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| Step I Discuss strategies and issues for the USMLE and COMLEX Step 1. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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2K Member
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I've had no problem with questions that involve best-response/best-action scenarios, but any involving study-design type and biostatistics are comparatively weak for me. I would normally just stick with the questions and hope for gradual improvement, but I was recently just doing a string of them, 26 of which I had correct in a row, then got a simple four-answer choice question about cohort studies wrong that 66% of people got right. This is really exasperating, and I'm realizing that I need to possibly remediate with a resource external to FA and the QBanks. I'm aware of BRS and HY Behavioral Science, as well as HY Biostatistics, but does anyone have any experience with any of these resources / advice that may help me out here? Thanks, ~Phloston |
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#2 |
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Member
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not sure how much time you have so i guess that is the biggest factor.....i would recommend kaplan's behavioral science videos if you still have some time (i am def not a proponent of kaplan videos usually but they did a few subjects well). i did them while following along in BRS (which i think is overkill IMO). i havent taken the exam yet so obviously im not the best authority but these resources have been more than good enough for me on uworld/kaplans qbanks.
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#3 |
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2K Member
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I've found I learn best from questions, so I just purchased BRS Behavioral Science and HY Biostatistics.
No one's reviews that I had read online were specific enough about these resources with respect to the USMLE, so I'll have to figure this one out for myself. I plan on spending a solid week (>40 hours) on those two books once I finish USMLE Rx, before proceeding to Kaplan QBank. |
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#4 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 10
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This HAS to be a troll. PLEASE let this be a troll.
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#5 |
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2K Member
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For everybody reading this post, I've done some workup on this uncgrad2002 character, and look at this post he's made about having been arrested twice and concern about applying for medicine:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=868165 Last edited by Phloston; 03-25-2012 at 03:30 AM. |
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#6 |
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1K Member
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I feel real good when I get over 70% on UWorld, and here is this mofo complaining about 83% blocks.
Jailbait. |
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#7 |
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MS-4
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^^^ He's actually getting 85% on USMLERx, not UWorld, which is much different.
OP, Your best bet would be to do read HY Biostats and BRS Behavioral. I've found that the best way to answer these questions is by actually doing questions. You can memorize a bunch of crap, but it can be tough to apply it. I find it best to pay close attention to the question stem and note exactly how things are worded. Sometimes that makes a big difference and usually can make the answers quite clear, especially if you're remotely familiar with the material. |
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#8 |
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Stressed Applicant
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#9 |
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MS-4
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Depends on if its random, timed blocks or studying a chapter and immediately doing a block specific to that material. But I think 85% is really high and excellent nonetheless.
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#10 | ||
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2K Member
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Quote:
Nonetheless, I still think, even in tutor-mode, that it's important to pick an answer in a target of <45 seconds. I've found that doing a block of questions and then going back to read all of the explanations at the end is both very draining and platitudinous. With tutor-mode, at least after having spent considerable time on the explanations and PrntScr FA images, one can look forward to the "fun and surprise" of a new, subsequent question, rather than just another mere explanation. Quote:
I agree with some of the other posters that UWorld is likely very different from Rx, however I can at least vouch the fact that having memorized FA was definitely essential. I'd say about 3/7 of the questions I've been getting wrong in Rx are directly out of FA, and I merely hadn't retained the minutiae the first time; 3/7 have been based on info that is purely unique to the QBank (not in FA), and 1/7 have been just dumb mistakes. I read and memorized BRS Pathology before having started FA or Rx. This book has definitely helped path be a strong point. My strongest breakdowns are neuroanatomy and micro. Before I started Rx, I went through all of the Sanjiv Microcards, which were by far the best study tool I've ever used in med school. Last year, I had also gone through HY Neuroanatomy, which has definitely helped with the visualization of a lot of things. |
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#11 |
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Member
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Do you spend time adding in information to FA from Rx explanations and the other books you read? I doing that as I go through my materials and Rx/world questions. I'm wondering if I'm just spending too much time and instead should try to go through FA cover to cover as you did
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#12 | ||
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2K Member
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In the final weeks, remember that you'll be re-re-re-re-re-re-memorizing FA to the core, and the annotations will recount a lot of the shock-factor info that you had encountered on your progression through the QBanks. By all means, FA is not as comprehensive as everyone makes it out to be. Absolutely annotate FA. Quote:
It depends on how much time you have. If you are still far away from your exam, pause, and strictly read FA cover to cover, THEN start questions. If you are in the closing months, do both. |
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