coralfangs
06-26-2006, 10:20 PM
what about aug2005, apr2005, etc?
|
View Full Version : so apr2006's mean was 25.6, what about the means for previous tests? coralfangs 06-26-2006, 10:20 PM what about aug2005, apr2005, etc? StrikeFreedom 06-26-2006, 11:12 PM you mean this? http://www.aamc.org/students/mcat/examineedata/pubs.htm braluk 06-27-2006, 05:06 AM Wow looks like this round of test takers were generally better then test takers of the last 3 years in which the MCAT is still valid seeing that the national average is .6 higher then the second highest score. I guess it was the SDN posters that brought the average up ;) coralfangs 06-27-2006, 10:43 AM oh man, does that mean we had an easy curve? braluk 06-27-2006, 11:27 AM either that or we just had really smart test takers this time around frick 06-27-2006, 12:13 PM If you compare the score/percentile tables of the April 2006 administration and the combined 2005 administrations, it looks like all the scores have been inflated by ~1 point this year (e.g., a 38 was 98.7 to 99.2 in 2005, while a 39 has the same percentile ranking in 2006). There are also some more striking changes if you look closely at the score tables... for example, over twice as many people scored in the 14-15 range in PS this year as did in 2005. This means that a given numerical score awarded in 2006 actually represents a lower performance than it did in 2005. I sincerely doubt that the number of people acing the PS section would just double in one year... rather, it seems that AAMC has adjusted the curve slightly so that the highest scores (44-45) might actually become attainable. Although this doesn't really affect anyone who took the 2006 MCAT (since everyone had the benefit of the minor curve-change), what about the people who are applying with 2005 scores? Since AMCAS applications don't list the percentile next to your MCAT score, does this mean the adcoms will have to scrutinize the particular year the exam was taken when they are reviewing applications? hope12 06-27-2006, 01:10 PM If you compare the score/percentile tables of the April 2006 administration and the combined 2005 administrations, it looks like all the scores have been inflated by ~1 point this year (e.g., a 38 was 98.7 to 99.2 in 2005, while a 39 has the same percentile ranking in 2006). There are also some more striking changes if you look closely at the score tables... for example, over twice as many people scored in the 14-15 range in PS this year as did in 2005. This means that a given numerical score awarded in 2006 actually represents a lower performance than it did in 2005. I sincerely doubt that the number of people acing the PS section would just double in one year... rather, it seems that AAMC has adjusted the curve slightly so that the highest scores (44-45) might actually become attainable. Although this doesn't really affect anyone who took the 2006 MCAT (since everyone had the benefit of the minor curve-change), what about the people who are applying with 2005 scores? Since AMCAS applications don't list the percentile next to your MCAT score, does this mean the adcoms will have to scrutinize the particular year the exam was taken when they are reviewing applications? They DO :) http://www.aamc.org/students/applying/advisors/2x_verified_app.pdf (http://) happydays 06-27-2006, 01:21 PM If you compare the score/percentile tables of the April 2006 administration and the combined 2005 administrations, it looks like all the scores have been inflated by ~1 point this year (e.g., a 38 was 98.7 to 99.2 in 2005, while a 39 has the same percentile ranking in 2006). There are also some more striking changes if you look closely at the score tables... for example, over twice as many people scored in the 14-15 range in PS this year as did in 2005. This means that a given numerical score awarded in 2006 actually represents a lower performance than it did in 2005. I sincerely doubt that the number of people acing the PS section would just double in one year... rather, it seems that AAMC has adjusted the curve slightly so that the highest scores (44-45) might actually become attainable. Although this doesn't really affect anyone who took the 2006 MCAT (since everyone had the benefit of the minor curve-change), what about the people who are applying with 2005 scores? Since AMCAS applications don't list the percentile next to your MCAT score, does this mean the adcoms will have to scrutinize the particular year the exam was taken when they are reviewing applications? premeds are slowly beating the system. coralfangs 06-27-2006, 01:28 PM well, 1pt overall aint gonna break or make anyone braluk 06-27-2006, 03:10 PM well, 1pt overall aint gonna break or make anyone it might if the curve puts the mcat taker at an advantage over students who had a harder curve coralfangs 06-27-2006, 05:39 PM true eh man, the easy curve makes me feel bad and cheated >_< |