15 Thread Kemlo Rogerson
Do you want the blunt truth?

There's a perception, even within the other disciplines in Diagnostic
Labs, that BMS's in Histology (HistoTechs) are second rate Scientists. I
know that's an inflammatory remark but I've battled with it for years.
Pharmacists, Physiotherapists, Ots, Audiologists and Speech Language
Therapists run Clinics treat Patients and are 'clinical'. The perception
is that 'scientists' are not clinical and before we get appreciated for
that we probably need to run Clinics ourselves but how do Histotechs/
BMS's achieve that? In the UK scientific staff are slowly doing that
with Anticoagulant Clinics, with advanced dissection and the reporting
of cervical smears after achieving the appropriate level of
qualification.

I'm hoping one day that the 'glass ceiling' will be taken off the Path
Labs and that a scientist will, after obtaining his/ her degree, Masters
(or PhD), like the Clinical Scientists, obtain the MRCPath and then
clinically lead a discipline. Only when we step from behind the skirts
of the Medics will the sun shine on us.

Does that help? 


 





Kemlo Rogerson MSc MIBiol CBiol DMS CSci FIBMS (I tried).   
 

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Shea's
Sent: 15 July 2009 04:13
To: jaustin1...@gmail.com
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] HTL

Michael,
Ditto, very well stated. I too believe that our industry is under
appreciated. Many new grads of today find a two year degree demeaning
and wouldn't consider HT because of it. I don't understand how some
professions like pharmacy  physical therapy gain respect and grow to
create 5 yr, 6yr  7yr programs. They are very well respected by the MDs
and Hospital administration and have nice salaries to show for it.

Why hasn't our field flourished?
Jan, BS, HTL
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Re: [Histonet] HTL

2009-07-15 Thread Anne van Binsbergen
well said!!
your statement: 'Only when we step from behind the skirts
of the Medics will the sun shine on us' deserves dissection (pardon the pun)

are we volutarily 'behind the medics
or
are we conveniently 'kept' there by those same medics

medics=pathologists (some exceptions)

where i come from most of these 'medics' are running the (very lucrative)
private labs and the techs are kept 'lean and hungry' - they are 'worker
bees'' grateful for work and paid a pittance.

i once voiced my desire to take unpaid leave in order to study further and
was refused time off for this, on the basis that i would then cost more to
employ!!!

i have a 4 year diploma (now called a BTech degree) - i am licensed as a
 Medical Technologist with Cell Path Speciality.
i am neither an HT or an HTL.
i have 30 years experience and have been supervising/managing AP labs for
over 15 years
but because i dont have a degree i would most likely have a hard time
finding employment in the USA or Canada - your loss guys.
its not what you call it its how you apply what you know - having a degree
does not make you a good tech.

flame away!!

AnnieinArabia (out of Africa)

2009/7/15 Kemlo Rogerson kemlo.roger...@waht.swest.nhs.uk

 Do you want the blunt truth?

 There's a perception, even within the other disciplines in Diagnostic
 Labs, that BMS's in Histology (HistoTechs) are second rate Scientists. I
 know that's an inflammatory remark but I've battled with it for years.
 Pharmacists, Physiotherapists, Ots, Audiologists and Speech Language
 Therapists run Clinics treat Patients and are 'clinical'. The perception
 is that 'scientists' are not clinical and before we get appreciated for
 that we probably need to run Clinics ourselves but how do Histotechs/
 BMS's achieve that? In the UK scientific staff are slowly doing that
 with Anticoagulant Clinics, with advanced dissection and the reporting
 of cervical smears after achieving the appropriate level of
 qualification.

 I'm hoping one day that the 'glass ceiling' will be taken off the Path
 Labs and that a scientist will, after obtaining his/ her degree, Masters
 (or PhD), like the Clinical Scientists, obtain the MRCPath and then
 clinically lead a discipline. Only when we step from behind the skirts
 of the Medics will the sun shine on us.

 Does that help?








 Kemlo Rogerson MSc MIBiol CBiol DMS CSci FIBMS (I tried).


