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Overall, which is a better school to attend, Buffalo or Upenn, especially as a NY resident?
Overall, which is a better school to attend, Buffalo or Upenn, especially as a NY resident?
I shadowed a dentist that graduated from Penn 6 or so years ago, and he is still kicking himself because he didn't get into Buffalo (mostly because of his student loans). Don't worry about it being a state school. I have friends that attend UB and love it, plus I'm at Stony Brook and I'm very happy with the program so far.
If you like sending bigger loan repayment checks, go to Penn.
depends. what is the tuition at Buffalo?
i like it here at columbia, but it's god awful expensive (not really a complaint, just kind of a downside).
Buffalo tuition is about $20,000
Total cost of attendance with room and board is about $40,000 for NY resident.
Penn also does not teach rotary endo to undergrad students.
Everyone in my interview group left saying that it was one of their top choices, if not their top 😕Ultimately, it was a school that everyone walked away from knowing they'd probably never be back.
UPenn was one of the least impressive schools I interviewed at
*Initial Impression*
-Beautiful campus, but NO ONE knew where the dental school was (one didn't even know they had one!).
-Admissions staff openly boasted that they never fill the entire class on Dec. 1; I wondered why.
*Tour*
Tour guide was nice, the building wasn't. Other applicant remarked that it seemed like Grand Central Station--and I agree. Sim clinic seemed like technology-overload with annoying posture sensors. Tuition was a joke, perhaps even with the dean-scholarship.
Ultimately, it was a school that everyone walked away from knowing they'd probably never be back.
Without knowing anything about the schools except tuition... go to Buffalo. You will get the same degree you get at Penn, and you will, most likely, have fun anyway.
I feel like people think that students up at Buffalo are frozen eskimos who do nothing but study in their igloos all day?? Seriously, are you going to have $300,000 more fun in a slightly warmer city, or do you think you can find things to do with that money once you graduate?
Let's make this more concrete.
Saving 40,000$ a year:
First year: make a payment on a tiny house in Buffalo. Use the remaining cash to throw yourself a 1,000$ party every month. Bank or invest what remains.
Second year: Buy a nicer car. Use the remaining cash to throw yourself a 1,000$ party every month. Bank or invest what remains.
Third year: Make another payment on another house. Rent it out. Bank or invest what remains, along with the rent money from your tenant.
Fourth year: stick 40,000$ into your savings. Start finding a tenant for the house you're moving out of.
Graduation hits. Congratulations: you have your DDS degree, two tiny houses, a very nice car, something like 50,000 in the bank, and 24,000$ in parties, compared to the guy down the street from Penn/NYU/Boston, who is starting with -360,000$ in the bank.
Alternatively:
First year: spend 80,000 on tuition. 15,000 on living costs.
Second year: Looks like first year.
Third year: Looks like second year.
Fourth year: Looks like third year, except thank god, you can finally find a job somewhere OUT OF THE CITY, and start paying down that 360,000.
If I had gotten into Buffalo, it would have been an absolute no-brainer over NYU. I still honestly don't know how people make the decision to go to the more expensive school.
Edit: if you put 40,000$ into the bank in your fourth year, you'd have more than 40,000$, not 30,000$ XD typo!
wait, you can buy a house in buffalo for under $40,000?? how
please elaborate....
Buffalo will most likely get 25 international students during 3rd year. As a result, you wont get your own chair, AND faculty and patients will be more thinly spread. In addition, there will be competition with the international students, since they are practicing dentists and american students will be ranked lower than them in clinics.... it will be much harder to specialize too....
are you better off going to Upenn or Columbia now that Buffalo is changing for the worse?
Buffalo will most likely get 25 international students during 3rd year. As a result, you wont get your own chair, AND faculty and patients will be more thinly spread. In addition, there will be competition with the international students, since they are practicing dentists and american students will be ranked lower than them in clinics.... it will be much harder to specialize too....
are you better off going to Upenn or Columbia now that Buffalo is changing for the worse?
I agree with the person above me...this was mentioned only briefly here on SDN...also don't jump to conclusions. I am sure if Buffalo adds 50 international students that their faculty would be adjusted (i.e. more full time or more hired faculty). Also, if the international program is anything like other schools, these students will NOT be part of your grading curve...so why are you jumping to the conclusion that you will be ranked less? That would just NOT make sense to rank internationals in the same system as 4year DDS/DMD seekers (There would be a huge uproar about this from Buffalo students if this ever happened). Also, how would it be harder to specialize? Specializing depends on the individual not a group?
Gosh I don't see why you freak out so much! 🙂. If anything call Buffalo about your concerns and take things said on an internet forum with a grain of salt...it is just common sense. 👍
The 3 international students we had in our class at Buffalo got ranked in with the regular DDS students starting in second year. One of them landed right into the top ten. Although it doesn't matter anymore so many years out of school, it sure felt lousy at the time trying to get into the top ten only to find out a practicing dentist from another country had taken one of the spots.
That sounds extremely lousy. On that account, I would call Buffalo and ask them all these questions Toothblaster (you'll get more accurate and quicker answers then asking on sdn). That's what I would do....good luck!
I have an interview there on Friday, I am going to ask them about this regardless cause it could be a dealbreaker. But they will probably talk down its importance b/c of the obvious negativity this brings to US students.
You need to be super smart to probably get into the top 10 (or even 20) at another school like Buffalo in order to specialize? But at Upenn and Columbia you won't have to be in the top 10 to specialize? why?
Soupower, why would it be a deal breaker for you?
You need to be super smart to probably get into the top 10 (or even 20) at another school like Buffalo in order to specialize? But at Upenn and Columbia you won't have to be in the top 10 to specialize? why?
Soupower, why would it be a deal breaker for you?
Well the way the posts on SDN have been making it seem.
this here is the reason why people making sweeping generalization about all dental schools (which is ironically a sweeping generalization on my part).
take what you read on SDN with a grain of salt. a lot of what people say here is out of context, misinformed, or both.
SUMMARY: bust your a** at any dental school and you will get to where you want to be. nothing is handed to you, you have to earn it.
I understand that I will pay off my student loans sooner which is financially smart if I go to Buffalo. But I hear that dentists do not have a problem paying off their student loans when they graduate and begin working full time. Also, Penn has an amazing reputation, faculty, and options in case I want to specialize. Penn will help more that Buffalo in terms of getting into a specialty? Right?
Once you get into that specialty that Penn will hand to you, you will be using money as TP anyways...burn it now, it doesn't matter, Penn grads are each given a seed to plant their own money tree at commencement.
I understand that I will pay off my student loans sooner which is financially smart if I go to Buffalo. But I hear that dentists do not have a problem paying off their student loans when they graduate and begin working full time. Also, Penn has an amazing reputation, faculty, and options in case I want to specialize. Penn will help more than Buffalo in terms of getting into a specialty?
I don't know who thinks Penn has an "amazing" reputation. People in the dental world don't care. Your patients will confuse Penn with Penn State. Students specialize from Buffalo every year. But you sound like one of those posters who will be impossible to convince otherwise.
What if you want to specialize? Could someone tell me or let me know where I can find info on Buffalo's placement rate of their graduates into specialty programs please? How do Buffalo student's do in matching in more competitive specialities like ortho, oral surg (6 year program), and endo?
And, since, the national dental boards will no longer be graded, but rather are going to be pass/fail, doesn't this make it even more difficult, for specialty programs to choose candidates based on merit alone? They may end up using the school you came from and its reputation as one of the consideration factors?