Re: "superiority" of US/Canadian dental schools
- From: "Amatus Cremona" <Nicola@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2008 00:23:04 -0400
The report does not state what specific requirement he did not meet. It
might be that he has not practiced in the USA long enough. Most States do
not offer reciprocity if we have not been in good standing with our State
dental board for many years prior to applying for reciprocity.
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Amatus
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"CA-DDS tired of BS" <ca_dds@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:0008ad1d$0$2034$c3e8da3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.state.nj.us/oag/ca/dentistry/minutes/den317.htm
4. Dr. David Sarment - Application for a dental license. Dr. Sarment
obtained a D.D.S. degree in 1994 from University of Paris, France. He
indicates that he is board certified in Periodontics and holds a dental
license and specialty license in the State of Michigan. The committee
recommends that this application be denied because he is a foreign
graduate and does not meet the requirements for licensure
MAYBE NOW YOU GET IT
"Amatus Cremona" <Nicola@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7uRMk.4438$as4.1944@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Two years of USA specialty training gets them a dental degree and license
here. Sorry.
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Amatus
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"CA-DDS tired of BS" <ca_dds@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:00089a14$0$2032$c3e8da3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I was talking about foreign grads with US specialty training.
They get nothing is most states
"Amatus Cremona" <Nicola@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:NYPMk.4431$as4.2828@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Most specialists can get reciprocity in other States. They have to
jump through the appropriate hoops, pay the fees, and they are al set.
They have to be trained from an acredidated school, and practice a
specific number of years, first.
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Amatus
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"CA-DDS tired of BS" <ca_dds@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:490139e7$0$12402$c3e8da3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I am sure I pissed NY dental board off, this is what I wanted.
And even if I will never practice in NY, I can live with it.
I want awareness, I want any SPECIALIST with US training to be able to
practice in any state.
Who is against that , just give me some arguments.
This is not a fight for me, I'll work a few more years and I am done,
this is a fight for justice,I'll take action against all the
protectionist US dental boards.
On the Internet and maybe in court.
As tenhmed agreed, a specialist should be allowed to practice anywhere
in the US , even if he is a foreign grad.
Look at my post , at what the pathetic scam called New Jersey dental
board did to that periodontist , who is more educated than any NJ
dental board member, but not allowed to practice in NJ!
"Steven Bornfeld" <dentaltwinmung@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:8rGdnY1na9-W653UnZ2dnUVZ_s3inZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
CA-DDS tired of BS wrote:
FOR ALL OF YOU CLAIMING THE SUPERIORITY of US/CANADIAN schools to
any other dental schools , did you know that in this country
students score lower than other countries
I have a theory--you could get your NY license but you pissed someone
off.
Steve
http://www.nysun.com/foreign/us-students-lag-behind-other-nations-in-science/67500/
SO DO ME A FAVOR AND CUT THE CRAP , US dental school system is not
the center of the Universe with everything revolving around it.
They are good dentists and crappy dentists everywhere in the world,
I'd rather have my teeth worked on in a private practice in Europe
than in an US Medical/HMO practice
U.S. Students Lag Behind Other Nations in Science, Math
By NANCY ZUCKERBROD, Associated Press | December 5, 2007
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WASHINGTON - American students are lagging behind their peers in
other countries in science and math, test results out yesterday
show.
The test, the Program for International Student Assessment, was
given to 15-year-olds in 30 industrialized countries last year. It
focused on science but also included a math portion.
The 30 countries, including America, make up the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, which runs the international
test.
The average scores for American students were lower than the average
scores for the group as a whole.
American students also had an average science score that was lower
than the average score in 16 other OECD countries. In math, American
students did even worse - posting an average score that was lower
than the average in 23 of the other leading industrialized
countries.
The test also was administered to students in about two dozen
countries or jurisdictions that are not part of the industrialized
group.
When compared with the broader group, the American students fell in
the middle of the pack in science and did somewhat worse in math.
There was no change in American math scores since 2003, the last
time the test was given. The science scores aren't comparable
between 2003 to 2006, because the tests aren't the same.
American girls and boys did about the same on the science and math
portions of the test.
Finland's 15-year-olds did the best on the science test, followed by
students in Hong Kong and Canada. Students in Finland, Taiwan, South
Korea, and Hong Kong were the top performers in math.
.
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