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i want to become an orthodontist. schools that i am thinking of applying to are northeastern, rutgers, udel, pennstate, st. josephs university, umass, .. etc. i am aware that you must study dentistry before becoming an orthodontist, and then go onto separate schooling. however, can i go to those school for dentistry rather than a college like University of Connecticut school of dentistry?

2007-09-07 08:21:24 · 7 answers · asked by summer 1 in Health Dental

7 answers

Do you have a college degree yet? If not, you need to go to a general university and pick a major which is heavy in the sciences that will prepare you for dental school. You may also need to take some classes that are required by dental schools, AKA- "pre-dental curriculum" Talk you your advisor about what these classes are.

After you complete your studies at a University, then you will study dentistry for about four years and then do a regular dentistry residency. You get paid for residency, but not much. After all that, then you complete another residency in orthodontia.

2007-09-07 08:56:59 · answer #1 · answered by love 6 · 0 0

Since becoming a dentist requires a degree in dentistry, and then (as you know) more study to specialize in orthodontics, you will need to go to a college or university for a 4-year degree, and then continue on into dentistry at the same or a different college or university in order to receive your doctorate in dentistry. Then, on to becoming an orthodontist Lots of work Good luck.

2007-09-07 08:29:30 · answer #2 · answered by NMFlamingo 2 · 1 0

Dental scholars DO take a extensive style of classes related to the anatomy, physique shape, histology, and pharmacology of different physique systems. scientific scholars DO take some classes on oral pathology, anatomy, and histology yet their scope of therapy is so extremely expert. remember that interior the area of dentistry there are right here specialities: oral and maxillofacial surgical technique oral and maxillofacial radiology oral pathology pediatrics endodontics periodontology prosthodontics orthodontics operative dental public well being "human beings say that human beings who learn dentistry are people who're too stupid to get into scientific college. " all and sundry who says that those days is an fool. Dental faculties robotically have greater applicants than scientific faculties for much less open slots and the GPAs are comparable--each and every particularly situations the dental college could have a greater physically powerful known admitted undergrad GPA than the med college at a school! it extremely is through fact all and sundry who's fairly clever and committed is figuring out that dentists take care of plenty much less crap from the government and hospitals so transforming into a dentist is a plenty greater advantageous occupation decision than healthcare expert.

2016-10-18 06:07:10 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I'm a dentist.

Most doctorate-level professional schools (e.g. medical school, dental school, optometry school, etc.) require at least three years of college. The overwhelming majority of matriculants into these professional schools have completed four years. Only the extraordinarily competitive students get in afer three years of college.

Lastly, you don't go to additional "school" to become an orthodontist (or any other dental specialist). You go into a residency program where you actually treat patients as a doctor (but under the supervision of licensed doctors, also known as "attendings".)

2007-09-07 08:56:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Uh, I was aware you just go to Orthodontic school after you get your undergrads. Did you talk to an ortho about where he went? The only dentist I know that goes to a specialty school after dental school is my major, which is oral maxillofacial school. So, my plan is UD Mercy, U of M, then USAMEDD&Cs. I just always assumed ortho was 4 years. Try calling an ortho, I'm sure he'll guide you through it. Usually if you go in, they have their degrees hanging on the wall.

2007-09-07 08:30:05 · answer #5 · answered by Srta. Argentina 7 · 0 1

no, schools of orthodontia only admit those who have already completed their degrees in dentistry.

2007-09-07 08:24:45 · answer #6 · answered by essentiallysolo 7 · 0 0

yes!!! i am gonna be a dentist.

2007-09-07 09:21:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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