 -Original Message-
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 [mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Shea's
 Sent: 15 July 2009 04:13
 To: jaustin1...@gmail.com
 Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL

 Michael,
 Ditto, very well stated. I too believe that our industry is under
 appreciated. Many new grads of today find a two year degree demeaning
 and wouldn't consider HT because of it. I don't understand how some
 professions like pharmacy  physical therapy gain respect and grow to
 create 5 yr, 6yr  7yr programs. They are very well respected by the MDs
 and Hospital administration and have nice salaries to show for it.

 Why hasn't our field flourished?
 Jan, BS, HTL
 ___
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 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

 ___
 Histonet mailing list
 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet




-- 
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Abu Dhabi
UAE
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Re: [Histonet] HTL

2009-07-15 Thread thecitan
Anne

I think most techs I know are in the voluntary category you speak of.

Most are happy being microtome monkeys and never exploring the other 
possibilities in the field. Nothing wrong with that if that's what you want to 
do. Although there are many things you can do with - like anne said- applying 
what you know. 

As far as pathologists keeping you back -i think its just like any other 
business. The boss will always look to keep more money and will pay his workers 
the lowest he can. That's when you take your experience elsewhere, or simply 
stay somewhere for a while to learn and beef up that resume.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: Anne van Binsbergen anni...@gmail.com

Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 12:01:24 
To: Kemlo Rogersonkemlo.roger...@waht.swest.nhs.uk
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu; Shea'sjshea...@roadrunner.com
Subject: Re: [Histonet] HTL


well said!!
your statement: 'Only when we step from behind the skirts
of the Medics will the sun shine on us' deserves dissection (pardon the pun)

are we volutarily 'behind the medics
or
are we conveniently 'kept' there by those same medics

medics=pathologists (some exceptions)

where i come from most of these 'medics' are running the (very lucrative)
private labs and the techs are kept 'lean and hungry' - they are 'worker
bees'' grateful for work and paid a pittance.

i once voiced my desire to take unpaid leave in order to study further and
was refused time off for this, on the basis that i would then cost more to
employ!!!

i have a 4 year diploma (now called a BTech degree) - i am licensed as a
 Medical Technologist with Cell Path Speciality.
i am neither an HT or an HTL.
i have 30 years experience and have been supervising/managing AP labs for
over 15 years
but because i dont have a degree i would most likely have a hard time
finding employment in the USA or Canada - your loss guys.
its not what you call it its how you apply what you know - having a degree
does not make you a good tech.

flame away!!

AnnieinArabia (out of Africa)

2009/7/15 Kemlo Rogerson kemlo.roger...@waht.swest.nhs.uk

 Do you want the blunt truth?

 There's a perception, even within the other disciplines in Diagnostic
 Labs, that BMS's in Histology (HistoTechs) are second rate Scientists. I
 know that's an inflammatory remark but I've battled with it for years.
 Pharmacists, Physiotherapists, Ots, Audiologists and Speech Language
 Therapists run Clinics treat Patients and are 'clinical'. The perception
 is that 'scientists' are not clinical and before we get appreciated for
 that we probably need to run Clinics ourselves but how do Histotechs/
 BMS's achieve that? In the UK scientific staff are slowly doing that
 with Anticoagulant Clinics, with advanced dissection and the reporting
 of cervical smears after achieving the appropriate level of
 qualification.

 I'm hoping one day that the 'glass ceiling' will be taken off the Path
 Labs and that a scientist will, after obtaining his/ her degree, Masters
 (or PhD), like the Clinical Scientists, obtain the MRCPath and then
 clinically lead a discipline. Only when we step from behind the skirts
 of the Medics will the sun shine on us.

 Does that help?








 Kemlo Rogerson MSc MIBiol CBiol DMS CSci FIBMS (I tried).


 -Original Message-
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 [mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Shea's
 Sent: 15 July 2009 04:13
 To: jaustin1...@gmail.com
 Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL

 Michael,
 Ditto, very well stated. I too believe that our industry is under
 appreciated. Many new grads of today find a two year degree demeaning
 and wouldn't consider HT because of it. I don't understand how some
 professions like pharmacy  physical therapy gain respect and grow to
 create 5 yr, 6yr  7yr programs. They are very well respected by the MDs
 and Hospital administration and have nice salaries to show for it.

