What do you guys think of NYU dental as of 2014?

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Springs01

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I tried searching this but all the posts are really old and not reliable anymore.

How is NYU Dental now? Pros and Cons? If you attend there now/or have attended recently please share your experiences!
 
First, I should disclose that I did not go to NYU. However, I have known many that did. Why have I known so many? Because, it is a mill. NYU graduates far more students than any other program in the country. If you get the feeling that you will just be a number to them, you are right. Second, NYU is expensive. Third, NYC is expensive. If you want to live in the area of NYU you can easily spend over $3000 per month on rent. Can you find cheaper living arrangements? Sure, but you'll be sharing your apartment with the rats. If you are independently wealthy and just want to have the New York City experience, NYU may be for you. However, if you don't have financial help, you can easily rack up 400K or more in debt. I know this because I have friends that graduated from NYU and have that much debt.

As I said, I have known many people that attended NYU for dental school. Not one of them has ever said it was a good experience. To the best of my knowledge the quality of education there is adequate at best. Don't fool yourself into thinking the NYU reputation will mean anything to your future patients or to any other dentists.

If at all possible, find a cheaper school.
 
First, I should disclose that I did not go to NYU. However, I have known many that did. Why have I known so many? Because, it is a mill. NYU graduates far more students than any other program in the country. If you get the feeling that you will just be a number to them, you are right. Second, NYU is expensive. Third, NYC is expensive.

If at all possible, find a cheaper school.

what a great, unbiased post. i feel that it really weighed the pros and cons of NYU objectively.
my only criticism is you forgot to mention that NYU kicks out half of its students after the first week of school, and that it's hard to find something to wear to match with its school color.
definitely doesn't sound like you have an ax to grind with the school.
 
what a great, unbiased post. i feel that it really weighed the pros and cons of NYU objectively.
my only criticism is you forgot to mention that NYU kicks out half of its students after the first week of school, and that it's hard to find something to wear to match with its school color.
definitely doesn't sound like you have an ax to grind with the school.
What?
 
what a great, unbiased post. i feel that it really weighed the pros and cons of NYU objectively.
my only criticism is you forgot to mention that NYU kicks out half of its students after the first week of school, and that it's hard to find something to wear to match with its school color.
definitely doesn't sound like you have an ax to grind with the school.
Typical. I offer some honest advice based on facts and many anecdotes. As expected someone suggests I'm bitter. I didn't even go there.

NYU is expensive. That is a fact.
New York City is expensive. Again, that is a fact.
Everyone I know that went to NYU did not have a pleasant experience. You can choose to believe me or you can choose not to. I don't really care.
There is no axe to grind. I didn't go to NYU.

If you have something to say about NYU, say it, just like I did. If you love NYU, great. Write down your reasons. And let the people decide.
 
Typical. I offer some honest advice based on facts and many anecdotes. As expected someone suggests I'm bitter. I didn't even go there.

NYU is expensive. That is a fact.
New York City is expensive. Again, that is a fact.
Everyone I know that went to NYU did not have a pleasant experience. You can choose to believe me or you can choose not to. I don't really care.
There is no axe to grind. I didn't go to NYU.

If you have something to say about NYU, say it, just like I did. If you love NYU, great. Write down your reasons. And let the people decide.

{Full disclosure: I am NYUCD c/o 2018, and that is the reason I clicked on this thread in the first place}
I am not giving you grief because you love/hate some school. OP created this thread and I clicked on it so we could get some real advice. Instead of offering good advice, your post just stated the obvious. Do you think we needed you to tell us nyc is expensive?
This is the first time I heard dental students are supposed to have a pleasant experience in dental school. I guess the dentists I talked to recently(who went to UPENN) referring to dental school as a '4 year jail term' or 'a cesspool' were over exaggerating(sarcasm). If you truly don't think your post sounded like you have an ax to grind with this particular school, then I am surprised.

