View Full Version : USMLE Step 1 Schedule


Scott_L
01-20-2004, 02:38 PM
Below is a schedule that was put together by a couple of Lippincott Williams & Wilkins authors. The schedule is in both subject and system formats. There are a number of products mentioned many are not LWW products but are recommended by faculty.

If you would like a word file of this schedule, drop me an e-mail at SLAVINE@LWW.com.

Best of luck on Step 1!

-Scott

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

General guidelines on constructing a study schedule for USMLE Step I

Assumption: 28 total days available, including the day before USMLE. If you have greater or fewer days, adjust the schedule accordingly. (For example, if you have 31 days, add ? day to Behavioral Science, ? day to Gross/Embryo, 1 day off, and 1 day to wrap-up.)

General apportioning of days:
Wrap-up (re-review in First Aid) = 2-3 days before your exam
Days off (schedule as rewards for doing your work) = 1-2 days (depending on wrap-up)
Total full study days (excluding wrap-up and days off) = 24 days

Allocation of days by subject:
Pathology = 4 days
Physiology = 4 days (may be less if you are strong in physiology)
Pharmacology = 4 days
Microbiology/Immunology = 4 days
Biochemistry = 3 days
Behavioral Science = 1.5 days
Gross/Embryo/Cell/Histo = 1.5 days
Neuroanatomy = 2 days

Systems Schedule:
Nervous = 3.5 days
Cardiovascular = 3 days
Respiratory = 2.5 days
GI = 2 days
Renal = 2.5 days
Endocrine = 2.5
Reproductive = 2 days
Musculoskeletal = 2 days
Heme / Lymph = 2 days
Basic Concepts / General = 2 days

Note: A ?day? for each subject means an 8-hour day per below. An ?hour? means a full hour with 5 minute breathers as needed. In addition, you will do 2 hours of questions daily.

The order of subjects:
The general strategy should be longer-term memory subjects early and shorter-term memory subjects late. This will vary among students, but a possible sequence is:

Physiology
Pathology
Behavioral Science
Day off
Microbiology/Immunology
Pharmacology
Day off
Biochemistry
Neuroanatomy, gross/embryo/cell/histo
Wrap-up days (re-review First Aid)
Take USMLE Step I

Order for Systems Schedule:
Basic Concepts / General
Endocrine
Nervous
Cardiovascular
Respiratory
Renal
GI
Musculoskeletal
Reproductive
Heme/Lymph
Wrap-up days

Suggested daily schedule:
8-12 Study
12-1 Lunch
1-5 Study
5-8 Exercise, dinner, errands, phone calls
8-10 (or 11) Questions

Note: Evening questions should be done from Kaplan Q bank, NMS Review for USMLE Step I, and Robbins Review of Pathology. Rotate the question sources, with Q bank and medrevu more often. Do questions randomly, and do not link them to what you studied during the day. Initially, do not time yourself, but do the questions to learn and to spend time with the explanations.

USMLE Sample Exam (download from USMLE.org):
Do it timed and simulated (150 questions in 3 hours) 3- 4 days before the actual USMLE. (Do it in the evening question time slot, or early morning and shift your study day forward.) Take it as if it counts; then review it 2-3 times in the next few days to be completely comfortable with the screens, the way questions are posed, and to figure out why you missed what you missed.

KyGrlDr2B
01-21-2004, 04:13 PM
Wow, thanks for posting.

Halaljello
01-22-2004, 02:02 PM
anyone thinking of starting to study for boards like in FEB? i've seen alot of people at my school already studyinG Seeing them walkaround with BSS books, and Qbook, and goin through Qbank has got me worried and that mabey I have to start too. anyone have a schedule out there that starts out light from the months before the exam and gets more intense as the exam gets closer?


thanks

Cristagali
01-22-2004, 02:37 PM
Go to www. residentinfo.net They have a 42 day plan, but I think it cost $6-7 bucks. good luck

Idiopathic
01-22-2004, 03:37 PM
I just downloaded it, and apparently it is now free....looks intense.

coconut lime
01-22-2004, 03:38 PM
i couldnt get that website to work....anyone else have problems?

Idiopathic
01-22-2004, 03:52 PM
its actually the site on the front page of sdn

http://www.residency.info

driedcaribou
01-22-2004, 05:55 PM
Wow, thanks for the informative post!:clap:

Idiopathic
01-22-2004, 07:45 PM
btw, i think that schedule is really easily consolidated into 28-30 days...2 hours for pharmacokinetics? I dont think so.

eddoc
01-23-2004, 07:45 PM
is NMS medicine a good book for systems review, or should i just stick to Step-up?

Idiopathic
01-23-2004, 09:48 PM
I have it and I think it is pretty thorough. I think it goes into about 10X more detail than Step Up, so if you hav ethat kind of time, sure.

Scott_L
03-09-2004, 02:11 PM
This is getting more timely so I wanted to bump it up.

-Scott

Stinger86
03-09-2004, 02:43 PM
Good grief... and here I am with a three-week study schedule before I take the exam in May.

Looking at some of these intense schedules almost forces me to have to change my pants... :eek: