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J Dent Educ. 72(5): 577-584 2008
© 2008 American Dental Education Association
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Critical Issues in Dental Education

Strategies for Developing a Culture of Mentoring in Postdoctoral Periodontology

Timothy J. Hempton, D.D.S.; Dimitrios Drakos, D.D.S., M.S.; Vikram Likhari, D.D.S.; James B. Hanley, D.M.D.; Lonnie Johnson, D.D.S., Ph.D.; Paul Levi, D.M.D.; Terrence J. Griffin, D.M.D.

Key words: mentoring, faculty recruitment, mentoring skills, dental faculty shortage

Submitted for publication 04/18/07; accepted 02/15/08


Dental education in the United States and Canada is currently experiencing a crisis with respect to faculty recruitment and retention. The major reasons for the status of dental and specialty education are lower salaries and lack of interest. To make up for this deficit in the specialty of periodontology, our current educators need to utilize strategies targeted towards an existing potential teaching resource: the postdoctoral students in periodontology. The intent of this article is to review the current crisis in dental faculty recruitment and retention, show how it affects the specialty of periodontics, and describe how creating a culture of mentoring may facilitate more engagement of periodontal residents in the teaching process during their postdoctoral training. The strategies utilized to develop a culture of mentoring in the Department of Periodontology at Tufts University are presented. They include methodologies to develop and enhance residents’ mentoring skills, thereby helping to compensate for the shortage of periodontists involved in academics. Measurement of the mentoring strategy is presented from data obtained from an online survey of third-year predoctoral students’ perceptions of their interaction with residents as their clinical instructors. Moreover, the numbers of program alumni engaged in teaching prior to and after the mentoring program was initiated are also presented as an outcome of the mentoring program. Developing a culture of mentoring in postdoctoral periodontology programs can be an important tool to enable individuals to become more involved in the process of teaching and mentoring during their postdoctoral training. This outcome could ameliorate the deficit of periodontists engaged as formal educators. Moreover, development and expansion of a culture of mentoring in a periodontolgy program may encourage recent graduates to become more involved in teaching subsequent to graduation.







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