The last of the 13 Dalhousie University dental students suspended for misogynistic Facebook posts says he will participate in a remediation process.

Ryan Millet, who claims to have blown the whistle on the Facebook group, said in statement Sunday he is willingly taking the sessions "with an open mind to further my education in this subject," the Herald News reported. "I recognize that everyone can learn further and accept more responsibility in addressing these important societal issues."

Millet was back at clinical practice last week, but the university's academic standards class committee (ASCC) laid down some conditions for that to happen.

The fourth-year students were suspended for making rape jokes about female classmates.

The other 12 were back working with patients at the beginning of March after saying in an open letter they're remorseful and working to prove it.

"Each woman supported the conditional return to clinic. Additionally, no member of the public will receive treatment from any of the men if they choose not to," Dalhousie president Richard Florizone said in a statement at the time.

When the ASCC handed down that decision, they included a number of conditions -- the students must continue to participate in an ongoing restorative justice program, take classes on communication and professionalism, and demonstrate "high standards of professionalism.

Millet was working to reverse his suspension separately from the group.