DDS Frequently Asked Questions
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General Questions
Applications are open from July 1 to November 1 in the year prior to the Fall term that admission is being sought.
E.g., Applications for Fall 2025 admission are open from July 1, 2024 to November 1, 2024.
The University of Alberta School of Dentistry is unable to accept transfer students from other dental programs. All students admitted to the DDS program are admitted to year 1 and must complete all 4 years of the program at the University of Alberta to be awarded a DDS degree.
No advanced credit will be awarded for any previous dental education or for work completed outside the University of Alberta DDS program.
A resident of Alberta is defined as a Canadian Citizen or Permanent Resident who has been continuously resident in the Province of Alberta, the Yukon, the Northwest Territories or Nunavut for at least one year immediately before the first day of classes of the term for which admission is sought. The one-year residence period shall not be considered broken where the admission committee is satisfied that the applicant was temporarily out of the province on vacation, in short-term employment, or as a full-time student. Applicants on study permit cannot establish residence during a period as a full-time student in an Alberta secondary or postsecondary institution because a stay under study permit is considered to be a visiting period.
If you feel that this definition reflects your current and expected residence, you may claim Alberta residency on your application. We reserve the right to correct your residency claim should we feel that the information in your application does not support your claim and would refer the applicant to the Code of Applicant Behaviour.
The Registrar of the Provincial licensing body may refuse to issue a license to practice dentistry to any applicant possessing a criminal record. If you have any concerns, contact the licensing association of the province you wish to practice in.
Academic Requirements
The DDS program is not a direct entry from high school program.
Applicants must complete two years in an undergraduate program for their application can be considered. More information can be found under Academic Requirements on the DDS webpage.
Applicants should consult the University of Alberta Undergraduate program search tool to review required high school subjects for each program.
Students should have the following grade 12 subjects in order to complete the DDS academic requirements:
- English Language Arts 30-1
- Biology 30
- Chemistry 30
- Mathematics 30-1 or 30-2
Students should consult their institution to determine what high school prerequisites are required.
It is entirely up to you as to which program you choose to complete the academic requirements in. Most applicants choose to complete them through the Faculty of Science but they may be completed through other faculties. We recommend applicants have an alternate program in mind when completing the academic requirements so that if never admitted into the program they can remain in their alternate program and complete a degree of their choosing.
You may wish to consult the University of Alberta Undergraduate program search tool to review the various programs available at the University of Alberta.
Upon receipt of an application for admission and all required documents, the Registrar's Office will evaluate your coursework to determine if you have met the requirements. Unfortunately, we are not able to provide unofficial evaluations of coursework. This includes, but is not limited to, the transferability of courses and OGPA calculations.
You can apply to the DDS program while your academic requirements are in-progress as long as the requirements will be completed and final official transcripts are received by June 15 in the year of admission.
E.g., You can apply at the beginning of your second year of study if you will be completing all requirements that year.
The course load requirement is a separate academic requirement from the required courses.
The minimum requirement of two Fall/Winter academic years of 30 units may be composed of any university transferable courses; it does not need to specifically include the required courses.
Required courses may be completed in any term.
Transcripts are reviewed on a case by case basis, but generally a withdrawal will only affect your application if it occurs during the current year in which you are applying.
Withdrawing from a course may affect your:
- two academic years with a full course load of *30,
- full-time status, or;
- ability to meet our requirements for application.
The number of withdrawals on a transcript do not negatively impact an application.
Only the first passing grade will be considered for repeated courses. If a passing grade is attained, no credit will be granted if the course is attempted again.
For University of Alberta coursework, a grade of D and above is considered passing.
Grades of D+ and lower are considered deficient for transfer coursework (i.e., courses not completed at the University of Alberta).
All university transferable coursework completed within a term (Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer) will be considered together, regardless if the courses are from different institutions.
For example, if you took 12 units at the University of Calgary and 3 units at Athabasca University in the Fall term, we will consider that you completed 15 units in the Fall term.
Transferring Courses
Applicants can use the following transfer credit assessment tools to check courses in advance or to plan your timetable and course selection.
- Equivalent course lists for select Alberta post-secondary institutions
- Transfer Alberta search tool for Alberta institutions
- University of Alberta Transfer Credit Search tool for all institutions
If the course is not listed in either tool, you may compare the course description of an accepted course at the UofA to course descriptions at your home institution.
Dentistry Admissions is unable to assess coursework in advance. Upon receipt of an application and all required documents, the Registrar's Office will evaluate your coursework to determine if you have met the paraprofessional requirements.
Dentistry Admissions is unable to assess coursework in advance. Upon receipt of an application and all required documents, the Registrar's Office will evaluate your coursework to determine if you have met the academic requirements.
Applicants can use the following transfer credit assessment tools to check courses in advance or to plan your timetable and course selection.
- Equivalent course lists for select Alberta post-secondary institutions
- Transfer Alberta search tool for Alberta institutions
- University of Alberta Transfer Credit Search tool for all institutions
If the course is not listed in either tool, you may compare the course description of an accepted course at the UofA to course descriptions at your home institution.
At some institutions, a course is worth 3 units whereas a course with a required laboratory is worth 4 units.
At the University of Alberta, courses with laboratories are NOT worth more units.
Therefore, course with laboratories that are 4 units will transfer as 3 units to the University. This may impact the course load for an academic year.
At some institutions, students must register in a laboratory course separately from the lecture course. The laboratory course is listed on the academic transcript with a grade and units.
At the University of Alberta, required laboratories are not separate from the lecture course and no additional units are assigned.
If a course has a co-requisite laboratory course, the laboratory will NOT transfer for credit and the grade will be excluded from the OGPA. This may impact the course load for an academic year.
If a laboratory course is optional (not a co-requisite), it will transfer for credit.
GPA Calculation
Overall GPA is comprised of all transferable postsecondary work completed as a full-time student. Full-time study is equivalent to a minimum of:
- 18 units taken in Fall/Winter terms
- 12 units taken in Spring/Summer terms
For applicants who have completed four or more years (Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer) of full-time transferable postsecondary work, the overall GPA is calculated with the deletion of the lowest GPA year, provided it is not the:
- most recent full-time period
- One of only two required Fall/Winter years where 30 units was taken.
Applicants can request a Special Considerations form to remove years from your OGPA due to extenuating circumstances. Applicants must be able to demonstrate circumstances that lead to the request, such as personal health issues or immediate family circumstances that impacted their ability to perform well in their studies.
Applicants requesting special consideration must meet all minimum academic requirements. Special consideration cannot be used to requested a waiver of academic requirements.
Your total grades points divided by total number of credits equals your OGPA.
You may follow these steps to calculate your OGPA:
- Multiply the numeric value of your grade by the number of credits that course is worth. This equals the grade points for that course.
- Do this for all of your classes and add your total grade points together.
- Divide that number by your total number of credits.
- The number you have at the end is your weighted OGPA