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Predental Tips from Lessons Learned from a Unique D1 Year

Updated: Aug 25, 2023

Hey everyone! My name is Gil and I’m a current D2 at Stony Brook.

Dental student smiling

My D1 year was the most challenging one I have faced yet, no question. Starting dental school during a pandemic posed many challenges for my class.


In January 2021, we began our in-person lab work and began a full dental school curriculum after finishing our medical school courses.

Over the next 6 months, I learned and applied lessons that were necessary to finish D1 strong. I’m happy to share these here and hope that they help an incoming D1 or pre-dental student!


Predental Tip #1-Take Care of Yourself First

Yes, you are studying to become a dentist, but you have to remember that you are first and foremost a human being that needs to take care of yourself.


Find activities that you love to make sure that your mental and physical well-being are taken care of every single day. Personally, I practice meditation using Headspace, journal with a Notion template, and exercise 3-5 times a week.


Physical training is really important since we spend so much time mentally training in the form of studying.


Finding your favorite self-care methods will help you get through those long days of didactics and lab work. Incorporating these practices into morning and evening routines is a great way to make sure that they’ll get done.


Predental Tip #2-Celebrate Small Victories, Learn from Setbacks

There is no shortage of exams, quizzes, and practicals/ competencies in dental school.


Still, every single one gets you a step closer to your ultimate goal.


Never lose sight of that fact!


It will give you some perspective and towards the end of the year, you will realize how far you’ve come.


Small rewards after success will keep you going. However, sometimes things don’t pan out. You had a bad day, didn’t study enough, got cursed, etc. Whether it’s an exam, a practical, or just having to redo an assignment, almost everyone fails at some point in dental school.


Don’t let it get you down!


In this situation, the best thing to do is ask questions of your professors and upperclassmen. See each failure or mistake as an opportunity to learn and to better reinforce the concepts. Hand skills in particular can be very stressful to learn, so be kind to yourself and trust the process.


Some extra practice never hurt anyone!

Predental Tip #3-Take Time Away from Studying

This is difficult during the rush of the school year, but it is crucial to take some time away from academics.


Be sure to spend as much time as you can manage with family and friends, or even do something alone!


Going full steam ahead 24/7 is a sure way to burn out. Your classmates will be going through all the same struggles and doing something not school-related together will make your bond even stronger.


Going back to predental tip #1, find some activities and places that get you going and unplug from school for a few hours, or days, preferably!


Predental Tip #4-Time Management is Your Best Friend

Building on the last point, being able to manage your time is an invaluable skill. Just ask all the docs that run 15 minutes behind all day after their first patient!


But seriously, some days get so packed that you have to skip a meal and or stay up until midnight studying.


To minimize unintentional fasting and sleep deprivation, preparation is key.


Personally, I use Notion to keep track of every scheduled exam, quiz, and report due date at the beginning of each course. Then, every weekend, I take 5-10 minutes to look through my calendar for anything coming up that week.


From there I make daily “Get To-Do” lists. (The “Get” is a little trick I saw somewhere that switches your perspective from “you HAVE to do this” to “you GET to do this” and makes completing each task more fulfilling.)


This list includes everything from meals, study sessions, classes, workouts, you get the drift. Even better if you can assign timeslots to specific tasks and incorporate them into your preferred calendar. This can help reduce (but not eliminate…) cramming tons of material the night before exams.


Bar none, your time is your most valuable asset. Use it wisely.


Predental Tip #5-Useful Apps

This is not so much a lesson learned as an unpaid plug for the various apps I use daily during school. So here goes:


Headspace

Headspace offers meditation, sleep sounds, and some light home workouts.


Notion

Notion is great for organization, schedule keeping, and journaling. Really can be made into anything you want it to be.


Notability

Notability is the app of choice for importing and marking up PDFs of slides, textbooks, etc. The best feature is audio recording which syncs to the notes, allowing you to play back the lecture and see the notes you made.


Forest

Forest is a focus app with a Pomodoro timer built in. Also, you plant trees for each session so you can see the total time you study build up!


GroupMe

GroupMe is great for keeping up with class news/struggles and memes.


Conclusion

I hope you found these predental tips helpful. Feel free to follow me on Instagram! ~Gil @sdr.gil

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