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Hey everyone, I cant believe I get to make a thread like this. Its been such a long journey to get into dental school after 2 years of hard work (on top of the 4 years of undergrad). I feel so lucky and privileged to be able to go into this profession and become a health care provider. I first want to say that every one of these schools is a good school and that I am honored that they picked me for an acceptance. I will always be grateful to them for this and wish them the best. If I had only been accept to any one of these schools only, I would be ecstatic and more than happy to attend, but I must make a choice. I have pretty much already decided on Buffalo, but a decision like this shouldnt be made so hastily and I want to look at all my options.
My main question is between Buffalo and Temple. I love both schools and was wondering if anyone would pick Temple over Buffalo? The rest of the thread is for those who are interested in those schools. Can anyone tell me more about the city of Buffalo? Would the advantage of Temples clinical training overshadow Buffalos low tuition and its own clinical training? Thank you all for taking the time to read and reply.
1. Buffalo
Price: $238,311
Clinical Training: Clinical experience first year. Good reputation for clinical training.
Chair/Scheduling: Schedule own patient, use to have own chair but new dean is bringing in more international students so we will have to share chairs. Large patient pool. You will be assigned patients.
Technology: Uses Macbook Pro, electronic textbooks. Sim lab/preclinical lab is old, I dont think they have an actual sim lab. Recorded lectures/video lectures.
City: Dont know too much, decent size city, will snow (which is a plus)
Student/Faculty: Good class size at around 90. Students like the faculty; they are treated like colleagues and respected. Some faculty is med school faculties, and we will have same classes with the med school.
Community Service:
School starts in August. Multiple choice tests, anatomy is just the upper part of the body, and will have 24 hour gross lab open to you. If you fail, you come back in January and retake course.
Pro: Really cheap tuition, great faculty, good patient pool.
Con: old pre clinic lab, might have trouble with chairs in the future
2. Temple
Price: $341,899
Clinical Training: Best out of the 4, you get to do a lot of extractions and restorations. No problem finding patients. (75-125 extractions, 10+ root canals, 15 crowns, 75-100 restorations, 10+ dentures). Start clinic during 2nd year. You will have graduation requirement numbers.
Chair/Scheduling: Have your own chair, schedule your own patients. Sometimes it can be competitive to get patients.
Technology: New renovations. Video recorded lectures, converting to digital office. They do not use e-books.
City: It is an 8am-5pm school, and afterwards people go home because the area is that bad. There is usually no one around at night and they do not advise you to be on campus after 6 pm. The worst part about this school is the location. It seems very unsafe, but they take measures to protect the students with police and security presence.
Student/Faculty: Most students were pretty nice and excited about the school. One person felt he wouldve fit better elsewhere. One tour guide was kind of rude and just texted during our lunch and didnt really try to engage in conversation with us.
Community Service: Outreach clinics.
Lease all of your instruments. Practice management courses. They have a new robotic typedont but since they have enough patients they dont really use it.
Pro: best clinical training, you will get a lot of practice and be ready to come out and practice dentistry, improving the school with renovations and digital office. Well established school with huge patient pool.
Con: the city is in a really bad area, and will change the dental school experience I think.
3. UNLV
Price: $355,157
Clinical Training: They have a good patient pool. Competency based requirements after a certain number of procedures. First year you learn about the operatory, 2nd year you do anesthesia on each other.
Chair/Scheduling: Schedule your own patient but you get your own chair.
Technology: Paperless/Digital office, they use ebooks (vital source). New school so they have flat screen TVs in the lecture halls, new preclinic with monitors. Have to buy a 1,300 Dell. There are some recorded lectures but not every teacher does it or allows for it.
City: Las Vegas would be a decent place to live, and it is close to home which is a huge plus.
Student/Faculty: Small groups/teaching you get a buddy system of 1,2,3,4th year and faculty mentor and team leader , and everyone works together and mentors each other which is a plus. Help each other and learn from them. 8 chairs/instructor. Get one clinical grade. One of the tour guides did not seem to enthusiastic about the school, and have heard some faculty can have an ego and look down on you. Another student didnt seem too excited about it, but then heard from a friend that a friend of his loved his time there. All this hearsay makes it hard to know who to believe.
Community Service : Saturday childrens clinic, smile day, required amount of community service hours.
Get a pretty long Christmas break. Mon-Fri 8am 3 or 5 pm. Integrated curriculum, there are no departments. Coordinated teaching of different subjects. 1st year you assist/observe, 2nd year do the easy stuff, 3rd/4th year in clinic practicing dentistry. Not really a practice management course. Assess your own work/request competency. A newer school.
Pro: new school with nice facilities and technology. Very interested in the buddy system where we help each other. Huge pro is that it is close to home (from northern California)
Con: tuition is a little high, instructors might one be the best.
4. Nova
Price: $329,480
Clinical Training: Not known to be the best. They have some patient pool problems maybe because the area around the school is of a higher income median.
Chair/Scheduling: You are assigned a family of patients that you work on, and sometimes you might not be able to get the procedure you need but the team leaders will switch around patients for you. Shares seats and schedule your own patients. There is a waiting list of patients. Competency on manikins, huge con for the school. Comprehensive patient care hope your patient has problems.
Technology: Very nice facilities. New sim lab/preclinics, the operatories are new. There are no recorded lectures and I dont think teachers allow you to record them if you wanted to. Kind of makes you wonder what kind of faculty they are if they dont want to be recorded.
City: It is in a nicer area and you have the beach and the weather, but I dont enjoy the humidity and hot weather.
Student/Faculty: The students have a reputation of being a little looser and the party/fun type. Not something I look for in a dental school as we are in a professional setting.
