OPTIDONN said:
Great idea with the colored post-its! I'm taking the ABO Advanced exam in a few weeks! Thanks for the tips!
You're taking the ABO Advanced? What a hoot! After I signed on with a very large Ophthalmic practice as their network administrator, they asked if I would mind "helping out" in the optics lab when I had spare time. I told them "no problem", and I liked the work so much that I asked if I could sit for the basic ABO exam in November. I had only started work there in May, and had spent limited time in the lab, so the chief optician recommended to the partners of the practice that I get a year or two of experience in before they paid for me to sit for the exam. Two of the three partners over-ruled the other, and paid for me to sit for the the exam, and I beat the lead optician's ABO exam score by over 10 points. When I expressed interest in taking the exam, the optician that I was learning under was interested, too. He was a smart guy, but he had a hard time with mathematics, so I helped him out, and he posted a decent score, too. After that, all the dispensing opticians in the salesroom started studying and signing up so we wouldn't take their jobs (we didn't want them!)
Few people appreciate the depth of knowledge necessary to become a good optician in an ophthalmic practice (as opposed to a "technician" at a big-box eyeglass outlet). A decent optician not only knows optics (how to handle basic corrections, astigmatism, wedge, reading correction, etc), but they've got to know the customer's physiology, occupation, hobbies, habits, aversion/preference for corrective lenses, and balance that with their fashion sense (if a pretty lady has a hefty correction for distance vision and also wants or needs a strong correction for reading, the surfacing curves will be awfully severe if you have to fit that correction in frames that are only 1"-1-1/2" from top to bottom). Also, some people are not tolerant at all to changes in base curve, so if they want to go from relative planar frames to something that wraps around a bit more, they can end up disoriented or even a bit nauseous. There's a lot to it, and sometimes it borders on art vs science.