
How many hours are some of you going to shadow? I'm thinking about over 300 hours for general, and 300 for orthro. Talked to one local orthro today, said I should do 50 hours at one location at a time. I think I can get 600 or so hours done by two years.
what the hell?? lol. do 100 hours general, then do 50-100 of one or two specialties such as ortho. any more is absolutely worthless (as Ranelar said). No bonus points after your first 100 hours.
might as well use the hours after your first 100 to get paid as a dental assistant, get a job, do research, do voluteering (as Stephie said), or use that time to study for the DAT or your classes lol.
i wouldn't say its "worthless." I'd say logging a lot of hours in a clinic shows initiative and passion for dentistry. And to be honest, depending on what you get to do, it's very beneficial and will prepare you for dental school. The more dental experience you can get, the better..and plus, who says you can't do all of that stuff? It's not that hard to log 200+ hours of volunteer work during the school year, and then 500+ hours in a dental clinic over one summer.
i wouldn't say its "worthless." I'd say logging a lot of hours in a clinic shows initiative and passion for dentistry. And to be honest, depending on what you get to do, it's very beneficial and will prepare you for dental school. The more dental experience you can get, the better..and plus, who says you can't do all of that stuff? It's not that hard to log 200+ hours of volunteer work during the school year, and then 500+ hours in a dental clinic over one summer.
Sure doing excessive amounts of hours could display initiative and interest, but maybe it's better spent doing other volunteer work (could be non-dental related) or better yet, put it towards your school work and DAT studying. Besides 10,000 hours of shadowing will never overcome a 3.0 or a DAT 17. My take is you can get away with doing less hours the higher your GPA and DAT. But typically schools like to see about 100 hours.
I agree with you in the fact that being well rounded is important (high GPA, great DAT, a lot of extra curriculars)..but I also think having dental experience is what other applicants are lacking most, and therefore is the easiest way to stand out against the rest.
If i was an adcom, i wouldn't care if you can recite the full oxidation of para, para' 2, 3, 7, 8 dichlorodibenzotrichloroethane..but if you could show me the proper technique of putting on a dental dam; how to trace a cephalogramic x-ray; or tell me what to look for in a panorex..that's impressive.

No matter how hard someone studies, there is a cap to how well they'll do academically - dumb people will likely never achieve a high GPA, but they CAN log a lot of hours in a clinic and learn more useful, dental-related things.
If i was an adcom, i wouldn't care if you can recite the full oxidation of para, para' 2, 3, 7, 8 dichlorodibenzotrichloroethane..but if you could show me the proper technique of putting on a dental dam; how to trace a cephalogramic x-ray; or tell me what to look for in a panorex..that's impressive.
...might as well use the hours after your first 100 to get paid as a dental assistant...
How about 50 hours at four different ortho practices, then 100 hours at my personal dentist, and 100 hours somewhere else. I can do the 200 hours for ortho by next Summer, then start with my personal dentist.
Dont you have to have a certificate to be a dental assistant?