Are you early in your equine dental education and want to get the best education while aiming for the IAED certification that enables you to practice legally in many States? Work with an equine dental school that has a current MOU with the IAED.
If you are setting your sights on becoming an equine dental professional, you want to get the best education that you can while being supported and respected during that journey. Part of that educational journey is the major professional milestone of becoming IAED Certified. It marks a level of competence that enables you to confidently go into the equine industry to work. While you start your practice after your certification, you should aim to continue to improve and hone your skills while providing that standard of care for your clients’ horses.
The IAED aims to help and support people who are just starting out on their path toward IAED Certification. As a result, the IAED Board requires equine dental schools to maintain a current MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) with the IAED. These equine dental schools have committed to the IAED Educational Associates Code of Conduct when working with their students. These schools have also committed to cooperating with the IAED around certification events and to working with fellow IAED Educational Associates to help students achieve graduation if students were to unexpectedly need to change schools during the student’s attempt to complete 240 hours and become a graduate from a dental school, in order to apply for certification. You should read the IAED Educational Associates MOU carefully before committing to start your equine dental education. Our Educational Associates have committed to conduct their schools in accordance with the document and the IAED Board would like to see you complete your path toward IAED Certification with our Educational Associates.
Canadian School of Equine Dentistry
275177 Township Road 252
Rockyview County, AB, Canada T1Z 0G6
403.819.5964
Academy of Equine Dentistry
P.O Box 999, Glenns Ferry, ID 83623
208.366.2315
academy@equinedentalacademy.com
equinedentalacademy.com
American School of Equine Dentistry
36691 Sawmill Lane, Purcellville, VA 20132
540.668.6505
rqhydedvm@xecu.net
Equine Dental School of Texas
21000 Interstate 27, Canyon, TX 79015
806.681.1820
equinedentalschool@gmail.com
Equine Gnathological Training Institute, Inc.
2050 East Medicine Wheel Lane, King Hill, Idaho 83633 USA
208.869.1002
dalejeffrey@equinedentistry.com
The International Association of Equine Dentistry’s primary mandate is not to educate Equine Dental Providers, though it does offer some education by lecturers at its annual convention and some practical instruction at IAED approved workshops. The IAED’s focus is to advance the profession and to offer continuing education opportunities to allow certified members to stay informed and therefore current with evolving industry standards and changes. The IAED understands that the accumulation of knowledge in order to become a competent and IAED Certified practitioner takes a combination of formal classroom instruction, practical instruction and experience that is most frequently achieved by attendance at an educational facility dedicated to equine dental education and practical instruction, along with the accumulation of experience through a large volume of cases. Such educational businesses usually offer multi-tiered education which culminates in the educational facility “graduating” the student.
To help ensure prospective IAED Certification Candidates are treated in a professional manner. Since the mid 1990’s, the IAED has developed a certification process through the work of dedicated volunteers that has been replicated all over the world. To achieve IAED Certification is required to be qualified to work legally in many jurisdictions and thus the IAED assumes a huge responsibility in providing certification. The IAED takes this responsibility extremely seriously.
Given that practitioners are required to be IAED Certified to work legally in many jurisdictions, the logical career path for many EDPs involves becoming IAED Certified. Furthermore, the IAED requires IAED Certification applicants to have completed a minimum number of hours (currently 240 for EDPs and 80 for Veterinarians) of formal education at a school dedicated to educating equine dental practitioners. This 240 hours of formal dental education prior to application for certification requirement heightens the IAED’s responsibility to ensure that those people working towards IAED Certification as part of their chosen career path are treated in a professional manner consistent with most post-secondary education institutions and the IAED’s Code of Conduct during that educational journey. Considering the previously mentioned points, it was the decision of the IAED Board in 2025 that educational entities whose graduates are to be accepted into the IAED Certification process will need to maintain a current MOU with the IAED.
The IAED Board has decided that those educational entities whose hours and graduates are acceptable to apply for IAED Certification will be required to maintain a current Memorandum of Understanding with the IAED.
