Category: Sonography Careers
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Can You Become a Sonographer With a Criminal Record?
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Quick answer There’s no single national rule that bars someone with a criminal record from sonography. Instead, a record can come up at several points — a program’s background check, a clinical site’s screening, a credentialing body’s conduct review, and a state licensing board where licensure is required. Each reviews on a case-by-case basis, weighing…
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Can You Work Part-Time as a Sonographer?
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Quick answer Yes — part-time, PRN, and per-diem sonographer work all exist, though how common it is by setting isn’t something any source tracks. There’s no clean government figure for how many sonographers work part-time. What is documented is that the field spans different settings — hospitals, outpatient clinics, physicians’ offices, labs — and those…
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Can Sonographers Have Tattoos and Piercings?
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Quick answer Usually, yes — but it depends on the dress code where you work. There’s no national rule about tattoos or piercings for sonographers. Appearance policies are set by individual employers and clinical sites, and they range from relaxed to strict. Some allow visible tattoos and piercings freely; others ask that they be covered…
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Can You Be a Sonographer If You’re Color Blind?
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Quick answer Possibly — it depends on the program’s and employer’s vision standards, and on the kind of imaging involved. There’s no single national color-vision rule for sonographers. Most ultrasound imaging is greyscale, while some techniques like Doppler add color overlays. Programs publish their own technical and vision standards, so whether color vision deficiency is…
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Do Entry-Level Sonographer Jobs Require Experience?
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Quick answer Some postings ask for experience, some don’t — and there’s no data on how often. No source tracks how many entry-level sonographer jobs require prior experience, so anyone quoting a percentage is guessing. What is documented is the field’s demand — about 5,800 openings a year on average through 2034 — and the…
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Travel vs. Staff Sonography: How to Decide
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Both are the same scanning, the same credentials, the same physical work. What separates a travel sonographer from a staff sonographer is everything around the job — the contract, the stability, the benefits, and how the pay is set. Travel trades roots for flexibility and a pay structure nobody can quote you in advance. Staff…
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Sonography Degree Levels Compared: Certificate vs. Associate’s vs. Bachelor’s
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Sonography has more than one way in. You can enter through a certificate, an associate’s degree, or a bachelor’s degree, and they’re not interchangeable — they differ in length, cost, who they’re built for, and what they add beyond the core training. The table below lays the three side by side. One honest note up…
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Can You Transfer Credits Into a Sonography Program?
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Quick answer Sometimes — but usually only the general-education credits, not the sonography coursework. General courses like English, math, and basic sciences often transfer between accredited schools. The hands-on sonography courses — scanning labs, ultrasound physics, supervised clinicals — rarely transfer, because they’re competency-based and tied to a specific program’s training. The receiving program decides…
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How Do You Apply to a Sonography Program?
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Quick answer There’s no single national application for sonography school. Each program sets its own process, so the exact steps differ from one to the next. That said, certain pieces show up again and again: prerequisite coursework, a minimum GPA, sometimes observation hours, and often an essay or interview. Knowing the common components — and…
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Do Sonography Programs Have Waitlists?
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Quick answer Some do, some don’t — it depends entirely on the program. There’s no national waitlist for sonography school, no central system, and no rule that says programs must keep one. A program with more qualified applicants than seats might keep a waitlist, run a competitive selection each cycle, or both. The only reliable…
