ADA.org: Future of Dentistry Full Report

(Grace) #1
FUTURE OFDENTISTRY

DENTAL SCHOOL APPLICANTS

The Applicant Pool

Like other professions, dentistry goes through
cycles during which the applicant pool rises,
declines, rises again, continuing in this wavelike pat-
tern over time.
As indicated in Figure 6.1, the number of dental
school applicants peaked in 1978, and then dropped
precipitously to a 30-year low in 1989. The next
year, in 1990, applications began a dramatic
increase and reached a high in 1997 of just over
9,800. Between 1998-2000, applications have

declined modestly. The latest decline, however, has
not led to a corresponding enrollment or academic
decline. There is some concern that the almost 30%
drop in Dental Aptitude Test (DAT) participants in
early 2000 may presage a sharper, short-term
decline in dental school applicants.
There are some factors that suggest that the latest
decline in size of the dental applicant pool may be less
drastic and have lesser consequences than the dramatic
applicant pool shrinkage experienced during the 1980s.

A second reason the decline is not expected to be
long lasting is that the current environment for den-
tal practice is extremely favorable, and especially so
for new practitioners. Whether relying on anecdot-
al reports of increasing practice opportunities, or on
the reports that assert or predict dental workforce
maldistribution, virtually all signs point to a favorable
professional practice climate for the next few cohorts
of dentists. Such a situation should also act as a brake
on the current decline in the applicant pool.
Third, the potential size of the applicant pool has
grown significantly since 1980, some say it has near-
ly doubled, due to an increased number of female
applicants. In most schools women now represent
30-40% of the student body.
Fourth, the number of dental
school seats to be filled is 30%
smaller than was the case in the
early 1980s. This suggests that
some decline in the size of the
applicant pool can be accom-
modated without serious aca-
demic consequences.
Fifth, there is informal evi-
dence from dental admissions
directors that, contrary to past
experience, the modest decline
in the size of the applicant pool
has not been accompanied by a
parallel decline in the grade
point average (GPA) of entering
students. In fact, quite the op-
posite seems to have occurred
in a number of schools, a
phenomenon that requires
explanation.
In spite of these positive fac-
tors, it would be foolish to be
complacent about the current
decline in the size of the dental
applicant pool. Much more
needs to be done to understand it in order to bet-
ter manage dental school admissions policies and
programs in the future.
A potentially important factor that may dis-
courage dental school applicants may be the
recent rise in dental school tuitions, and the asso-
ciated increase in indebtedness among the gradu-
ates from dental schools. Dental students gradu-
ate with somewhat higher debt loads as compared
to medical students. This applies to comparisons

Dental Education

Applicants First-Year Enrollment

Source: ADA, Surveys of Predoctoral Dental Educational Institutions.


18,000

16,000

14,000

12,000

10,000

8,000

6,000

4,000

2,000

0

4,644

3 , 573

6, 301
3 , 979 4,^347

4, 964

9 ,82 9

15 , 734

FIGURE 6. 1


U.S. Dental Schools: Trend of Applicants
and First-Year Enrollees, 1950 - 1998

19

51
19

53
19

55
19

57
19

59
19

61
19

63
19

65
19

67
19

69
19

71
19

73
19

75
19

77
19

79
19

81
19

83
19

85
19

87
19

89
199

1
199

3
199

5
199

7
199

8

APPL

ICANTS

AND

E

N

R

OLLM

E
NTS

YEAR
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