 Why hasn't our field flourished?
 Jan, BS, HTL
 ___
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 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

 ___
 Histonet mailing list
 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet




-- 
Anne van Binsbergen (Hope)
Abu Dhabi
UAE
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RE: [Histonet] HTL

2009-07-15 Thread Kemlo Rogerson
 
Some volunteer to stay 'behind the medics' as it is safe; some are kept
there kicking and screaming (I'm hoarse). Medics are medics; it is a
'gentlemen's club' but non-Path medics are finding their position eroded
by the Consultant Nurse and Consultant Physiotherapist. Pathologists are
strenously opposing the idea of a Consultant Biomedical Scientist but
bizzarely the Consultant Clinical Scientist is seen as OK. 
 

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Anne van
Binsbergen
Sent: 15 July 2009 09:01
To: Kemlo Rogerson
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu; Shea's
Subject: Re: [Histonet] HTL

well said!!
your statement: 'Only when we step from behind the skirts of the Medics
will the sun shine on us' deserves dissection (pardon the pun)

are we volutarily 'behind the medics
or
are we conveniently 'kept' there by those same medics

medics=pathologists (some exceptions)

where i come from most of these 'medics' are running the (very
lucrative) private labs and the techs are kept 'lean and hungry' - they
are 'worker bees'' grateful for work and paid a pittance.

i once voiced my desire to take unpaid leave in order to study further
and was refused time off for this, on the basis that i would then cost
more to employ!!!

i have a 4 year diploma (now called a BTech degree) - i am licensed as a
Medical Technologist with Cell Path Speciality.
i am neither an HT or an HTL.
i have 30 years experience and have been supervising/managing AP labs
for over 15 years but because i dont have a degree i would most likely
have a hard time finding employment in the USA or Canada - your loss
guys.
its not what you call it its how you apply what you know - having a
degree does not make you a good tech.

flame away!!

AnnieinArabia (out of Africa)

2009/7/15 Kemlo Rogerson kemlo.roger...@waht.swest.nhs.uk

 Do you want the blunt truth?

 There's a perception, even within the other disciplines in Diagnostic 
 Labs, that BMS's in Histology (HistoTechs) are second rate Scientists.

 I know that's an inflammatory remark but I've battled with it for
years.
 Pharmacists, Physiotherapists, Ots, Audiologists and Speech Language 
 Therapists run Clinics treat Patients and are 'clinical'. The 
 perception is that 'scientists' are not clinical and before we get 
 appreciated for that we probably need to run Clinics ourselves but how

 do Histotechs/ BMS's achieve that? In the UK scientific staff are 
 slowly doing that with Anticoagulant Clinics, with advanced dissection

 and the reporting of cervical smears after achieving the appropriate 
 level of qualification.

 I'm hoping one day that the 'glass ceiling' will be taken off the Path

 Labs and that a scientist will, after obtaining his/ her degree, 
 Masters (or PhD), like the Clinical Scientists, obtain the MRCPath and

 then clinically lead a discipline. Only when we step from behind the 
 skirts of the Medics will the sun shine on us.

 Does that help?








 Kemlo Rogerson MSc MIBiol CBiol DMS CSci FIBMS (I tried).


 -Original Message-
 From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 [mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Shea's
 Sent: 15 July 2009 04:13
 To: jaustin1...@gmail.com
 Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Subject: [Histonet] HTL

 Michael,
 Ditto, very well stated. I too believe that our industry is under 
 appreciated. Many new grads of today find a two year degree demeaning 
 and wouldn't consider HT because of it. I don't understand how some 
 professions like pharmacy  physical therapy gain respect and grow to 
 create 5 yr, 6yr  7yr programs. They are very well respected by the 
 MDs and Hospital administration and have nice salaries to show for it.