I can't say what I think since I don't go there yet, all I can offer is this article that was recently published on TIME:

http://business.time.com/2014/02/26...your-life-now-theyre-ruining-the-economy-too/


NYUCD students, please share like DentStudentc/o2017 did.
 
you ask anybody at any dental school what they think of their school and most will say they dont love it. you go to the best of the best- harvard, columbia, penn (just saying for ivys sake) you will find people who complain that it sucks, that they wish they went somewhere else, that the schools charging for the name, that the facilities suck, the exams are so hard, they work you like a dog, the profs suck, why am i paying tuition for professors that suck and dont speak english etc.
you find people who go to ANY dental school- lecom, BU, ohio etc, you will hear people say - i wish i went somewhere else, bc i dont like my school bc of abc...xyz.
if you want to go to nyu, then go to nyu.
if people cry bc nyu is expensive thats unfortunate that money controls them so much. to someone $1 could be the same as $100. people come from different walks of life. to someone who thinks a 100 dollar bill is equivalent to a 1 dollar bill bc theyre wealthy, good for them. either person can choose to go to nyu, its all personal opinion. the fact that everyone on sdn cries that nyu is so expensive.....thats cool & i feel bad you cant afford it bc nyc is probably one of the best cities to live in & will be a great expirience. dont discourage people from going to nyu based off MONEY. get over it. seriously. nyus tuition is around 70 grand a year, i dont see what is so astronomical about that compared to other dental schools, what is expensive is living, and if you get a roomate its not that bad. many dental schools are pushing 100grand nowadays. so get past it. if you have the opportunity to go to your state school for 40-50k, thats cool too.

nyu curriculum is rigorous and in my opinion prepares you well. the class size is large. who cares? what are all of those people doing for your life? nothing. be quiet keep your head down and do your work. youre in dental school to do work, not to cry about how many people are sitting next to you. do your work get good grades pass the boards and move on with your life. unless youre a baby and want your professor to hold your hold and sit with you in the clinic and pat and rub your back, i think you will be okay.

if you are blessed enough to have gotten an acceptance to ANY dental school, be grateful. everyone here was once a pre-dent wanting desperatley to GET IN, now once were in we become ratchet divas criticizing the crap out of every school.
 
I'm having a great time at NYU. I am here in a beautiful city with great friends, studying to be the best dentist I can. Yea its expensive, we know that...that didnt stop 360 students from coming here though. And before you say " that was the only school to take you" I got into some great schools and turned them down. Some of my classmates still think im crazy for turning down Uconn for NYU. You pay it off. Maybe Im just young and naive. My father brought us to america (3 kids and a wife) and we were poor as hell. (Foodstamps and ****) He was accepted to NYU dental (1999-- was still pricey) as international dentist took out loans and payed it off while taking care of his family.

Yea the school is tough and we work hard- but it pays off at the end. We also have a lot of fun. @DentStudentc/o2017 can attest to that.

You can balance an amazing experience here in NYC and still have a killer GPA 😀
 
{Full disclosure: I am NYUCD c/o 2018, and that is the reason I clicked on this thread in the first place}
I am not giving you grief because you love/hate some school. OP created this thread and I clicked on it so we could get some real advice. Instead of offering good advice, your post just stated the obvious. Do you think we needed you to tell us nyc is expensive?
This is the first time I heard dental students are supposed to have a pleasant experience in dental school. I guess the dentists I talked to recently(who went to UPENN) referring to dental school as a '4 year jail term' or 'a cesspool' were over exaggerating(sarcasm). If you truly don't think your post sounded like you have an ax to grind with this particular school, then I am surprised.

I can't say what I think since I don't go there yet, all I can offer is this article that was recently published on TIME:

http://business.time.com/2014/02/26...your-life-now-theyre-ruining-the-economy-too/


NYUCD students, please share like DentStudentc/o2017 did.
I'm not sure you understand what saying someone has an axe to grind means. Perhaps you should look it up. Furthermore, who are you calling "we" when you say "do you think we needed you tell us nyc is expensive?" You are accepted already. The OP is pre-dental and seems to have not made his or her decision yet. There's a difference. The OP asked so, I offered an opinion. Given that there are so many people willing to say that $400,000 is no big deal (when a dental education can be had for less half the price), I do feel that the expense should be reinforced. Do you know the OP? How do know the OP's understanding of the expense of NYC?

