Shadowing dentists isn't enough?? How do I get a better dental experience?

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clubwestpua

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I was attempting to shadow dentists at my school's dental school, but they told me that just observing dentists won't make me a competitive applicant. I was told from this forum that if I shadow for about 100 hrs I would be competitive.

Do I have to volunteer at dental clinics and get hands-on experience?
 
I was attempting to shadow dentists at my school's dental school, but they told me that just observing dentists won't make me a competitive applicant. I was told from this forum that if I shadow for about 100 hrs I would be competitive.

Do I have to volunteer at dental clinics and get hands-on experience?

haha i dunno what kind of places you've been shadowing at but there's no chance in hell anyone will let you get any "hands-on experience" unless they want to lose their license and you'll go to jail for practicing w/o a license. Shadowing is the basic cornerstone of any education and after you get that 100 hrs thats ALL you need. Nothing more or less..

PS "Hands on experience" doesnt really mean you pass instruments to the dentist lol
 
I think you'll be fine with 100 hrs of shadowing. I had ~75 hrs of shadowing/observing and I got accepted. Of course, assisting would help but not assisting is not going to hurt.
 
Georgia wants 200+ Hours

Georgia only interviews/accepts in state students. So if you're not from GA, don't worry about it.

I know VCU and Howard want 100 hours and NYU "recommends" it.
 
in medicine, hands on experience is near impossible unless you have certifications
 
Thank you for your incisive comments guys. So if I want to shadow someone at private practice, should I make phone calls, visit their offices and bring my resume?


I don't think a resume is required. You can make phone calls to see if they are willing to let students shadow in their office. If they say yes, you can let them know you want to visit the office to meet the dentist and his/her staff members in order to introduce yourself.
 
PS "Hands on experience" doesnt really mean you pass instruments to the dentist lol

my dentist wouldn't let me pass her anything

she had an assistant who did that and apparently you need a certificate to do that
 
I was attempting to shadow dentists at my school's dental school, but they told me that just observing dentists won't make me a competitive applicant. I was told from this forum that if I shadow for about 100 hrs I would be competitive. Do I have to volunteer at dental clinics and get hands-on experience?

And they were right; shadowing was never intended to make applicants "more competitive". What you understood from reading on the forum is no more than wishful thinking.
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=527523
 
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I'm pretty sure that's what they meant by "Hands on experience"

Yes because handing instruments over is quite prestigious. 😛
 
Yes because handing instruments over is quite prestigious. 😛

The point isn't to mindlessly hand over instruments. If you shadow a good dentist, he should be explaining things along the way. 🙂


edit: I'm in a state where you do not need certifications
 
When I was applying I thought schools wanted me to shadow, to assist, to learn the different tools and stuff. And I thought to myself "I am going to show off my knowledge at interviews!"

But at most of the interviews I went to... they really didn't care if I knew which tooth was #8 or if I knew what "10mo" meant.

I did mention translating while shadowing in my PS, so sometimes they asked about that. But otherwise, the only question that "tested" my dental knowledge was "Did you see any ethical issues while shadowing?"
 
The point isn't to mindlessly hand over instruments. If you shadow a good dentist, he should be explaining things along the way. 🙂


edit: I'm in a state where you do not need certifications

most states need certificates and most dentists are too busy working to teach. I didn't expect my dentist to explain every procedure and I know that in reality the shadowing hours are more important than what you learn. I expect to learn about dentistry in d-school, not while shadowing. But then again I prioritize differently than most people. I was busy working, shadowing and taking classes so I didn't really mind just watching and seeing things vs. being mr. inquisitive. I was happier knocking out my prereqs to actually get into d-school.
 
most states need certificates and most dentists are too busy working to teach. I didn't expect my dentist to explain every procedure and I know that in reality the shadowing hours are more important than what you learn. I expect to learn about dentistry in d-school, not while shadowing. But then again I prioritize differently than most people. I was busy working, shadowing and taking classes so I didn't really mind just watching and seeing things vs. being mr. inquisitive. I was happier knocking out my prereqs to actually get into d-school.

