UKWildcatz
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What do the students who are at the top of your class do differently than the rest of students. Do they just study more? Work harder? Or are they just naturally smarter? Any advice for how to manage the workload like a general schedule of how you managed it would be nice to see. Thanks!
There is no one-size fits all when it comes to a cohort. Every student tends to a top achiever whether or not they show it. Time management is key. Are some naturally smarter? For sure. You’ll see many top students that say they have photographic memory and then you’ll see other top students that study 12 hours on Saturday and Sunday, 4-6 hours after the 8:00am-5:00pm classes everyday. The majority do tend to take Friday evenings off to kick back to some Netflix or spend time with their SO.
Treat it like a job. Then treat it like it’s a job that demands unpaid overtime. That’s the best thing I can say.
Do you see any differences in how much people struggle based on their undergrad (state school vs top?) in terms of preparedness and worth ethic maybe?
Do any of the dental students interact with the medical school/nursing/other health profession students, or is everyone pretty secluded from each other?
Great question! As far my experiences go, I have not been able to put a correlation with what school they went to and their performance in DS. In fact, I have seen top achievers from schools I have never heard of (small colleges).
Preparedness would fall into the category of what courses they took previously, some have had significant exposure in higher academics such as a Masters or PhD, and some have very little. Is that what you meant? Otherwise, nothing really prepares you for the amount of work involved in dental school. It’s beyond anything you’ve ever had. We had about 31 credits in the Fall and 29 in the Spring I believe.
Interaction with other professions is highly encouraged and incorporated. In fact, 3 things that I can tell you how they implement this: (1) In October of D1, you will take a road trip to an underserved location in rural Kentucky and place sealants in children. Yes, you will be treating patients and having clinic exposure early. You will practice this in August and September on each other, become competent, and then place them in children in October. It’s a service for the community and an invaluable experience. (2) On this trip, you will have nursing students, physical therapy students, and social work students accompany you. You will work as an inter-professional team in providing children with oral care and overall health literacy. (3) Our Urgent Care Clinic has many professionals that play a role in treating the patient so they come in for dental-related issues but have a comprehensive checkup to ensure optimal health.
You will have more opportunities within the first year to work with other disciplines besides what I mentioned.
Great question! As far my experiences go, I have not been able to put a correlation with what school they went to and their performance in DS. In fact, I have seen top achievers from schools I have never heard of (small colleges).
Preparedness would fall into the category of what courses they took previously, some have had significant exposure in higher academics such as a Masters or PhD, and some have very little. Is that what you meant? Otherwise, nothing really prepares you for the amount of work involved in dental school. It’s beyond anything you’ve ever had. We had about 31 credits in the Fall and 29 in the Spring I believe.
Interaction with other professions is highly encouraged and incorporated. In fact, 3 things that I can tell you how they implement this: (1) In October of D1, you will take a road trip to an underserved location in rural Kentucky and place sealants in children. Yes, you will be treating patients and having clinic exposure early. You will practice this in August and September on each other, become competent, and then place them in children in October. It’s a service for the community and an invaluable experience. (2) On this trip, you will have nursing students, physical therapy students, and social work students accompany you. You will work as an inter-professional team in providing children with oral care and overall health literacy. (3) Our Urgent Care Clinic has many professionals that play a role in treating the patient so they come in for dental-related issues but have a comprehensive checkup to ensure optimal health.
You will have more opportunities within the first year to work with other disciplines besides what I mentioned.
Sounds like you get a lot of experience early on. When do you start clinic? Are there a lot cases you lose experience out on due to specialities there? What are the labs like? Do you share classes with other non-dental students?
What is a typical D1 day? Now that you've gone through D1, what are things that you wished you would have known before starting or learned earlier?
Thanks!
Can you share some study methods/scheduling that worked for you? Also a relative idea of where you stand in the class?
What are the best and worst things about your school?
Do most students study at home or on campus?
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+1 on the studying methods. Do you keep reviewing info everyday or look over it last minute? And do you just review ppt slides or supplement textbook as well?
How’s Lexington?? I’m OOS and am curious about how Lexington is!
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What were your most important factors for choosing a dental school?
How much free time do you realistically have for hobbies and relaxing, gym etc. while still studying effectively?