ADA.org: Future of Dentistry Full Report

(Grace) #1
FUTURE OFDENTISTRY

factor in bringing dental assistants and dental tech-
nicians into the dental workforce.


Applications and Admissions


During the period from 1994/95 to 1998/99,
applications to dental hygiene programs have con-
sistently exceeded 20,000 students per year for a
system capacity of between 5,883 and 6,471 first-
year spaces. Dental hygiene program admission
requirements vary significantly: 46% of programs
require a high school diploma/GED; 16% require
some college courses; 27% require one year of col-
lege; 8% require two years of college; and 3% use
some other standard. Males accounted for 3.0% of
all enrolled dental hygiene students in 1998/99,
while African Americans constituted 3.1% of the
dental hygiene student body.
Dental assisting applications have exceeded
11,000 in each year of the 1994/95 to 1998/99
enrollment. Acceptances exceeded 8,000 in four
of the five years. For 98% of programs, the mini-
mum entry qualification was a high school diplo-
ma/GED. Males constituted 3.0% of enrolled
dental assisting students in 1998/99, while African
American students accounted for 12.1% in the
same year.
Dental laboratory technology applications have
declined from 1,469 in 1994/95 to 1,100 in


1998/99. Acceptances fell from
1,118 to 856 during the same
period. All but one program
required a high school diploma/
GED as a minimum entry require-
ment. In 1998/99, dental labora-
tory technician programs enrolled
224 males and 263 females into
first year and 215 males and 198
females into second year. African
Americans constituted 13.9% of
the enrolled dental laboratory
technician students.

Tuition and Fees for Allied
Dental Education

Figure 6.4 provides the trend
in the cost of tuition and fees
related to allied dental educa-
tion. The data reflect first-year
educational costs applicable to
"in-district" students (i.e., students who live in the
district the school or community college serves).
The costs are close to "in-state" tuition and fees,
though the latter are about $1000 higher in the late
1990s. For publicly-funded institutions, out-of-
state tuitions and fees are substantially higher for all
allied dental education programs. However, most
allied dental education students tend to enroll in
programs fairly close to their place of residence, sug-
gesting that in-district or in-state tuition and fees
would be the norm. The data presented in Figure
6.4 include university, community college, technical
institute, vocational school and other category
tuition and fee structures. Except for dental
hygiene, there are relatively few university-based
allied dental education programs.

Allied Dental Education Teaching Faculty

There is relatively little information describing the
teaching faculty for allied dental education.
Anecdotal reports suggest that dental hygiene, in par-
ticular, finds it increasingly difficult to recruit faculty
for its programs. This problem has been exacerbated
in part by the continuing decline in the number of uni-
versity-based dental hygiene programs, institutions
that have traditionally supplied a significant propor-
tion of the faculty and faculty leadership for dental
hygiene teaching programs in general.

Dental Education


Graduates of Allied Dental Education Programs, 1989-1998

Source: ADA, Surveys of Allied Dental Education.


TABLE 6.10


Dental Hygiene Dental Assisting

1 989/9 0
1990 /9 1
1991 /92
1 992/93
1 993/94
1 994/95
1 995/9 6
1996 /97
1 997/98
1 998/99

3 , 904
3 , 953
4 , 229
4 , 431
4 , 637
4 , 553
4 , 668
4 , 855
5 , 023
5 , 281

3 , 960
3 , 940
3 , 999
4 , 077
4 , 382
4 , 490
4 , 679
5 , 032
4 , 967
4 , 720

722
596
655
585
638
608
510
507
436
490

Year DentalTech Lniabocianratory
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