Dental Assisting · North Carolina
Dental Assisting colleges in North Carolina
Dental Assisting program coverage in North Carolina is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Dental Assisting is an allied-health program that trains you to support dentists chairside, take dental x-rays, sterilize instruments, and run the front office of a practice.
We're still verifying Dental Assisting programs in North Carolina. Try a broader search at /results?q=Dental Assisting or browse all colleges in North Carolina.
What you'll study in a Dental Assisting program
- Chairside assisting and four-handed dentistry technique
- Dental radiography, including taking and processing x-ray images
- Infection control, instrument sterilization, and operatory disinfection
- Dental anatomy, terminology, and tooth notation
- Taking tooth and mouth impressions and pouring study models
- Mixing and handling dental materials, cements, and restorative compounds
- Pre- and post-operative patient care and oral-hygiene instruction
- Dental office administration: scheduling, patient intake, and recordkeeping
- Equipment maintenance and chairside instrument identification
Where a Dental Assisting degree can lead
- Dental Assistant
- Orthodontic Assistant
- Oral Surgery Assistant
- Expanded-Function Dental Assistant
- Dental Office Coordinator
- Pediatric Dental Assistant
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 dental assistants median $47,300).
Dental Assisting prepares you to be the hands-on support a dentist relies on during patient care. You learn to seat and prepare patients, hand instruments and manage suction during fillings, extractions, and other procedures, take and develop dental radiographs, and take impressions of teeth and the mouth. A large part of the work is keeping the operatory safe and ready: sterilizing instruments, disinfecting surfaces, mixing dental materials, and following infection-control standards. You also handle the office side of a practice, scheduling appointments, greeting and intaking patients, maintaining records, and explaining pre- and post-operative care. This makes the field distinct from dental hygiene, which is a separate, longer-degree path focused on cleanings, scaling, and periodontal assessment, and from dentistry itself, which requires a doctoral degree.
Many people enter Dental Assisting through a certificate or diploma program, though associate-degree options also exist; entry-level roles typically require a postsecondary nondegree award rather than a four-year degree. Programs are built around supervised clinical training, so expect lab practice on mannequins and instruments followed by a chairside externship in an actual dental office. Requirements vary widely by state: some states regulate who may take x-rays or perform expanded functions, and programmatic accreditation, a radiography permit, and a state credential or registration may be required, so verify the rules where you plan to work. Graduates work in general dental offices, orthodontic and oral-surgery practices, pediatric clinics, group and community dental settings, and as office coordinators who blend clinical and administrative duties.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of dental assistants, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $47,300 and projects employment to grow about 6.4% from 2024 to 2034; a postsecondary nondegree award is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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