 Why hasn't our field flourished?
 Jan, BS, HTL
 ___
 Histonet mailing list
 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

 ___
 Histonet mailing list
 Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet




--
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Abu Dhabi
UAE
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[Histonet] HTL/BS

2009-07-14 Thread Patti Loykasek
Thought I would throw my 2 cents out there, too. I received my HTL back in
the early 80's (hate to think how old that makes me!), I already had a BS
when I went to histotech school. I have found that it has made a difference
in my career to have the HTL. When I have worked in hospitals, I was on the
same pay scale as the med techs, the HT's were not. When I received my QIHC,
some kind med techs lobbied for me to get the same specialty certification
bonus that the med techs received. I feel fortunate to have mostly been
treated by physicians and co-workers with respect, and do feel that my work
is a profession ( I enjoy it). I am thankful  to have the wonderful
experiences, and I go home  have a glass of wine on the bad days!

Patti Loykasek



This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the 
intended recipients and may contain privileged information. Any unauthorized 
review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the 
intended 
recipient, please contact the sender by e-mail and destroy all copies of the 
original message, or you may call PhenoPath Laboratories, Seattle, WA U.S.A. 
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[Histonet] HTL

2009-07-14 Thread Shea's
Michael,
Ditto, very well stated. I too believe that our industry is under appreciated. 
Many new grads of today find a two year degree demeaning and wouldn't consider 
HT because of it. I don't understand how some professions like pharmacy  
physical therapy gain respect and grow to create 5 yr, 6yr  7yr programs. They 
are very well respected by the MDs and Hospital administration and have nice 
salaries to show for it.

Why hasn't our field flourished?
Jan, BS, HTL
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[Histonet] HTL (ASCP) seeks employment opportunites

2009-04-19 Thread Pathrm35


Degreed HTL/QIHC certified tech seeking opportunities in hi volume private labs 
in the southeastern US. I am a Florida licensed supervisor w/ 20 years 
experience including dermpath, IHC and lead positions. Interested in all 
shifts, IHC,dermpath  and molecular path opportunities. Please feel free to 
pass my email along to anyone you know who may be interested. 

Thanks in advance. 

No recruiters please! 
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Re: [Histonet] HTL (ASCP) seeks employment opportunites

2009-04-19 Thread Rene J Buesa
In the last issue of Advance for Medical Lab. Professionals there was an 
advertisement by Quest Diagnostics where they are looking for a supervisor at 
their Miramar histolab.I think you should contact them ASAP
René J.

--- On Sun, 4/19/09, pathr...@comcast.net pathr...@comcast.net wrote:

From: pathr...@comcast.net pathr...@comcast.net
Subject: [Histonet] HTL (ASCP) seeks employment opportunites
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Date: Sunday, April 19, 2009, 10:20 AM


Degreed HTL/QIHC certified tech seeking opportunities in hi volume private labs
in the southeastern US. I am a Florida licensed supervisor w/ 20 years
experience including dermpath, IHC and lead positions. Interested in all
shifts, IHC,dermpath  and molecular path opportunities. Please feel free to
pass my email along to anyone you know who may be interested. 

Thanks in advance. 

No recruiters please! 
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RE: [Histonet] HTL Flash Cards?

