Apprentice Dental Nurse (Level 3)
WARD END DENTAL PRACTICE
Birmingham (B8 2HF)
Closes in 17 days (Monday 15 September 2025 at 11:59pm)
Posted on 29 August 2025
Contents
Summary
This is a fantastic opportunity for the right candidate to become an integral and vital part of Ward End Dental Practice. You will work in surgery greeting patients, putting them at ease and assisting the Dentist complete an array of tasks. Full training both in Practice and day release to complete Dental Nurse Level 3 Qualification.
- Wage
-
£13,741 for your first year, then could increase depending on your age
National Minimum Wage rate for apprentices
- Training course
- Dental nurse (GDC 2023) (level 3)
- Hours
-
Working days and shifts to be confirmed.
35 hours a week
- Start date
-
Wednesday 24 September 2025
- Duration
-
1 year 9 months
- Positions available
-
1
Work
Most of your apprenticeship is spent working. You’ll learn on the job by getting hands-on experience.
What you'll do at work
- Ensure completion of your regulated and certified Dental Nursing qualification under the guidance of the Lead Dental Nurse
- Attend all college sessions online or in person in pursuit of qualification completion
- Initially to observe the following responsibilities, in order to learn the processes, however completion of these duties is expected once suitably able and qualified
- Keep the clinical areas, equipment and instruments clean, tidy and sterile and according to the practice’s health & safety, infection control procedures and manufacturers' instructions
- Use all equipment and machinery in accordance with manufacturers' recommendations and ensure that they are maintained regularly and in good working order
- Provide chairside assistance, ensuring that the correct equipment is available
- Ensure the care and welfare of patients
- Accurately complete patient clinical records as directed
- Handle all substances in accordance with health and safety policies
- Be familiar and comply with all health and safety rules and guidance, including PPE, COSHH, mercury handling, infection control, waste disposal etc.
- Develop and file radiographs and change radiographic solutions as directed
- Complete laboratory request forms, keep records of work sent, received and fitted
- Ensure adequate stocks of materials and other items within the surgery
- Request the ordering of new stock supplies as necessary
- Ensure computer/written records are accurately maintained and securely stored
- Liaise with reception to ensure smooth patient communications and transfer of records
- Attend and participate in practice meetings
- Other duties as necessary for the efficient operation of the practice (perhaps including the duties and tasks of receptionist as required)
- Undergo training as may be required to develop skills and abilities
- Act in accordance with the practice rules and code of conduct
Where you'll work
554 Washwood Heath Road
Birmingham
B8 2HF
Training
Apprenticeships include time away from working for specialist training. You’ll study to gain professional knowledge and skills.
Training provider
BIRMINGHAM METROPOLITAN COLLEGE
Training course
Dental nurse (GDC 2023) (level 3)
Understanding apprenticeship levels (opens in new tab)
What you'll learn
Course contents
- Identify relevant and appropriate dental, oral, craniofacial, and general anatomy, recognising the diversity of anatomy across the patient population.
- Evaluate the health risks of prescribed, non-prescribed and recreational drug use and misuse on oral and general health.
- Evaluate the scientific principles underpinning the use of materials and Biomaterials, their limitations and selection, with emphasis on those used in dentistry.
- Identify the signs of abuse, neglect or emotional trauma, explain local and national systems that safeguard the welfare of children and adults.
- Identify the signs of normal and abnormal facial growth, physical, mental and dental development milestones and explain their significance.
- Assess patients’ levels of anxiety, experience, and expectations in respect of dental care and oral health.
- Contribute to relevant special investigations and diagnostic procedures.
- Undertake orthodontic assessment.
- Obtain valid consent from patients explaining all the relevant factors and taking into account the legal requirements where appropriate within scope of practice.
- Record an accurate and contemporaneous patient history.
- Accurately record dental charting as carried out by other appropriate registrants.
- Accurately record an oral health assessment.
- Prepare records, images, equipment and materials for clinical assessment.
- Process and manage dental radiographs and images.
- Manage patient anxiety appropriately, effectively, and safely.
- Monitor, support and reassure patients through effective communication and behavioural techniques.
- Identify changes in the patient’s reported oral health status and take appropriate action.
- Make arrangements for follow-up care as prescribed by the operator.
- Provide chairside support to the operator during treatment.
- Prepare, mix and handle dental materials.
