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Does anyone know where on the web you can find statistics or rankings on the Dental Schools.
usually schools in an underseved community. For instance alabama and uofp are in or around underserved community where you get to do a lot of different clinical work.which schools do u believe offer the most clinical experience?
Here's some insight on this one for you. I graduated from UCONN Dental School in '97, did 2 years of a GPR(hospital based general dentistry residency)and have been in private practice now for almost 2 years. In the thousands of patient encounters I've had I could probably count the number of times I've been asked where I went to dental school with both hands. Your patients will always assume that you've had the best training possible, and most dental school curiculums turn out competent dentists. The big difference for all of you is the costs. My dental school loans were anywhere from 1/2 to 1/4 of those in my residency who went to private dental schools. How this relates is that every month I write out a loan repayment check for about $800 where their's are between $1600 to $3200 per month!
pacific is around an underserved community? 😱usually schools in an underseved community. For instance alabama and uofp are in or around underserved community where you get to do a lot of different clinical work.
Yeah, I wouldn't put temple in the top ten for anything. But, I digress...I don't see how temple would make it into the top ten either. If we are talking top ten clinical schools then yes, temple would be on the list but it looks like you are listing the top ten research schools. If you are looking for clinical schools then go to case, detroit, UoP, temple, or a school in any underserved community. Just about all the schools in CA are known to have good clinics also.
this post started when i was 14...
1. San Antonio
2. Baylor
2. Houston
No other schools are worthy of being ranked, IMO.
...I plan on going past my four years of dental school and specializing in oral surgery. What can I say, I find implants, bone filing, and mandibular reconstructions facinating...
Then attend Temple, they have one of the best Oral Surgery programs! You will see so many patients! I interviewed there in November, and they told us that 35%(approx.) of their graduates specialize in Oral Surgery. The average wait is 1year.
Top Ten schools, in no particular order.
BU, UF, Columbia, UPenn, Temple, UConn, Uof Pacific, Case, Iowa, UNC
(No to Harvard b/c from what I have read you as a dental student are on your own.)
I'm curious as to why you put BU over Tufts, didn't add Maryland or Michigan and a little bit questionable on some of the others..
1. San Antonio
2. Baylor
2. Houston
No other schools are worthy of being ranked, IMO.
Last fall the class of 2005 ranked NUMBER ONE in the country on Part II of the national board exams , and in March the school moved into the top 10 nationwide in funding from the National Institute of Dental Crainiofacial Research (NIDCR), a division of the National Institutes of Health.
The class of '05 also ranked fifth in the nation on Part I of national board exam which they took between their sophomore and junior years.
Of the class of '05, 48% went on to pursure advanced dental education.
(this data was published in the Spring issue of "UAB Dentistry " magazine, 2006.)
hahha i like this. We are just special... everything is better in Texas! 👍
Of the class of '05, 48% went on to pursure advanced dental education.
Columbia
Harvard
Penn
UCLA