Now that I know you are about to attend NYU, I understand why you are so sensitive. You will be paying a lot for a school that turns out to have a mediocre reputation rather than the elite "Ivy League" status you had been led to believe. Perhaps you wish you had known more before you got so far down the rabbit hole? But really, why are you so upset if less people go to NYU? If that were to happen, your tuition would not go up as fast.

That fact is that an education at NYU Dental is more than twice that of other dental schools. Is the education twice as good? There is no reason to believe this. Do dentists that graduate from NYU make twice as much? Again, there is no evidence to support this.

Regarding, your comment about other schools, and the degree of misery that people experience, the OP specifically asked about NYU. Sure, people complain about their schools everywhere. However, there is a school that I have consistently heard graduates speak favorably of. That school is UOP. Again, I did not go to UOP. I probably still would have avoided the UOP because of the expense. People can and do have pleasant experiences in dental school. My point about NYU is that the people I have met that went to NYU Dental overwhelmingly despised it. I'm glad you know some that are having fun. That's great and it's what this thread is for.

You offered an article from Time about the high student loan debt and the dramatic increases in tuition over the past decade. That's great that you read that but what is your point? You seem to be arguing with me and then post an article that basically encourages us to be careful about our college expenses. That's basically what I'm saying. If at all possible, go to a cheaper school.

I didn't go to NYU and I wasn't denied acceptance either. Instead of focusing on me and my motive, focus on the facts.
 
i believe the moral of the last post in this thread, in condensed form, is for op to tell you that : NYU is expensive.

alright, no one has heard that before. moving on...

lets say for just 2 seconds- nyu dropped their tuition to 50k a year, or something "cheaper" i can pretty much say majority of ppl here on sdn would stop bashing the life out of nyu and everyone would want to go to the school. why? bc it IS a good school, the curriculum is on point, the clinical aspect is great and its life in nyc. if nyu was equivalent to someones state school, would they actually consider going to nyu over their state? probably/maybe. now all the sudden the typical bash against nyu, that the class size is big, wouldn't really phase people. they would actually consider going there over their state school. again, why? bc nyu is a good school clinically and w/didactics. you look at their curriculum and it is not by any means a breeze. you go to school to make yourself a dentist, what do any of your classmates have to do with the fact that you are going to ds to work hard and make yourself a competent well rounded dentist? nothing. There are professors there to help everyone, are your classmates going to stop you from talking/getting help from your professor? no, we are not in pre-k.

so what everyone hates on nyu for is $$. move past it
 
Alright, we're on an anonymous public online forum discussing something pointless...but I'll play along because I kinda like this discussion.

You wrote in one of your posts that "You can choose to believe me or you can choose not to. I don't really care." But judging by your last post, you seem to be taking this personal and seems like you do care what I think. I am flattered.
I do not know OP personally, no. I did make the assumption (perhaps incorrectly) OP already was accepted.
I will admit when I am mistaken, but you insist on going on with your line of thinking regardless of what I say...you clearly did not read my posts carefully and you are making assumptions as well.

You still DO NOT understand why I was giving you grief. You seem to think I was attacking you personally. So I will make it abundantly clear for you here why I was being sarcastic with you...THE OP DID NOT WANT YOUR OPINION!

Like you did not read my posts carefully, and like how you did not read the article I linked carefully, you did not read what OP was asking. Here is what OP asked:
How is NYU Dental now? Pros and Cons? If you attend there now/or have attended recently please share your experiences!

Did you attend NYU? NO
Did you recently attend NYU? NO
Did you offer pros and cons? NO
Did you have anything of value to offer anyone here? NO

toothtooth000- you made a good point. It did not occur to me that most students will say their school sucks, not necessarily because their school is worse compared to some other school. And I think your last post has some very good logic in it...but I think ppl will continue to harp on NYU, regardless.
 
<bring out popcorn> :corny:
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OP has been accepted to NYU and I think they wanted to know some things that only past and current NYU dental students can answer for them. They already know it's EXPENSIVE. During interviews they tell you straight up it's expensive to attend this school because of living expenses and not because of tuition.

