Department of Restorative Dentistry and Biomaterial Sciences, Office of Dental Education, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Eur J Dent Educ. 2010 Feb;14(1):1-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0579.2009.00611.x.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the variables of students with prior dental assisting experience and students with a parent who is a dentist can be used as predictors of students' pre-clinical and clinical course performance in dental school.
The study population consisted of a cohort of 159 students in the Harvard School of Dental Medicine (HSDM) DMD graduation classes of 2001-2005. Data were collected via self-report using students' applications for admission to the HSDM DMD programme on which students provided information regarding whether they had prior dental assisting experience, including the type and duration of the experience and whether one or both of their parents were dentists. Data on the students' undergraduate science grade point average, Dental Admission Test academic average, Perceptual Ability Test (PAT) score, NBDE Part I and HSDM course grades (three pre-clinical and five clinical assessment categories) were collected from the Office of the Registrar. The pre-clinical categories included the first Oral Comprehensive Exam and the first two classes of the pre-clinical portion of the dental school, Treatment of Active Disease (TxAD) and Restorative Treatment (RTx). The clinical categories included the second Oral Comprehensive Exam and the cumulative grades received for the clinical procedures performed during the third and fourth years in the fields of Endodontics, Operative Dentistry, Periodontics and Prosthodontics. Descriptive and bivariate statistical analyses were performed and included in a multiple logistic regression model.
The results revealed that for the variable of prior dental-assisting experience, no statistically significant differences were noted in the pre-clinical and clinical assessment categories. However, students who had any amount of assisting experience were 2.2 times more likely to earn a grade of honours in TxAD compared with students who did not have assisting experience (P = 0.05). Students with a parent who was a dentist performed better only in Operative Dentistry clinical assessment compared with students without a dentist parent (P < 0.05).
Information on prior dental-assisting experience and having a parent who is a dentist have minimal merits for use as predictive agents based on these findings. Dental school admissions committees should continue to review a full spectrum of variables and ensure an applicant's true interest and motivation to pursue a career in dentistry.
本研究旨在评估具有牙医助理经验的学生和父母为牙医的学生的变量是否可用于预测学生在牙科学院的临床前和临床课程表现。
研究人群包括哈佛牙医学院(HSDM)2001-2005 年 DMD 毕业班级的 159 名学生。通过学生申请 HSDM DMD 课程时的自我报告收集数据,学生提供了有关他们是否具有牙医助理经验的信息,包括经验的类型和持续时间,以及他们的父母中是否有一位或两位是牙医。学生的本科科学平均绩点、牙科入学考试学术平均分、感知能力测试(PAT)分数、国家牙科考试第一部分和 HSDM 课程成绩(三个临床前和五个临床评估类别)从注册处收集。临床前类别包括第一次口腔综合考试和牙科学院临床前部分的前两个课程,即活动性疾病治疗(TxAD)和修复治疗(RTx)。临床类别包括第二次口腔综合考试和在牙髓学、口腔修复学、牙周病学和口腔修复学领域的第三和第四年进行的临床操作的累积成绩。进行了描述性和双变量统计分析,并包含在多变量逻辑回归模型中。
结果显示,对于具有牙医助理经验的变量,在临床前和临床评估类别中没有观察到统计学上的显著差异。然而,与没有助理经验的学生相比,有任何程度助理经验的学生在 TxAD 中获得荣誉成绩的可能性高 2.2 倍(P = 0.05)。有牙医父母的学生仅在口腔修复学临床评估中表现优于没有牙医父母的学生(P < 0.05)。
根据这些发现,以前的牙医助理经验和父母是牙医的信息作为预测因子几乎没有价值。牙科学院招生委员会应继续审查各种变量,并确保申请人对从事牙医职业的真正兴趣和动机。