Dental Hygiene
As a dental hygiene major, you'll learn the fundamental and technical skills needed to pursue your career in the health professions field.
Through classroom, clinic and community outreach settings, you will gain the experience that will not only lead you into various clinical professions but also provide you with the skills and knowledge for the interdisciplinary future of dental hygiene.
The Department of Dental Hygiene offers the following degrees:
- An Associate of Science in Dental Hygiene
- An Associate of Science to Bachelor of Science program route for students actively enrolled in the AS program seeking a BS degree
- A Bachelor of Science program for students who have an AS in Dental Hygiene either from 91¶ÌÊÓƵ or another accredited university
91¶ÌÊÓƵ Process
Thoroughly review the following resources before scheduling an advising appointment.
Applicant Checklist
Our applicant checklist reviews each necessary step to be a successful candidate for the dental hygiene program. Always refer first to your program checklist when choosing general education courses.
Many of your program prerequisites also count as general education requirements. Review the checklist closely and come to your advising appointment prepared with questions.
Dental Hygiene Applicant Checklist
Dental Hygiene Advising Video
Apply
Ready to apply? Visit the Department of Dental Hygiene website to apply to our programs.
Helpful Information
- Taking more than two science courses, including math, in a semester may be overwhelming. Balance your course load with other general education requirements.
- Medical Terminology (HTHS 1101) is highly recommended before your first course in anatomy and physiology.
- The Dental Hygiene program is highly competitive with an average science support course GPA of 3.6 for students entering the program (see science option one or two from the applicant checklist). Shoot for a B+ and above in these courses. A couple of B's may be okay, but A's are best.
Don’t forget math and English general education requirements, which can be found on our Math and English Requirements website as well as the 91¶ÌÊÓƵ Placement website.
Health Sciences or Zoology Anatomy & Physiology
The following video spells out the differences between the Health Sciences Integrated Human Anatomy & Physiology (HTHS) class series, or the Zoology Human Anatomy & Physiology (ZOOL) class series.
Students need to complete either the HTHS or ZOOL series for entrance into most College of Health Professions programs.
Possible Academic Plan
The following outlines a possible academic schedule for a student’s first two semesters at Weber State while pursuing dental hygiene.
Work with a College of Health Professions advisor to determine the best schedule that works for you.
If your math and English requirements are complete, replace those classes with other general education requirements found in your CatTracks.