What gives the best impression on dental school admissions: shadowing a dentist or being a dental assistant?
Assisting will absolutely look better than shadowing for lots of reasons: you experience the pressure of patient treatment first hand, you really get to learn procedures well because you have to know them almost as well as the dentist, and adcoms who know anything know it is not a glamorous job and they will know you are interested in dentistry. It is definitely a more intense involvement than shadowing. The downside is that it is a job and takes a lot more time than shadowing. I was a dental assistant while I did my post-bacc work and it was a good way to make some money and also get experience in a dental office. I think a lot of dental school applicants do the bare minimum in shadowing, which doesn't set them apart in the eyes of dental adcoms. Behind GPA and DAT scores, experience is the best way to set yourself apart from other applicants.
What gives the best impression on dental school admissions: shadowing a dentist or being a dental assistant?
4.0GPA and 22TS with minimal shadowing >>> 3.0GPA and 20TS with 1000+hours of assisting.
Do you have any evidence to support this?
I think we can all agree (like the above poster stated) that EC's matter little if there is a large descrepancy between the GPA and DAT's of two separate applicants. But the OP asked about the impression in admissions committees.
As for evidence, I have no more evidence than just my own experience and what many people have told me. I was told by my interviewer that she was impressed with my experience and that she thought it showed my dedication to pursuing a career in dentistry. I have heard others with similar experience say the same about their interview. I do not remember anyone reporting that their interviewer thought their minimal shadowing experience was impressive.
Again this is anecdotal, but each of the handful of former dental assistants in my class went into their interviews with tons of confidence and got accepted, despite a few of us having lower numbers. Just by simple math we know that we took the spots of some applicants who had higher numbers, and the only reason for this I can think of would be either experience or the confidence it gave us for the interview.
Beyond the application process, the hands-on experience of assisting has helped me tons in dental school, especially now that we are up on clinic. Taking radiographs and impressions, placing rubber dams, gentle handling of soft tissues, and interacting with patients all come pretty easy to me. Often I am done with work before my classmates. Also, your first year professors are less likely to talk to you like a child if you appear like you know what you are talking about.
Bottom line (for me): Students graduating from dental school will all pretty much be on the same level, but I feel dental school has been easier and I have done MUCH better than I would have if I had only shadowed.
I think his/her time would be better spent doing something far more intellectually stimulating like research rather than accruing thousands of hours suctioning and taking x-rays (assisting is a pretty menial job, IMO).
Crushing fly heads or sawing teeth in half seem pretty menial to me. It looks like I have as little respect for being a lab grunt as dawg has being a dental assistant (I envy your future employees, BTW). Well, I guess we'll have to agree to disagree. Dawg, you advocate for cleaning petri dishes all you want.
To the OP, do what you are interested in. Just know that adcoms can sift through the BS. Some research experiences will help you a lot. Some will not. The same can be said for clinical experience.
Remember though, that EVERY dental school in the country makes you see and successfully treat patients, and it is my opinion that NOTHING teaches you critical thinking in a dental environment like having done it before in a clinical setting.
4.0GPA and 22TS with minimal shadowing >>> 3.0GPA and 20TS with 1000+hours of assisting.
The question was what looks better to dental schools, assisting or shadowing. And the answer is assisting due to the reasons people have mentioned. Assisting and research are very different experiences and both are enlightening. Yes, research is more mentally stimulating, but assisting offers hands on experience and unique patient interaction.You think this because you've never done any meaningful research. I have both assisted and done research, and can say without a doubt, that the latter is far more intellectually stimulating. To each his own, though.