- Identify and explain the risks within and around the clinical environment and manage these in a safe and effective manner.
- Implement, perform, and manage effective decontamination and infection control procedures according to current guidelines.
- Prepare and maintain the clinical environment including the instruments and equipment.
- Identify, assess, and manage medical emergencies.
- Provide patients/carers with comprehensive, personalised preventive advice, instruction, and intervention in a manner which is accessible, promotes self-care and motivates patients/carers to comply with advice and take responsibility to maintain and improve oral health.
- Support the management of patients with acute oral conditions ensuring involvement of appropriate dental team members.
- Adopt an evidence-based approach to clinical practice.
- Communicate effectively and sensitively, tailoring to context, by spoken, written and or electronic means with all patients, including patients whose first language is not English, using representatives or interpreters where necessary, in relation to patients with anxious or challenging behaviour or special considerations such as emotional trauma and difficult circumstances, such as breaking bad news, or discussing issues such as alcohol consumption, smoking, or diet.
- Communicate effectively and sensitively by spoken, written and electronic means with the public.
- Communicate effectively by spoken, written and electronic means with colleagues from dental and other healthcare professions in relation to the direct care of individual patients, oral health promotion and raising concerns when problems arise, including where patients cause distress to staff.
- Maintain contemporaneous, complete and accurate patient records in accordance with legal requirements and best practice.
- Communicate with care, compassion, empathy and respect in all professional interactions with patients, their representatives, the public and colleagues.
- Communicate appropriately and effectively in professional discussions and transactions.
- Give feedback effectively to other members of the team.
- Respect the roles of dental and other healthcare professionals in the context of learning and working in a dental and wider healthcare team.
- Demonstrate effective team working.
- Contribute to your team in providing dental care for patients.
- Where appropriate manage, refer or delegate work according to the scope of practice of members of the dental team, in line with competence and professional practice.
- Take a patient-centred approach to working with the dental and wider healthcare team.
- Raise concerns where appropriate about your own or others’ health, behaviour or professional performance.
- Comply with systems and processes to support safe patient care.
- Act in accordance with current best practice guidelines.
- Act in accordance with national and local clinical governance and health and safety requirements.
- Act within the legal frameworks which inform personal behaviour, the delivery of healthcare and the protection and promotion of the health of individual patients.
- Act with integrity and ensure your actions maintain the trust of colleagues, patients, and the public in you, your team, and the profession across all environments and media.
- Demonstrate personal accountability to patients, the regulator, the team and wider community.
- Work in partnership with colleagues to develop and maintain an effective and supportive environment which promotes the safety and wellbeing of the patient and dental team.
- Where appropriate lead, manage and take professional responsibility for the actions of colleagues and other members of the team involved in patient care.
- Where appropriate support patients to negotiate the barriers and challenges which prevent sections of the population accessing oral healthcare, including patients from marginalised populations and patients with protected characteristics.
- Treat your patients, members of the public and your colleagues with dignity and respect and without discrimination.
- Support patients to make informed decisions about their care, making their interests your first concern.
- Demonstrate cultural competence, accepting and respecting the diversity of patients and colleagues.
- Provide the best possible outcome for your patients by using your knowledge and skills, acting as an advocate for their needs where appropriate.
- Speak up to protect others from harm.
- Evaluate the effectiveness of evidence-based prevention at a community and or population level.
- Proactively address discriminatory language, behaviour and microaggressions from colleagues, patients and other professionals.
- Evaluate the role of health promotion in terms of the changing environment, community and individual behaviours to deliver health gain.
- Evaluate and apply the evidence base in relation to the environmental impacts of common treatment methods and approaches to the delivery of oral healthcare.
- Contribute positively to the healthcare communities of which you are a part.
- Evaluate an evidence base.
- Utilise the receipt of effective feedback in the professional development of self.
- Demonstrate personal development planning, recording of evidence, and reflective practice.
- Evaluate the impact of new techniques and technologies as they relate to dental nurse practice.
- Accurately assess your own capabilities and limitations in the interest of high-quality patient care and seek advice from supervisors or colleagues where appropriate.
- Recognise personal assumptions, biases and prejudices and manage the impact of these on patient care and professional behaviour with colleagues, patients and wider society.
- Recognise the impact of contextual factors on the health care environment and patient safety and manage this professionally.
- Demonstrate own professional responsibility in the development of self.