The IAED will maintain a list of current “IAED Educational Associates” on the IAED Website. To be listed as an “IAED Educational Associate”, the educational entity must have a current MOU with the IAED.
Educational Entities not maintaining a current MOU with the IAED will not be listed on the IAED website. The IAED Website will also inform readers that those with hours and graduation from those entities with no IAED MOU will need to achieve graduation status from an educational associate with a current IAED MOU.
IAED Educational Associates agree to the IAED Educational Associates Code of Conduct and commit to operate their educational programs in a manner in keeping with the letter and the spirit of the Code of Conduct.
Regarding IAED Educational Associates that offer IAED Certifications: an IAED Educational Associate that offers IAED Certification has agreed to the following requirements:
Pre-approval for the certification must be sought from the IAED through the IAED Certification Committee Chair and the IAED Office. Such requests must be received 90 or more days prior to the proposed Certification.
The request must include the following information:
Once approved by the IAED Board, the Certification can be advertised/publicized by the local hosts.
All certification applicants must apply directly to the IAED to be accepted as a certification candidate. All payments for IAED certification fees must be paid directly to the IAED. No educational associate or other party may take IAED certification payments on behalf of the IAED. Only candidates that have applied directly to the IAED and paid the IAED certification fees to the IAED will be recognized as IAED certified once they pass the certification process. All payment requirements are subject to current IAED policy. (See application for Certification)
Educational Associates are required by the MOU to share all the records produced during the IAED Certification with the Certification Committee through the Certification Chair and the IAED Office within 14 days of the completion of the approved Certification.
These records shall include but are not limited to:
Current IAED Certification policy requires candidates to “Graduate” from an Equine Dental Program in addition to accumulating 240 hours of Equine Dental Education.
Educational associates commit to accept students with equine dental education hours completed at other educational facilities into their programs in order to help the student to complete 240 hours of education and achieve graduation. The educational associate may require the transferring student to complete additional education in order to graduate if deemed necessary. In cases where a potential candidate is a graduate from an educational entity with no IAED MOU agreement, the candidate must attain “graduate” status from a school with a current MOU with the IAED prior to attempting certification. The graduating IAED educational associate may require a candidate to complete further hours of education beyond the minimum 240 hour requirement if they deem it necessary in order to achieve graduation through their program.
IAED Educational associates must agree to cooperate fully with IAED Grievance Committees or IAED Board inquiries/investigations within a reasonable time frame as set forth by the IAED.
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The IAED code of conduct for educators outlines the ethical and professional standards expected of teachers and other school personnel. It guides their actions, responsibilities, and interactions with students, colleagues and the broader community, ensuring fair and respectful interactions while prioritizing student well-being and learning.
The educator shall refrain from the illegal use or distribution of controlled substances and/or abuse of prescription drugs and toxic inhalants.
The educator shall not consume alcoholic beverages on school property or during school activities when students are present.
The educator shall not reveal confidential information concerning students unless disclosure serves lawful professional purposes or is required by law.
The educator shall not intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly treat a student in a manner that adversely affects or endangers the learning, physical health, mental health, or safety of the student.
The educator shall not intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly misrepresent facts regarding a student.
The educator shall not exclude a student from participation in a program, deny benefits to a student, or grant an advantage to a student on the basis of sex, race, color, gender, disability, national origin, religion, family status, or sexual orientation.
The educator shall not intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly engage in physical mistreatment, neglect, or abuse of a student.
The educator shall not furnish alcohol or illegal/unauthorized drugs to any person under 21 years of age.
The educator shall maintain appropriate professional educator-student relationships and boundaries based on a professional educator standard. The educator shall not solicit or engage in sexual conduct or a romantic relationship with a student.
The educator shall refrain from inappropriate communication with a student or minor, including, but not limited to, electronic communication such as cell phone, text messaging, email, instant messaging, or other social network communication.
Factors that may be considered in assessing whether the communication is inappropriate include, but are not limited to:
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