Success story: Dental assistant program looks to the U.P. for students
March 22, 2023
To address another workforce sector where employer demand exceeds labor supply, ҹèÊÓÆµ has formally partnered with Bay Mills Community College in the U.P., seeking to admit more dental assistant students.
Last month, ҹèÊÓÆµ and Bay Mills, a tribally-controlled community college in Brimley, signed an articulation agreement that will allow Bay Mills students to transfer to ҹèÊÓÆµ’s dental assistant program after their first year. ҹèÊÓÆµ’s yearlong dental assistant curriculum allows them to sit for the state exam to become a registered dental assistant (RDA). ҹèÊÓÆµ Dental Assistant Director Beckie Wooters will make a recruiting visit to Bay Mills on April 17.
Ability to earn RDA licensure is a key advantage of ҹèÊÓÆµ’s program. ҹèÊÓÆµ has an outstanding exam pass rate, exceeding the state of Michigan’s average in both the clinical and written portion of the exams. Since 2019, at least 96 percent of ҹèÊÓÆµ graduates have passed the clinical portion.
“With a registered dental assistant, a dentist can see about 60 percent more patients. They can do more clinical procedures under the dentist’s supervision,” said Dr. Jessica Rickert, a now-retired Traverse City area dentist who hired ҹèÊÓÆµ graduates in her practice.
Rickert is also the first female Native American dentist in the United States, and remains the only one in Michigan. She now consults with insurer Delta Dental of Michigan and leads Anishinaabe Dental Outreach, whose goal is to improve dental health in Native communities. She saw an opportunity to connect ҹèÊÓÆµ and Bay Mills to better serve the Upper Peninsula, where the shortage of dental professionals is especially acute.
“The scarcity of timely dental care is causing serious hardship,” Rickert said of the U.P. “They have a wonderful program at ҹèÊÓÆµ. Dental assisting is such a great career, and it’s really fulfilling and it’s necessary. Let’s make this happen.”
Wooters said the agreement is another way to boost enrollment. ҹèÊÓÆµ’s dental assistant program currently has 13 students, and can accommodate 24. Need is great in the lower peninsula as well, she said.
“We’re not filling the needs for all of the jobs,” said Wooters.
ҹèÊÓÆµ recently invested $52,000 in new equipment for the dental assistant program. It has six fully-functioning patient rooms and some of the latest technology, including an intraoral scanner.
In addition to dental assistants, ҹèÊÓÆµ has been working to increase the ranks of professionals in multiple fields. In just the past nine months the college has introduced several programs in response to employer demand and labor shortages:
- Nurses - A fast-track bachelor’s degree in partnership with Davenport University will allow students to complete the program more quickly and less expensively.
- Cooks on ships - A culinary-maritime certificate will prepare students for this well-paid, niche occupation.
- Police officers - A shortened Police Academy as well as participation in the Michigan Public Safety Academy Assistance Program, in which police agencies pay for tuition.
- Water Quality Environmental Technology - Michigan’s first associate degree aimed at the workforce that will monitor and clean up waters within the Great Lakes watershed.
- Drone pilots - A standalone degree in Uncrewed Aerial Systems will debut this fall.
- Surveyors - A donor-funded recruiter is seeking to boost enrollment in order to meet employer needs.
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