OP, just ask this question in the FB GROUP bc I'm sure you'll have a better response from actual students who are currently attending.
 
The fact is you didn't attend NYU. So how are you going to comment on its curriculum and tell the op it's mediocre? lol ...:thinking:
It's simple. There is no evidence that NYU is any better than any other dental school. It just costs more.
 
I'm not sure you understand what saying someone has an axe to grind means. Perhaps you should look it up. Furthermore, who are you calling "we" when you say "do you think we needed you tell us nyc is expensive?" You are accepted already. The OP is pre-dental and seems to have not made his or her decision yet. There's a difference. The OP asked so, I offered an opinion. Given that there are so many people willing to say that $400,000 is no big deal (when a dental education can be had for less half the price), I do feel that the expense should be reinforced. Do you know the OP? How do know the OP's understanding of the expense of NYC?

Now that I know you are about to attend NYU, I understand why you are so sensitive. You will be paying a lot for a school that turns out to have a mediocre reputation rather than the elite "Ivy League" status you had been led to believe. Perhaps you wish you had known more before you got so far down the rabbit hole? But really, why are you so upset if less people go to NYU? If that were to happen, your tuition would not go up as fast.

That fact is that an education at NYU Dental is more than twice that of other dental schools. Is the education twice as good? There is no reason to believe this. Do dentists that graduate from NYU make twice as much? Again, there is no evidence to support this.

Regarding, your comment about other schools, and the degree of misery that people experience, the OP specifically asked about NYU. Sure, people complain about their schools everywhere. However, there is a school that I have consistently heard graduates speak favorably of. That school is UOP. Again, I did not go to UOP. I probably still would have avoided the UOP because of the expense. People can and do have pleasant experiences in dental school. My point about NYU is that the people I have met that went to NYU Dental overwhelmingly despised it. I'm glad you know some that are having fun. That's great and it's what this thread is for.

You offered an article from Time about the high student loan debt and the dramatic increases in tuition over the past decade. That's great that you read that but what is your point? You seem to be arguing with me and then post an article that basically encourages us to be careful about our college expenses. That's basically what I'm saying. If at all possible, go to a cheaper school.

I didn't go to NYU and I wasn't denied acceptance either. Instead of focusing on me and my motive, focus on the facts.

what kind of conclusion can you make of the school based off of hearsay, lol? The school has a mediocre reputation because you've heard this from the people YOU'VE talked to. Did you take the time to find out WHY these people didn't like their time at this school? Times change, schools/curriculums change. Make an informed decision.

In terms of $$, the fact of the matter is, is that NYU is so much more because of living expenses. Is it worth it? Well, that's a personal issue. Tuition is pretty comparable among other private schools in the country. Public schools can vary highly, but an overwhelming trend as of late shows a closing of the gap in tuition prices.
 
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Oh but there is. We have the highest part 1 board pass rate in the country, and we rank among the highest in research funding allocations among dental schools. Look it up if you don't believe me.

Do you know if there is there a list of pass rates for schools that I can look up?
 
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Board 1 pass rate must be the highest since it's 100% right now. They have the whole banner and everything. I was also wondering this bc when I went to another school for interview in NY, the students were talking about how some big corporate dental clinics refused to hire nyucd students due to their lack of clinical experience (which I think is ridiculous since nyu has the biggest patient pool). Is this true? I really liked the school. I had 5 interviews and nyucd was by far my favorite except of course the 77k/yr price tag.
 
I graduated from NYUCD in 2011. It is a great school, but like any school has its holdups. As mentioned, for clinic you are split into groups of <30 students so clinic is as personalized as any school in the country. We saw many, many more patients than Columbia and SB students, no question.

Yes, NYU is expensive. But NYC is the most expensive city in the country to live in (or close to it). That also means when you graduate, you can MAKE the most money in NYC.

By being at NYU, I learned the city, met many dentists at the school and in the area, grew a huge network in the dental community, things I could not have done at any other school (with the objective of practicing in or around NYC).
 
