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Journal ArticleDOI

Dental Education from the Students’ Perspective: Curriculum and Climate

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TLDR
This cross-sectional study compares morale among dental students at five western U.S. dental schools, relates morale to various aspects of the school environment, and determines a prioritized list of the most important aspects of dental education from the students' perspective.
Abstract
This cross-sectional study compares morale among dental students at five western U.S. dental schools, relates morale to various aspects of the school environment, and determines a prioritized list of the most important aspects of dental education from the students’ perspective. Survey data were collected from students at the end of their first, second, and third years. Respondents answered several questions associated with student morale and listed the three best aspects and three greatest challenges of their school. Lastly, respondents ranked seven different aspects of dental education in order of importance. Surveys were returned by 742 students (66 percent response). Student morale varied significantly in different educational institutions. Morale tended to be lower among third-year students and higher among first-year students. Poor student-faculty relations was the factor most strongly associated with decreased morale. Similarly, positive atmosphere was the factor most frequently associated with high morale. Faculty and clinic experience were the most frequently cited positive aspects of schools; curriculum and clinic experience were the most commonly cited negative aspects. Students commonly perceived clinical experience to be the most important aspect of their education. As students neared graduation, they perceived business management as more important and lab work as less important.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A typology of dental students according to their experience of stress: a qualitative study.

TL;DR: This study conducted a qualitative research study based on in-depth one-on-one interviews with twelve recent graduates from a Canadian dental school to understand in a comprehensive manner how dental students experience stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning experience in endodontics: Brazilian students' perceptions.

TL;DR: Students' perceptions provided valuable information about the development of the course and the teacher-student relationship, together with the added intention of enhancing the teaching of endodontics as well as other courses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dental students' perceptions about the endodontic treatments performed using NiTi rotary instruments and hand stainless steel files

TL;DR: The use of NiTi rotary instruments should be included in undergraduate dental curriculum, contributing to the increase of patients assisted and consequently to improve the clinical experience of the students.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can patients help teach professionalism and empathy to dental students? Adding patient videos to a lecture course.

TL;DR: Examination of predoctoral students' perspectives to determine the impact of new educational methodologies designed to integrate patients' voices into a patient management lecture course indicates that students perceived this innovation enhanced the teaching of professionalism, raised their awareness of the importance of empathy, and was a well-received addition to the course.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perceived sources of stress amongst Chilean and Argentinean dental students.

TL;DR: The Spanish version of the DES30 questionnaire performed well, but future studies should evaluate the instrument's properties in larger and more diverse dental student populations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluations of Self and Others: Self-Enhancement Biases in Social Judgments

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relation between self-appraisals and appraisals of others and found that individuals with high self-esteem were more likely to appraise their friend.
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Psychological stress in undergraduate dental students: baseline results from seven European dental schools.

TL;DR: Higher than expected levels of emotional exhaustion were found in a large sample of first-year undergraduate dental students in Europe and some evidence showed that contact with patients and the level of support afforded by living at home may be protective.
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In the Students’ Own Words: What Are the Strengths and Weaknesses of the Dental School Curriculum?

TL;DR: It is concluded that students participating in this study were positive overall about their learning experiences in dental schools, but identified several areas that appear to be problematic for many students at a variety of different schools including fundamental concerns about instructional quality in some areas of the curriculum.
Journal ArticleDOI

North American Dental Students’ Perspectives About Their Clinical Education

TL;DR: Junior, senior, and graduate dental students at twenty-one North American dental schools perceived that the strongest aspect of their clinical education was their relationship with the faculty, but also reported that the dental school clinic was often an inefficient learning environment that hindered their opportunity to develop clinical competency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress, burnout and health in the clinical period of dental education

TL;DR: A need to identify the group of students who may have insufficient social skills for dealing adequately with the patients, and to train them accordingly is indicated, as few differences existed between the students of the fourth and the fifth study year.
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