Masters Programs Options

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

jsdental

New Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2025
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Hello everyone this is my first post here on SDN and I was looking for some help. I applied this past cycle and unfortunately have only been waitlisted by one school and rejected by many others which was expected with my low GPA. I am now shifting my focus to masters programs and of course would prefer a masters program that offers a guaranteed interview or guaranteed seat upon meeting a certain GPA requirement however the only one I have found as of now is NSU. Does anyone know of other similar programs whose application deadline has not passed and or at the very least a recommendation for a regular masters program with a high matriculation rate that you would suggest? I have hit a wall and do not know where I should go from here.

Members don't see this ad.
 
Coming from someone (with a low GPA in the 2s) who went through this already. Dental schools do not care about your masters. They will focus on your science undergrad GPA. You need to retake the science and math prereq courses and get all A's.

I thought to myself hey... I'll just get a masters and dental schools will ignore the fact I bombed my math and chemistry. Doesn't work like that.

You need a post-bacc certificate program. Search on this website to find a participating university near you. There are 21 public and 45 private universities that offer pre-med undergrad certificates. All of which have to be taken in person and cannot be taken at a community college.

Select certificate "yes", and "undergraduate". Then search through the list.

Postbac

Next focus on scoring high on your DAT. These two things are most important.
 
Last edited:
Welcome to the forums.

Without knowing what your undergrad GPA is, it's not as simple to say you need a postbac and not an SMP. Furthermore, dental schools can consider master's grades in an SMP as part of a holistic review of an application to show reinvention and academic readiness. I concur one should still do well on the DAT.

There are a few SMP's run by dental schools with linkages and more postbac programs that are generally prehealth. Reach out to program directors and gauge how experienced they are with predental advising and their track record with other applicants with similar metrics and back story.
 
Top