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i wish i had known about this thread by @nyuddsalumni earlier
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/threads/nyu-college-of-dentistry-a-students-perspective.1046052/

since it is exactly what this thread was looking for, i will copy and paste exactly the first post, again with all credit going to nyuddsalumni. great thread
*****************************
Hi there pre-dents!
I just wanted to write this thread to give you guys a current perspective of the school. This will be beneficial for those who have been accepted and have already been interviewed and are deciding to attend or not, and those with upcoming interviews. I see a lot of misinformation out there and remember this is just my perspective of the school, which has been a rather positive one.

I'm a D4 student, from out of state, currently live in Manhattan nearby the school, pursuing advanced education next year.

I hope to provide a perspective that you have not seen during your interview and possibly answer questions that would have been awkward to ask during interview day and also to answer questions that may not be on the website.

The Cons: I wanted to start a short list of these so that in the event any of these are deal breakers, you need not read further.
Tuition is expensive, living is expensive, you will not get spoon fed, pre-clinical is begins in D1 and you pick up a handpiece in the second month of school and drill/prep/restore a ton of teeth, school is very diverse, clinics are open 8:30AM-8PM (2 days of the week you will be doing a 6-8PM session), Class size is big (you will see someone different every day), our bad reputation from >10 years ago still lingers and may affect you depending on your future plans, school is not pass fail

1. Tuition and Fees: The school is expensive. You have to decide whether its worth it to you, and whether you can get what you want out of it cheaper somewhere else. If this is the only school you got into, you have no choice and while you are here you should make the most of it.
My tuition has been around 64,000 a year for 4 years. You will also spend 800-2400/month depending how you want to live (share a place to studio apartment+). Then there is living + food + misc.

To many, this is one of the most expensive schools and to many posters on here it is not justified. While I was applying, I was choosing based on where I thought I would be happiest and did not want to consider price a factor because I wanted the best education and either way I was going to be taking out loans. For my situation it has been justified because I am where I want to be, I finished almost all graduation minimal requirements by the end of D3 year, the amount of exposure you get to dentistry from all specialties and the amount of patients you get here is overwhelming (a good thing). The network here is amazing (all your faculty are from different dental schools etc). The amount of local/international outreaches you can go to, the Honors programs (various specialties, implant honors, special patient care, survivors of torture, hospitals) As a pre-dent you do not see these things. We have a ton of research going on, from basic science, clinical, to educational research.

2. Dental Requirements:
You start clinic in D2 Spring semester, but get your patients/rosters assigned at the beginning of Summer semester in D2(June).
In a nutshell, here is a list of the minimal requirements you will get done by graduation (I didn't include competencies/exams).
Fixed: 10PFM Crowns, 1 Procera/All-Ceramic, 1-2 Fixed Bridge, 1-2 Implant Crown
Removable: 3 Arches of Complete Dentures, 3 Arches of RPDs, 1 overdenture, 1 more Removable
Endo: At least 5 endos, 1 of which has to be a molar and premolar
Perio: 24 Quads of SRP
Operative: At least 10 Class II, and At least 10 Class III for D3 year, 4 arches of bleaching
Oral Surgery: these are done in "experiences" in our school, but the D4 requirements are 10 Surgical Extractions, and 20 Non-Surgical Extractions, 10 nitrous admin

In addition to these requirements, you need to make a certain amount of "CEE = clinical education experiences" which the minimal requirements come no where near fulfilling the required CEE for graduation. So you will be doing much more than the minimal in order to graduate. Most students choose trying to get minimal requirements done first, so in their D4 year they can spend time taking on big cases and doing the kind of dentistry they want. If you have 1-2 friends that are residents from each specialty, it makes referrals/completion of cases a lot easier and each specialty is its own floor and easy to communicate. For example, if you need an implant placed that qualified for a "pre-doc implant (1250 or implant and crown)" then you do the extraction/get it done by a resident in OS, 3 months later evaluate yourself for implant placement, time it such that Perio/Prosth/Implant Program/OS can place the implant immediately after it has been cleared, wait 3-4 months for stage 2, then you can take impressions to restore the crown.

