Certificate in Dental Radiography

Key Information

Duration: 6 months

Date: March, September

Hours: 18 hours (3 hours Monthly)

Awarding Body: National Examination Board for Dental Nurses (NEBDN)

Level: Equivalent to level 4

Fees: £990 (including examination fee)

Deposit: £290.00

Who it’s for: GDC registered dental nurse

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    • Overview
    • Learning and Skills
    • Entry Requirement

    Certificate in Dental Radiography

    EXPAND YOUR SKILLS

    Is This the Right Next Step for You?

    Dental radiography is one of the most clinically significant skills a dental nurse can develop. Radiographs are taken in virtually every dental practice, every day — and having a trained, competent dental nurse who can take them confidently makes a genuine difference to how a practice runs and what it can offer patients.

    The NEBDN Certificate in Dental Radiography is a Level 4 post-registration qualification that enables qualified dental nurses to act as an IR(ME)R operator under prescription — meaning you can legally and competently take both intra-oral and extra-oral radiographs as part of your clinical role. It’s one of the most sought-after post-registration qualifications in dental nursing, and for good reason. The skills it develops benefit you, your employer and your patients directly.

    Entry Requirements

    To enrol, you’ll need to meet the following criteria:

    • Hold current registration with the General Dental Council (GDC) or the Irish Dental Council (IDC)
    • Have a supportive employer who can supervise the completion of your Electronic Record of Competence (eRoC)
    • Hold a valid First Aid or Basic Life Support (BLS) Certificate of Completion
    • Be competent in written and spoken English to a level that allows effective communication with patients, families and healthcare professionals

    If you’re unsure whether you meet any of these requirements, the team is happy to talk it through before you apply.

    What You Will Learn

    The course builds the clinical knowledge and practical understanding needed to take radiographs safely, accurately and in full compliance with current legislation and regulatory requirements. That means radiation physics and protection, relevant legislation including IR(ME)R, radiographic techniques, image quality assessment, radiographic anatomy and patient safety — as well as the professional responsibilities that come with operating as an IR(ME)R operator.

    By the time you qualify, you won’t just be technically capable of taking radiographs. You’ll understand the clinical and legal framework within which you’re working, and be able to apply that judgement confidently in practice.

    Why Study With the School of Dental Nursing?

    Live Monthly Classes — The course is delivered through live virtual classes via Zoom, timetabled once a month. That means direct engagement with your tutor, the opportunity to ask questions in real time and structured learning that goes beyond self-directed study. It’s a meaningfully different experience from simply working through pre-recorded content alone.

    Supported Between Sessions — Additional materials are available through the School’s virtual learning environment, eTrain — including lecture slides, past video lessons, suggested reading and other key resources. Everything you need to prepare for sessions and consolidate your learning is in one place.

    Immediate Clinical Value — This is one of those qualifications where the benefit is felt straight away. Once qualified and competent, you can take prescribed radiographs as part of your everyday clinical role — increasing your value to your employer and your contribution to patient care from day one.

    How You Will Be Assessed

    To be awarded the Certificate in Dental Radiography, you must successfully complete two things:

    Record of Competence (eRoC) A comprehensive, work-based Electronic Record of Competence made up of three sections:

    • Practical Competence Assessment Sheets (PCAS)
    • Case studies
    • Supplementary outcomes

    The eRoC is completed in your own clinical environment, with supervision from your employer, and documents your developing competence across the range of radiographic duties you’ll be undertaking. Your personal tutor will support you throughout.

    Written Examination A 90-minute written examination in two parts:

    • Part A — 45 multiple-choice questions (MCQ)
    • Part B — 30 extended matching questions (EMQ)

    Examinations are held twice a year, in March and September. Revision materials, past resources and tutor support are all available through eTrain to help you prepare thoroughly well in advance of your chosen sitting.

    Ready to Apply?

    Got questions before you apply? Call 0208 993 4500 or email dental@schoolofdentalnursing.com — the team knows the course inside out and is happy to talk things through before you commit to anything.

    Maintaining Good Clinical Practice
    Radiation Physics
    Radiation Protection
    Apparatus and Equipment
    Films and Processing
    Digital Imaging
    Principles of Imaging
    Film Handling
    Digital Imaging – Practical Instruction
    Intra Oral Techniques
    Extra Oral Techniques
    Quality Assurance
    Care of Patients
    Principles and Practice of Interpretations
    Fundamentals of Radiological Anatomy
    Identification of Common Dental Pathology.

    Learner Eligibility:

    • To be a registered dental nurse with the General Dental Council (GDC) or Irish Dental Council (IDC)
    • To have a supportive employer to supervise the completion of the Electronic Record of Competence (eRoC)
    • To have a valid First Aid / Basic Life Support (BLS) Certificate of Completion
    • Be competent in written and spoken English in order to communicate effectively with patients, their families and dental and healthcare professionals

    Frequently Asked Questions About Certificate in Dental Radiography

    It’s a post-registration qualification for registered dental care professionals who want to develop real, hands-on clinical skills in taking dental radiographs. Completing it means you can contribute more directly to patient care and the diagnostic side of everyday practice — which for many dental nurses is a significant step forward in what they’re able to offer.

