1 / 25

The “P” Word

The “P” Word. Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education. In the next weeks, months, years and, yes, decades, you are going to hear this word a lot. The “P” word. What is it?. Professionalism. Professionalism.

Download Presentation

The “P” Word

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The “P” Word Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

  2. In the next weeks, months, years and, yes, decades, you are going to hear this word a lot.

  3. The “P” word • What is it?

  4. Professionalism

  5. Professionalism

  6. The way you present yourself to others in your workplace is one small piece of becoming a professional. • It’s a good first step.

  7. Professionalism • Not about whether you play golf, or wear plaid shirts or 2 plaids together. • It’s about what’s inside of you, what drives your actions.

  8. Professionalism • Honesty and integrity • Respect for others • Do no harm

  9. Professionalism • Trouble is there is leakage between your private life and your professional life. • The challenge ahead for all of you is to figure out how to be yourself, authentically you, and also to be a professional.

  10. Professionalism • This isn’t something most people figure out right away. • You may work on this for years. • This is a heads up for you. • When you come to the college, you will begin this journey.

  11. Professional Dress Code • We have a school dress code.

  12. Why a Dress Code? • The clinics are located near D3-3, the Simulation lab, & small group rooms D 3-39, D3-31 and D 1-26. • When patients see you in very casual dress (the sort of thing you are used to wearing in college), patients make assumptions.

  13. Professional Dress Code • They don’t know that you are a first year student and not treating patients. • There are already some issues for patients with student dentists treating them. • You are helping out the other students. • And you will benefit from this help as you go through dental school when you start treating patients.

  14. Professional Dress Code • expected to be neat & clean, in dress, • present themselves to faculty, staff, colleagues, and patients in a manner that reflects their professional development.

  15. Professional Dress Code • Applies in the Health Science Center during usual business hours, from 7:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. • It applies to all usual academic activities, including didactic lectures and exams, preclinical simulation classes, and clinical patient care activities during the four-year curriculum.

  16. Professional Dress Code • The UFCD Dress Code can be found in the Clinic Procedure Manual (page 72) at the following link: • Education/Forms and Publications/Clinic Procedure Manual

  17. Professional Dress Code: Men • clean, collared dress shirt and tie or • College-approved scrub top with dress slacks, or • approved scrub top and bottom. • No shorts, denim jean slacks, hats. • In the Sim lab/clinics, Open toed shoes are a no-no.

  18. Professional Dress Code: Women • Dress (covering knees when sitting) or • Blouse (not T shirt) or college approved scrub top with skirt (knees covered) or slacks, or • a scrub top and bottom.

  19. Professional Dress Code: Women • Shorts, capris and denim jean slacks and hats are unacceptable attire. • In the Sim lab/clinic, open toed shoes, skirts and dresses and nail polish are no-nos.

  20. Professional Dress Code • Special Note: We expect you to be fully covered and modest in your appearance.

  21. Simple solution? • Wear the ceil blue, approved scrubs. • Wear a t shirt underneath for modesty and warmth. • Wear plain white or black tennis shoes with socks long enough to cover your legs when seated.

  22. White Coats? • Students may wear a clean white clinic coat of any length over the scrubs or dress clothes.

  23. Go Professionally!Go Gators!

More Related