- Develop and maintain professional knowledge and competence.
- Demonstrate engagement with systems and personal strategies which promote and maintain physical and mental wellbeing.
- Demonstrate appropriate continuous improvement activities.
- Recognise when and how to take action if wellbeing is compromised to a point of affecting an individual’s role or professional relationships.
- Effectively manage your own time and resources.
- Underpin all patient care with a preventive approach, that takes account of patient compliance and self-care, to contribute to the patient’s long-term oral and general health.
- Identify relevant and appropriate dental, oral, craniofacial, and general anatomy, recognising the diversity of anatomy across the patient population.
- Evaluate the health risks of prescribed, non-prescribed and recreational drug use and misuse on oral and general health.
- Evaluate the scientific principles underpinning the use of materials and Biomaterials, their limitations and selection, with emphasis on those used in dentistry.
- Identify the signs of abuse, neglect or emotional trauma, explain local and national systems that safeguard the welfare of children and adults.
- Identify the signs of normal and abnormal facial growth, physical, mental and dental development milestones and explain their significance.
- Assess patients’ levels of anxiety, experience, and expectations in respect of dental care and oral health.
- Contribute to relevant special investigations and diagnostic procedures.
- Undertake orthodontic assessment.
- Obtain valid consent from patients explaining all the relevant factors and taking into account the legal requirements where appropriate within scope of practice.
- Record an accurate and contemporaneous patient history.
- Accurately record dental charting as carried out by other appropriate registrants.
- Accurately record an oral health assessment.
- Prepare records, images, equipment and materials for clinical assessment.
- Process and manage dental radiographs and images.
- Manage patient anxiety appropriately, effectively, and safely.
- Monitor, support and reassure patients through effective communication and behavioural techniques.
- Identify changes in the patient’s reported oral health status and take appropriate action.
- Make arrangements for follow-up care as prescribed by the operator.
- Provide chairside support to the operator during treatment.
- Prepare, mix and handle dental materials.
- Identify and explain the risks within and around the clinical environment and manage these in a safe and effective manner.
- Implement, perform, and manage effective decontamination and infection control procedures according to current guidelines.
- Prepare and maintain the clinical environment including the instruments and equipment.
- Identify, assess, and manage medical emergencies.
- Provide patients/carers with comprehensive, personalised preventive advice, instruction, and intervention in a manner which is accessible, promotes self-care and motivates patients/carers to comply with advice and take responsibility to maintain and improve oral health.
- Support the management of patients with acute oral conditions ensuring involvement of appropriate dental team members.
- Adopt an evidence-based approach to clinical practice.
- Communicate effectively and sensitively, tailoring to context, by spoken, written and or electronic means with all patients, including patients whose first language is not English, using representatives or interpreters where necessary, in relation to patients with anxious or challenging behaviour or special considerations such as emotional trauma and difficult circumstances, such as breaking bad news, or discussing issues such as alcohol consumption, smoking, or diet.
- Communicate effectively and sensitively by spoken, written and electronic means with the public.
- Communicate effectively by spoken, written and electronic means with colleagues from dental and other healthcare professions in relation to the direct care of individual patients, oral health promotion and raising concerns when problems arise, including where patients cause distress to staff.
- Maintain contemporaneous, complete and accurate patient records in accordance with legal requirements and best practice.
- Communicate with care, compassion, empathy and respect in all professional interactions with patients, their representatives, the public and colleagues.
- Communicate appropriately and effectively in professional discussions and transactions.
- Give feedback effectively to other members of the team.
- Respect the roles of dental and other healthcare professionals in the context of learning and working in a dental and wider healthcare team.
- Demonstrate effective team working.
- Contribute to your team in providing dental care for patients.
- Where appropriate manage, refer or delegate work according to the scope of practice of members of the dental team, in line with competence and professional practice.
- Take a patient-centred approach to working with the dental and wider healthcare team.
- Raise concerns where appropriate about your own or others’ health, behaviour or professional performance.
- Comply with systems and processes to support safe patient care.
- Act in accordance with current best practice guidelines.
- Act in accordance with national and local clinical governance and health and safety requirements.
- Act within the legal frameworks which inform personal behaviour, the delivery of healthcare and the protection and promotion of the health of individual patients.
- Act with integrity and ensure your actions maintain the trust of colleagues, patients, and the public in you, your team, and the profession across all environments and media.