    Put simply, it’s the process of taking dental X-rays. But the clinical value goes well beyond that description. Radiographs show dentists things that simply can’t be seen during a routine examination — early decay between teeth, bone loss, root problems, pathology that might otherwise go unnoticed for years. They’re one of the most important diagnostic tools in dentistry, used in virtually every practice, every day.

    The course is open to registered dental care professionals, including dental nurses, dental hygienists, dental therapists and orthodontic therapists. If you’re not sure whether you meet the entry requirements, it’s worth checking the current criteria before you apply.

    Yes — GDC registration is a requirement, as this is a post-registration qualification. You’ll need to hold current registration at the point of enrolment.

    Yes, and it’s one of the most widely recognised post-registration qualifications available to dental nurses. It’s well regarded across the profession, in both NHS and private settings, and most dental employers are familiar with what it involves and what it means to hold it.

    Most learners complete the Diploma in Dental Nursing within 12Yes — but only once they’ve completed appropriate training and can demonstrate the required competence. The GDC Scope of Practice is clear on this: a dental nurse who has completed an approved radiography qualification and evidenced their competence may take radiographs that have been prescribed by a dentist. It needs to be done in line with current legislation, employer policy and their individual scope of practice — but the qualification itself is the essential foundation.to 18 months, depending on their pace of study, workplace experience and examination schedule.

    Because dentistry without radiography would miss an enormous amount. Early-stage decay, bone changes, cysts, impacted teeth, root fractures — the list of conditions that radiographs help detect or monitor is long. For patients, that means earlier diagnosis and better treatment outcomes. For the practice, having a dental nurse who can take radiographs competently means smoother workflows and more efficient appointments. It genuinely changes what a dental team can deliver.

    The programme covers everything you need to take radiographs safely and competently in a clinical setting:

    • Radiation physics and radiation protectionessfully complete and fulfil the requirements of the Record of Competence (RoC).
    • Relevant legislation and regulatory requirements
    • Dental radiographic techniques
    • Image quality assessment
    • Radiographic anatomy
    • Patient safety and quality assurance
    • Professional responsibilities

    Radiation protection and patient safety run as central themes throughout — not just as a topic in one module, but as principles that underpin every part of the course.

    Through blended learning — a combination of online study and workplace-based practical assessment. The structure is deliberately flexible because most learners are working full-time and can’t step away from practice for extended periods. You work through the theory online, build your practical experience in your own clinical environment and complete assessments as you progress.

    Most learners finish within six to nine months, though the pace varies. It depends largely on how quickly you can build up your radiography portfolio in practice and how much study time you can fit in week to week. There’s no pressure to rush — the programme is designed to work around a real clinical job.

    Yes, this is essential. You’ll need a suitable practice environment where you can build hands-on experience, complete your radiography portfolio and have your practical competence assessed. It’s not a course you can complete purely online — the clinical element is central to it.

    Yes. You’ll need someone in your workplace who can support your practical development and verify your competence. Full details about what this involves are provided when you enrol — it’s a well-established process and your course team will walk you through it.

    Once you’ve met all the course requirements and passed your assessments, you’ll be awarded the Certificate in Dental Radiography.

    Once you’ve completed the qualification, demonstrated competence and satisfied your employer’s requirements, you can take prescribed radiographs as part of your clinical role. That’s in NHS and private practice alike — radiography is a routine part of dental care in both settings, so the qualification is immediately and practically useful wherever you work.

    For most dental nurses, yes, without much hesitation. It’s one of the few post-registration qualifications where the benefit is tangible and immediate. Practices need dental nurses who can take radiographs — it makes appointments run better, reduces pressure on the dentist and makes you a more capable and flexible member of the team. Many job adverts mention it specifically. It also tends to be the qualification dental nurses reach for first after registration, and for good reason.

    They’re quite different in focus. Radiography is a diagnostic clinical skill — you’re supporting the detection and monitoring of disease through imaging. Oral Health Education is about patient communication and prevention — helping people understand and improve their own oral health. Both are worth having, but they develop entirely different parts of your practice.

    Again, different areas of dentistry. Radiography sits on the diagnostic side; fluoride varnish is a clinical preventive treatment. Some dental nurses do both, building a broader skill set across prevention and diagnosis — but each qualification stands strongly on its own.

    Absolutely. Many dental nurses use this as a starting point for broader professional development. Common next qualifications include Oral Health Education, Fluoride Varnish Application, Orthodontic Nursing, Sedation Nursing and Special Care Dental Nursing. Building up post-registration qualifications over time is one of the most effective ways to develop a dental nursing career.

    Absolutely. Many dental nurses use this as a starting point for broader professional development. Common next qualifications include Oral Health Education, Fluoride Varnish Application, Orthodontic Nursing, Sedation Nursing and Special Care Dental Nursing. Building up post-registration qualifications over time is one of the most effective ways to develop a dental nursing career.

    Throughout the programme you’ll have access to tutor support, structured learning resources, workplace assessment guidance, exam preparation support and administrative help when you need it. The team is there to help you get through — not just to enrol you and leave you to it.

    The current fee is £990, inclusive of examination fees. It’s always worth confirming the latest pricing before you apply, as fees can be reviewed from time to time.

    The school has been working with dental professionals since 2006, which means nearly two decades of experience in post-registration dental education. The tutors understand clinical practice from the inside, the learning is structured to fit around real working lives and the qualifications have a genuine track record in the profession. If you’re looking for a provider that takes the quality of its courses seriously, it’s a solid choice.

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