Community Service:
Take histo/neuro with the med school but on a different grading system. No dissections for cadavers. Lab test is multiple choice.
Pro: I believe the curriculum will be easier because of the multiple choice and what Ive heard (from a D1).
Con: The city, no recorded lectures, patient problem.
PS. I apologize for any typos, I didnt really proof read it.
My main question is between Buffalo and Temple. I love both schools and was wondering if anyone would pick Temple over Buffalo? The rest of the thread is for those who are interested in those schools. Can anyone tell me more about the city of Buffalo? Would the advantage of Temples clinical training overshadow Buffalos low tuition and its own clinical training? Thank you all for taking the time to read and reply.
1. Buffalo
Price: $238,311
Clinical Training: Clinical experience first year. Good reputation for clinical training.
Chair/Scheduling: Schedule own patient, use to have own chair but new dean is bringing in more international students so we will have to share chairs. Large patient pool. You will be assigned patients.
Technology: Uses Macbook Pro, electronic textbooks. Sim lab/preclinical lab is old, I dont think they have an actual sim lab. Recorded lectures/video lectures.
City: Dont know too much, decent size city, will snow (which is a plus)
Student/Faculty: Good class size at around 90. Students like the faculty; they are treated like colleagues and respected. Some faculty is med school faculties, and we will have same classes with the med school.
Community Service:
School starts in August. Multiple choice tests, anatomy is just the upper part of the body, and will have 24 hour gross lab open to you. If you fail, you come back in January and retake course.
Pro: Really cheap tuition, great faculty, good patient pool.
Con: old pre clinic lab, might have trouble with chairs in the future
2. Temple
Price: $341,899
Clinical Training: Best out of the 4, you get to do a lot of extractions and restorations. No problem finding patients. (75-125 extractions, 10+ root canals, 15 crowns, 75-100 restorations, 10+ dentures). Start clinic during 2nd year. You will have graduation requirement numbers.
Chair/Scheduling: Have your own chair, schedule your own patients. Sometimes it can be competitive to get patients.
Technology: New renovations. Video recorded lectures, converting to digital office. They do not use e-books.
City: It is an 8am-5pm school, and afterwards people go home because the area is that bad. There is usually no one around at night and they do not advise you to be on campus after 6 pm. The worst part about this school is the location. It seems very unsafe, but they take measures to protect the students with police and security presence.
Student/Faculty: Most students were pretty nice and excited about the school. One person felt he wouldve fit better elsewhere. One tour guide was kind of rude and just texted during our lunch and didnt really try to engage in conversation with us.
Community Service: Outreach clinics.
Lease all of your instruments. Practice management courses. They have a new robotic typedont but since they have enough patients they dont really use it.
Pro: best clinical training, you will get a lot of practice and be ready to come out and practice dentistry, improving the school with renovations and digital office. Well established school with huge patient pool.
Con: the city is in a really bad area, and will change the dental school experience I think.
3. UNLV
Price: $355,157
Clinical Training: They have a good patient pool. Competency based requirements after a certain number of procedures. First year you learn about the operatory, 2nd year you do anesthesia on each other.
Chair/Scheduling: Schedule your own patient but you get your own chair.
Technology: Paperless/Digital office, they use ebooks (vital source). New school so they have flat screen TVs in the lecture halls, new preclinic with monitors. Have to buy a 1,300 Dell. There are some recorded lectures but not every teacher does it or allows for it.
City: Las Vegas would be a decent place to live, and it is close to home which is a huge plus.
Student/Faculty: Small groups/teaching you get a buddy system of 1,2,3,4th year and faculty mentor and team leader , and everyone works together and mentors each other which is a plus. Help each other and learn from them. 8 chairs/instructor. Get one clinical grade. One of the tour guides did not seem to enthusiastic about the school, and have heard some faculty can have an ego and look down on you. Another student didnt seem too excited about it, but then heard from a friend that a friend of his loved his time there. All this hearsay makes it hard to know who to believe.
Community Service : Saturday childrens clinic, smile day, required amount of community service hours.
Get a pretty long Christmas break. Mon-Fri 8am 3 or 5 pm. Integrated curriculum, there are no departments. Coordinated teaching of different subjects. 1st year you assist/observe, 2nd year do the easy stuff, 3rd/4th year in clinic practicing dentistry. Not really a practice management course. Assess your own work/request competency. A newer school.
Pro: new school with nice facilities and technology. Very interested in the buddy system where we help each other. Huge pro is that it is close to home (from northern California)
Con: tuition is a little high, instructors might one be the best.
4. Nova
Price: $329,480
Clinical Training: Not known to be the best. They have some patient pool problems maybe because the area around the school is of a higher income median.
Chair/Scheduling: You are assigned a family of patients that you work on, and sometimes you might not be able to get the procedure you need but the team leaders will switch around patients for you. Shares seats and schedule your own patients. There is a waiting list of patients. Competency on manikins, huge con for the school. Comprehensive patient care hope your patient has problems.
Technology: Very nice facilities. New sim lab/preclinics, the operatories are new. There are no recorded lectures and I dont think teachers allow you to record them if you wanted to. Kind of makes you wonder what kind of faculty they are if they dont want to be recorded.
City: It is in a nicer area and you have the beach and the weather, but I dont enjoy the humidity and hot weather.
Student/Faculty: The students have a reputation of being a little looser and the party/fun type. Not something I look for in a dental school as we are in a professional setting.
Community Service:
Take histo/neuro with the med school but on a different grading system. No dissections for cadavers. Lab test is multiple choice.
Pro: I believe the curriculum will be easier because of the multiple choice and what Ive heard (from a D1).
Con: The city, no recorded lectures, patient problem.
PS. I apologize for any typos, I didnt really proof read it.