2008-09-27 Thread joelle weaver

I was not involved in writing any questions/answers. However I am thinking of 
buying some of the cards just of out curiousity! I can understand the concern 
about the memorization aspect versus true understanding, application- a.k.a 
knowledge. I definately think that this would be a drawback. I have worked 
with a number of folks who seemed to have memorized information for the test 
but either do not seem to have retained any of it, and/or unable to apply any 
of the details of that information when in a real laboratory situation. (and 
have apparantly also lost the ability to look up needed information).  I can 
also see that the HT versus HTL topic lists do not seem to coincide much with 
the topic and study lists published for registry exam preparation on the ASCP 
website? I know that the special stains list is most definately not a match. Go 
figure? 
It will be interesting to see what reply is posted.
Joelle From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];  Date: Sat, 27 Sep 
2008 11:28:56 -0400 Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL Flash Cards? CC:   I had 
never heard of them, so I looked them up on the website. Morrison Media 
www.mo-med.com  They sell all kinds of flashcards and study guides for lots 
of tests. Under the E-H category, where the HT and HTL flashcards have a link, 
there are also links to Electrician exam, Paramedic exam, First Responder 
test, Funeral Service test, GED, GRE, GMAT - you get the idea.   According 
to their general blurb, they have experts in the field writing the flashcards. 
Does anyone know any histotech involved in writing the flashcards? I'd love 
for them to talk about this.  I think for some people, having flashcards 
would fit with their style of learning - give them soundbites of information 
on topics, instead of having them read entire books. Or use this as a 
supplement to studying. Or have them in their purse/pocket where they can pull 
out a card and study on the go, instead of a book.  But I do have some 
concerns about the flashcards and the test taking information this company 
supplies. If there is someone out there who helped write the cards, or someone 
who has bought the cards to respond, that would be helpful. - They have 
topics divided into 2 tests (have to pay separate for them) - HT and HTL. But 
when I look at what's on the HT exam vs. what's on the HTL exam, I have some 
concerns. - HTL need to know chemical fixatives, HT are supposed to know 
chemical and physical fixation. - HTL need to know autolysis, HT are supposed 
to know autolysis and putrefaction - HTL need to know acid decalcification, 
HT are supposed to know decalcification and chelation - HT are supposed to 
know Immunofluorescence, Electron microscopy, Carbowax and Celloidin, which 
are not listed on the HTL topics (yet ASCP HTL exam would include these 
topics, but ASCP HT exam would not) - The only stains listed for HT are HE, 
Mucopolysaccharides, Hyaluronidase, Gomori Trichrome.  - HTL stains include 
Connective tissue, PTAH, Bacteria, Fungus, Gram, Auramine-Rhodamine, Exogenous 
pigments, Minerals. Yet on the ASCP HT exam, all these stains are also 
required for the HT exam. You get the idea.  Also, under the 
Histotechnology Exam Secrets Study Guide, they are saying that their 
histotechnology exam study guide will help people beat the test taking game, 
and that their research in the HT and HTL exam offered by ASCP reveals 
specific weaknesses that you can exploit.  Basically, what followed were 
test taking tips - how to guess to your advantage, how to tell the difference 
between right answers and clever sounding traps, how random bits of 
information often give away the right answer, how to look for key words to 
identify the correct answer, etc.  Yet I know that the ASCP Board of Registry 
has (or at least did have) a psychometrician on staff - someone with a PhD in 
test writing, who works with the histotechs and pathologists writing the exam 
questions, to eliminate all the above clues.  Between this company's 
tips and the customer testimonials that they only studied for 1 week (one 
case, 5 hours) and passed the exam - I'm worried about people who aren't 
studying for the HT/HTL exam, and think these test taking clues will help them 
pass. This isn't like taking the GRE, where you can get by with some math and 
grammar background that can to be refreshed - the HT and HTL exams are based 
on a LOT of information that has to be LEARNED and APPLIED.  The other 
concern I have is that the 3 flashcards they show as examples are still 
MEMORIZED information. What test takers have problems with are the 
PROBLEM-SOLVING and TROUBLESHOOTING aspects of the HT and HTL exams. Yes, they 
need to know what the oxidizer in the retic stain is, but they also need to 
know how to tell if it isn't working, or what to do if they run out, etc.  
So I'd love to hear from someone involved with writing these flashcards/study 
guides, and would love to hear from someone who actually bought

Re: [Histonet] HTL Flash Cards?

2008-09-27 Thread Bryan Llewellyn

In the three example cards they show there are errors.

In the first one it gives liter and meter.  I know this spelling is 
common in the United States, but I believe the SI standard is litre and 
metre.  In other words, include both.


In the middle one, about reticulin staining, I would dispute the dogmatic 
nature of the information.  Although this is a common explanation, it is not 
the modern one, which uses analogies to the photographic process.  It is 
presented as absolute fact when it is an unproven suggestion as to what may 
happen.


The final one, about dye structure, uses chromogen as a synonym for 
chromophore, whereas it is a little used term for the dye+chromophore 
combination.  For that reason, the final use of chromophore should 
actually be chromogen.  The word auxophore does not exist.  It should be 
auxochrome.