👍
 
I was attempting to shadow dentists at my school's dental school, but they told me that just observing dentists won't make me a competitive applicant. I was told from this forum that if I shadow for about 100 hrs I would be competitive.

Do I have to volunteer at dental clinics and get hands-on experience?

That's easier said than done. But if you can supplement 100 hours shadowing with non invasive volunteering it would help
 
When I was applying I thought schools wanted me to shadow, to assist, to learn the different tools and stuff. And I thought to myself "I am going to show off my knowledge at interviews!"

But at most of the interviews I went to... they really didn't care if I knew which tooth was #8 or if I knew what "10mo" meant.

I did mention translating while shadowing in my PS, so sometimes they asked about that. But otherwise, the only question that "tested" my dental knowledge was "Did you see any ethical issues while shadowing?"

If that's the extent of dental knowledge required to impress an interviewer... the entire incoming class would be filled with middle aged dental assistants.
 
Georgia wants 200+ Hours

Georgia doesn't "want 200+ hours"...stop misleading people. The average number of hours that students who apply to GA have is 200 hours...this is a different statement from "GA wants 200 hours".

That being said, GA does place heavy emphasis on shadowing and dental experience, and they consider it to be an important factor in the application.
 
Georgia doesn't "want 200+ hours"...stop misleading people. The average number of hours that students who apply to GA have is 200 hours...this is a different statement from "GA wants 200 hours".

That being said, GA does place heavy emphasis on shadowing and dental experience, and they consider it to be an important factor in the application.

Most schools I interviewed at were contempt with 100 hours. One school said that my 300 hours were "way more than they needed." As long as you have the 100 then you'll be fine, you get no extra leverage for having more hours. It won't enhance your app.
 
Georgia doesn't "want 200+ hours"...stop misleading people. The average number of hours that students who apply to GA have is 200 hours...this is a different statement from "GA wants 200 hours".

That being said, GA does place heavy emphasis on shadowing and dental experience, and they consider it to be an important factor in the application.

I was told specifically by Ms Perry that I should be shooting for the 250 range the first year that I applied.
 
I was told specifically by Ms Perry that I should be shooting for the 250 range the first year that I applied.

She "specifically" told me that the average number of hours of exposure to the dental field that applicants have is around 200. This was both in person and over the phone (a month or so ago). She also specifically said that they don't have a required amount...just that there's an average that the applicants have.
 
They probably meant something along the lines of....just BC you shadowed a dentist doesn't mean you will be accepted or something.instead they are probably trying to say that you need to try to have the complete package (good GPA, Dat, etc).

Don't take their statement literally because I can definitely tell you that there is NO requirement to work as a dental assistant/xray tech/etc to gain an acceptance. It helps but not required.

You got your 100 hours, pat yourself in the back. You should know weather or not you should committee yourself to this field. And now focus on your other weaknesses ie GPA,Dat,etc

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I got into multiple schools last cycle with 35 hours of shadowing and no other dentistry experience. Whoever is telling you that you need "hands on experience" is full of it.
 
You don't need to hand instruments to be part of the dental team. I volunteer at one of the school clinics now, while in the past I volunteered at a clinic affiliated with one of the homeless centers. In both places, I got to wipe down the rooms, stock the carts, answer phones, greet and seat patients, take blood pressure and temperature, and write down the numbers when they do perio-charting.

Later, I became a registered dental assistant, for which you do not need to attend classes. It only requires watching some slides at home about blood born pathogens and HIV, taking self graded tests at the end of each power point, them filling up the state specific dental assisting registration form and signing on your word of honor that you watched the slides, plus a registration fee. After my registered DA card arrived, I got more involved getting to assist the dentists too.

In the end, it is not the hours to fill in, but the rich experiences you acquire, so keep your eyes peeled and you neurons firing. I like being in the clinic so much, that even now after I got in, I continue volunteering there once per week.
 
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