Took my CDT exam back in March and failed by 8 points, which honestly crushed me. I'd been in dental assisting for three years and figured my clinical experience would carry me through without too much structured studying. Wrong. The infection control and radiography sections were way harder than I expected, and I completely blanked on some of the instrument identification questions.
Second attempt I gave myself 10 weeks and actually followed a real plan. I used a CDT study guide that broke things down by topic area, spent the most time on dental materials and sciences (my weakest area), and ran through CDT practice test questions every single night before bed — even just 20-30 questions to stay sharp. Tracked my scores in a notebook so I could see which topics kept tripping me up.
Passed with a 82 this time. The biggest CDT exam tip I can give: don't skip dental sciences thinking your chair-side experience covers it. It doesn't. The written exam cares about terminology and rationale, not just what you do by habit.
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