If you are going to use flash cards for improving rote learning of facts, 
make sure the facts being learned are correct.  I suggest that students 
should have the cards checked out by an experienced educator technologist 
before using them, as first-learned information stays with you for decades.


Bryan Llewellyn


- Original Message - 
From: Lee  Peggy Wenk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Kristen Yaros' [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'Histonet' 
histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu

Sent: Saturday, September 27, 2008 8:28 AM
Subject: RE: [Histonet] HTL Flash Cards?



I had never heard of them, so I looked them up on the website. Morrison
Media www.mo-med.com

They sell all kinds of flashcards and study guides for lots of tests. 
Under

the E-H category, where the HT and HTL flashcards have a link, there are
also links to Electrician exam, Paramedic exam, First Responder test,
Funeral Service test, GED, GRE, GMAT - you get the idea.

According to their general blurb, they have experts in the field writing 
the

flashcards. Does anyone know any histotech involved in writing the
flashcards? I'd love for them to talk about this.

I think for some people, having flashcards would fit with their style of
learning - give them soundbites of information on topics, instead of 
having

them read entire books. Or use this as a supplement to studying. Or have
them in their purse/pocket where they can pull out a card and study on the
go, instead of a book.

But I do have some concerns about the flashcards and the test taking
information this company supplies. If there is someone out there who 
helped
write the cards, or someone who has bought the cards to respond, that 
would

be helpful.
- They have topics divided into 2 tests (have to pay separate for them) - 
HT

and HTL. But when I look at what's on the HT exam vs. what's on the HTL
exam, I have some concerns.
- HTL need to know chemical fixatives, HT are supposed to know chemical 
and

physical fixation.
- HTL need to know autolysis, HT are supposed to know autolysis and
putrefaction
- HTL need to know acid decalcification, HT are supposed to know
decalcification and chelation
- HT are supposed to know Immunofluorescence, Electron microscopy, 
Carbowax

and Celloidin, which are not listed on the HTL topics (yet ASCP HTL exam
would include these topics, but ASCP HT exam would not)
- The only stains listed for HT are HE, Mucopolysaccharides, 
Hyaluronidase,

Gomori Trichrome.
- HTL stains include Connective tissue, PTAH, Bacteria, Fungus, Gram,
Auramine-Rhodamine, Exogenous pigments, Minerals. Yet on the ASCP HT exam,
all these stains are also required for the HT exam.
You get the idea.

Also, under the Histotechnology Exam Secrets Study Guide, they are 
saying
that their histotechnology exam study guide will help people beat the 
test
taking game, and that their research in the HT and HTL exam offered by 
ASCP

reveals specific weaknesses that you can exploit.

Basically, what followed were test taking tips - how to guess to your
advantage, how to tell the difference between right answers and clever
sounding traps, how random bits of information often give away the right
answer, how to look for key words to identify the correct answer, etc.

Yet I know that the ASCP Board of Registry has (or at least did have) a
psychometrician on staff - someone with a PhD in test writing, who works
with the histotechs and pathologists writing the exam questions, to
eliminate all the above clues.

Between this company's tips and the customer testimonials that they only
studied for 1 week (one case, 5 hours) and passed the exam - I'm worried
about people who aren't studying for the HT/HTL exam, and think these test
taking clues will help them pass. This isn't like taking the GRE, where 
you
can get by with some math and grammar background that can to be 
refreshed -

the HT and HTL exams are based on a LOT of information that has to be
LEARNED and APPLIED.

The other concern I have is that the 3 flashcards they show as examples 
are

still MEMORIZED information. What test takers have problems with are the
PROBLEM-SOLVING and TROUBLESHOOTING aspects of the HT

[Histonet] HTL Flash Cards?

2008-09-24 Thread Kristen Yaros
Has anyone heard of these? I just came across this site and was wondering if
anyone has used these pre-made flash cards.

http://www.flashcardsecrets.com/histotech/

-- 
Kristen Yaros, HT (ASCP)CM
Histotechnology Society of Delaware
Correspondence Secretary
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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