- Demonstrate personal accountability to patients, the regulator, the team and wider community.
- Work in partnership with colleagues to develop and maintain an effective and supportive environment which promotes the safety and wellbeing of the patient and dental team.
- Where appropriate lead, manage and take professional responsibility for the actions of colleagues and other members of the team involved in patient care.
- Where appropriate support patients to negotiate the barriers and challenges which prevent sections of the population accessing oral healthcare, including patients from marginalised populations and patients with protected characteristics.
- Treat your patients, members of the public and your colleagues with dignity and respect and without discrimination.
- Support patients to make informed decisions about their care, making their interests your first concern.
- Demonstrate cultural competence, accepting and respecting the diversity of patients and colleagues.
- Provide the best possible outcome for your patients by using your knowledge and skills, acting as an advocate for their needs where appropriate.
- Speak up to protect others from harm.
- Evaluate the effectiveness of evidence-based prevention at a community and or population level.
- Proactively address discriminatory language, behaviour and microaggressions from colleagues, patients and other professionals.
- Evaluate the role of health promotion in terms of the changing environment, community and individual behaviours to deliver health gain.
- Evaluate and apply the evidence base in relation to the environmental impacts of common treatment methods and approaches to the delivery of oral healthcare.
- Contribute positively to the healthcare communities of which you are a part.
- Evaluate an evidence base.
- Utilise the receipt of effective feedback in the professional development of self.
- Demonstrate personal development planning, recording of evidence, and reflective practice.
- Evaluate the impact of new techniques and technologies as they relate to dental nurse practice.
- Accurately assess your own capabilities and limitations in the interest of high-quality patient care and seek advice from supervisors or colleagues where appropriate.
- Recognise personal assumptions, biases and prejudices and manage the impact of these on patient care and professional behaviour with colleagues, patients and wider society.
- Recognise the impact of contextual factors on the health care environment and patient safety and manage this professionally.
- Demonstrate own professional responsibility in the development of self.
- Develop and maintain professional knowledge and competence.
- Demonstrate engagement with systems and personal strategies which promote and maintain physical and mental wellbeing.
- Demonstrate appropriate continuous improvement activities.
- Recognise when and how to take action if wellbeing is compromised to a point of affecting an individual’s role or professional relationships.
- Effectively manage your own time and resources.
- Underpin all patient care with a preventive approach, that takes account of patient compliance and self-care, to contribute to the patient’s long-term oral and general health.
Training schedule
- You will receive the Dental Nurse Level 3 standard qualification upon completion of the apprenticeship
- You will attend our Matthew Boulton Campus once every 4 weeks but will attend online classes once a week in order to complete your college portfolio
- A level 3 qualification which has been approved by the General Dental Council as meeting the requirements for entry to the professional register as a dental nurse
Requirements
Desirable qualifications
Other in:
- English (grade 4/C or above)
- Maths (grade 4/C or above)
Share if you have other relevant qualifications and industry experience. The apprenticeship can be adjusted to reflect what you already know.
Skills
- Communication skills
- Attention to detail
- Organisation skills
- Customer care skills
- Problem solving skills
- Administrative skills
- Number skills
- Analytical skills
- Logical
- Team working
- Initiative
- Non judgemental
- Patience
Other requirements
You must have Hepatitis B vaccinations and ensure all your other required vaccinations are up to date before beginning the apprenticeship.
About this employer
Ward End Dental Practice specialises in providing all‐inclusive dental care for NHS and private patients alike across the West Midlands. With a focus on customer care and satisfaction, as well as a commitment to providing results, Ward End Dental Practice delivers comfortable treatments and bespoke regimes for all patients, regardless of needs, age or budget.
After this apprenticeship
- Once qualified, depending on performance and availability for a permanent role, Apprentice Dental Nurse job descriptions will be superseded by the Qualified Dental Nurse job description, including the above plus the necessary CPD completion, indemnity security and GDC registrations
Ask a question
The contact for this apprenticeship is:
BIRMINGHAM METROPOLITAN COLLEGE
BMet Recruitment Team
recruitment@bmet.ac.uk
0121 362 1122
The reference code for this apprenticeship is VAC1000339513.
Apply now
Closes in 17 days (Monday 15 September 2025 at 11:59pm)
Sign in with your GOV.UK One Login to apply.