3. Ability to Specialize:

There is talk about us being a clinical school that produces only GP's and not specialists due to our "low specialization rate". Everyone graduating here has clinical experience due to the requirements, but what our school offers in addition is the research, the education, and ability to specialize. There are 340 people in my class, and not all of them are in the top 10%-20%. Ortho and OMFS tend to attract applicants in the top 10-20% however there are people that matched in both that were not both in my year and previous years. The one thing you cannot overlook is that there is specialists that came from almost every dental school in the nation and they have contacts at other dental schools in their respective specialty. The school is not pass fail, so this cycle we were interviewing with a lot of students from pass/fail schools with pass/fail boards.

From my class D4 program there were about:
5 Prosth
5 Endo
6 Ortho
Peds - Pending (i heard there is abou 25-30 applicants)
OMFS (there is about 8 applicants)
Oral Path - there is about 3 applicants
Dental Anesthesiology - not sure

4. Class Size:
340 students.

How can it function? Is it a factory?
The school runs group practice style, 14 Group Practices. My clinic has about 20 D4's and 20 D3's so around 40 students. There are 32 chairs, 5 are Endo chairs (has its on X-ray), 1 is a wheelchair accessible chair.
There are always students on rotation so chairs are almost never a problem. Only if you are trying to work off session, its first come first serve.
Each clinic session has 1 Endo, 1 Prosth, 6 General (2 of which can can do most prosth), 1 Group practice director, 1 Group practice Director right hand man for a maximum of 32 students. It can be a hassle if you are trying to get assistance and the prosth faculty is sitting there helping a student who is prepared do something like border mold.

5. Research
There is a ton of research going on here. For science research we are I believe 3rd in NIH funding.
There is also Educational research, Epidemiology (we have our own department), Clinical, etc.
Lots of faculty who teach/work in clinic also do research, and majority is evidence based.

You have the opportunity to do research throughout the entire dental school, attend AADR/IADR, greater new work dental meeting, other national meetings.

6. Any questions/comments/topics you want me to discuss I will be more than welcome to answer your questions.
 
I tried searching this but all the posts are really old and not reliable anymore.

How is NYU Dental now? Pros and Cons? If you attend there now/or have attended recently please share your experiences!
Hi OP, I'm just wrapping up the end of 1st year. Everyone on here who posted about NYU that attended is spot on. The curriculum is tough, lot's of classes, they are not easy. The main classes aren't mandatory, however there a lot of small seemingly insignificant classes that ARE mandatory, so you will be there for 12 hours on some days with a big break in between where you can get your studying done. I think we have the largest class size to date at about 360, we've lost about 12-15 total I think. Out of those, half of them didn't want to put in the work and they partied and thought they were really cool and now they're repeating the first year, the rest either didn't want to stick with it because they got upset the first semester because it was a tough first semester, they throw you in the shark tank from day 1. Also these kids from what I hear associated what dental school was like with what dental practice was like. I don't know much as a D1 when it comes to practice but I imagine the two are nothing alike. So your first year is a lot of work, heres what I see no one mentioning, the reason the curriculum is difficult is because you rarely have an exam where they test you on one class. Your midterms and finals are going to be at least two classes, meaning you will have your biochem/anatomy midterm combined. Your final will be anatomy/biochem/cell organelles. It will be a 6 hour exam day. Next year they are changing it so biochem is online (good luck with that lol). This is why we are always studying, because it's twice the material as other schools. I have a lot of friends who are graduating this year from UMDNJ, and they were top of the class and always had time to go out. While they were naturally smart kids, they weren't strapped for time like we are, because they don't have 360 kids with no where to put them. That being said the school isn't all that bad aside from the fact that we expect them to light the room on fire while were taking exams just to make it harder. The kids here are all pretty cool, maybe 2 kids I don't like out of 360, so yeah. Faculty is cool, we do a ton of lab work early off. But like everyone said above, you need to approach people to get the most out of it. The school will turn you into a beast, this is new york, its cut throat. They are going to train you like a physician. There is a lot of support here if you need it, just ask, everyone helps each other out. Yes it's expensive they all are, but nature...ugh...ugh..finds a way. Hope this helps you make your decision, and congratulations!
 
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