lionking1191
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2007
- Messages
- 1,068
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
of course there are a variety of unis out there for both med and ddentistry and there is no universal 'bar' that sets entry requirements for med against dentistry (if you compare say, UNSW med and La Trobe dentistry, or Umelb dentistry and JCU med - obviously there are exceptions. generally these 2 courses and both in high demand, perhaps medicine more so than dentistry but on the other end of the scale there are a lot more places available for med (especially wth the shortage of GPs as they near retirement age) whereas dentistry (like optometry) remains highly regulated and a niche field.In actuality, Dentistry at Melbourne University is harder to get in than Medicine. Just because there are less positions available.
About 60-70 students are accepted into Dentistry and about 200 into Medicine.
I have 4 friends studying at Melbourne Dentistry, two was offered FULL FEE Dentistry at 99.65-99.75 ENTER and a very very decent UMAT (270/300 before Melbourne University's weird scaling takes place).
Medicine tends to be around that ENTER as well for Melbourne University, however, 99.65 should be able to get you a CSP place with a 270 umat.
Moving along now. Prior to 2008 Dentistry was harder to get in. However, with the introduction of La Trobe's Dentistry course, the enter dropped dramatically with a first round offer of only 98.85 with no umat required. Much of this reduction was attributed by many factors such as the location of the university in a rural area, the lack of publicity and knowledge about the existence of the course etc.
Then again, one could argue that many students with 95-97 UAI landed a place with UTAS or JCU Med.