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J Dent Educ. 71(8): 1098-1123 2007
© 2007 American Dental Education Association
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Association Report

U.S. Dental School Applicants and Enrollees, 2005 Entering Class

Jacqueline E. Chmar, M.P.H.; Richard G. Weaver, D.D.S.; Satyan Ramanna, M.S.; Richard W. Valachovic, D.M.D., M.P.H.


There were 10,731 applicants to the entering dental school class in 2005. This represents a 13.8 percent increase over the number of applicants to the 2004 entering class and almost a 45 percent increase over the number of applicants in 2001. Dental schools reported 4,558 first-time, first-year enrollees in 2005, an increase of 101 first-time, first-year enrollees over the number reported in 2004. The percent of applicants that were enrolled in 2005 was 42.5. The percent of applicants enrolled in 2001 was 57.6. Women were 44.2 percent of the applicants and 43.8 percent of the first-time, first-year enrollees in 2005, slight increases from what they were in 2004. Underrepresented minorities comprised 12.8 percent of the applicants and 12.6 percent of the first-time, first-year enrollees in 2005. These percentages are little changed from those reported in 2001. The average GPA of the first-time, first-year enrollees increased slightly in 2005, from 3.4 to 3.5; there was little change in DAT scores, standing at 18.9 for Academic Average, 17.4 for Perceptual Ability, and 18.4 for Total Science.




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D. C. Holmes, J. V. Doering, and M. Spector
Associations Among Predental Credentials and Measures of Dental School Achievement
J Dent Educ., February 1, 2008; 72(2): 142 - 152.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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