How I Raised My MCAT Score By 10 Points in 2 Months — The Spinach Method

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Spinach Dip

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NOW WITH PS!
The Spinach Method
-or-
How I Added 10 Points To My MCAT Score In 2 Months​

By: Spinach Dip
Posted on Student Doctor Network



1
= THE OVERVIEW=​



Let’s get the most obvious question out of the way first:
30 (9,9,12) on 20 Nov 2012, using a paper copy of AAMC #1
40 (14,11,15) on 26 Jan 2013, on the actual test. :soexcited:



Greetings future MCAT takers and re-takers! This is my guide on how to utterly destroy this monster of a standardized exam!

Let’s get the disclaimers out of the way, first:
—This article is copyright by ME, Spinach Dip, posted here on the Student Doctor Network for the benefit of all. You may NOT, in any circumstance, claim that you authored it in part or in whole, NOR may you post it in part or in whole on any other website whatsoever. PLEASE do not print it off to share with your friends, pre-med club, or anyone else. I would APPRECIATE it if you gave out direct links to this article so others could read it, in its entirety, for themselves.
—You are free to refer to the “Spinach Method” on your own website/blog/facebook/twitter/etc if you wish, but you may NOT post excerpts, and you SHOULD provide a direct link to this article.
—I do not guarantee that you will see the same score increase that I saw. There are simply too many variables in play at any one time to guarantee anything. :(
—I will always write scores as “Total (PS,VR,BS)” or “(PS,VR,BS) Total”. In other words, the section scores will be represented in the order they actually appear on the exam, not in some score report which mixes things around for no discernable reason
—I am willing to engage in kind-hearted debate about some of the details I list below. But if you come here just to insult me, I will ignore you and report your post for being offensive. Keep it civil.
—If you have success with this method, please post below and tell others you used the Spinach Method to study!



*Deep breath* Let’s get into it.



This test is a beast. A salivating, voracious monster. A soulless horror from the deepest pit of hell. A massive, brutish minotaur hidden in a labyrinth by the AAMC with the sole purpose of slaying any and all who come before it unprepared. The labyrinth is also known as “undergrad”, full of twists, turns, and dead ends—which anyone might eventually find their way through given enough time. The minotaur is the test itself, and all must engage it in a one-on-one battle-to-the-death. Some are slain by the minotaur. many come out bleeding and bruised, yet alive. Others are victorious but come away with a slight limp or a black eye. And a select few slay the minotaur effortlessly and come out with nary a scratch. After the battle, it is up to the Council of Elders (adcoms) to determine if you are worthy of one of their illustrious apprenticeships (acceptance to med school).

My own path has been long and winding. I took several wrong turns in the labyrinth. Changed my major… let’s see… three times. Came out with a below-average GPA that took a couple extra years to complete. I haven’t met with the Council of Elders yet, but hope to hear their decision within a year. But, as for the minotaur, it wasn’t even close! I kicked its ass, spit in its eye, spray-painted my name on the wall, stole its candy, and on my way out I yelled: “SUCKS TO BE YOU!!”

Yeah!

That’s what I said! :smuggrin:

And now that we’re all pumped up, let’s get to the meat of this post—the method. I have seen SN2ed’s method, and while it definitely works for some people, I found it much too restrictive for my own study style.

What follows are 20 basic points of this method. As I was studying for the MCAT, I kept a list of what I found helpful and unhelpful, notes to myself about how to study most efficiently. I have embellished these points into what you see below. Some are specific and somewhat unknown. Some are broad ideas you should be doing all the time. Others are general knowledge which I am repeating here for the purpose of reinforcement. But all are important to the Spinach Method of studying for the MCAT.



=1. The Overall Idea=

The backbone of this entire method is based on repeating 5 different activities over and over to assess and overcome your own weaknesses and lack of knowledge.

The first is testing. This is the most obvious. You want to take 3 full-length tests every week. Two should be from secondary sources (Kaplan, TPR, TBR, EK, GS, Arco, etc), while one should be primary (AAMC is the only primary souce of material). In my schedule, I took secondary tests on Monday and Wednesday, then a primary (AAMC) test each Friday. Every time you take a test, you should do a careful post-game analysis. Make this analysis twice as thorough for AAMC tests.

The second is quizzing. This is what you do on your other days (in my case, Tuesday and Thursday, with a little less on Saturday). This is the time where you get out a book such as EK1001 or TPR Hyperlearning and do practice questions and passages on whichever subject you did poorly on last time you took a test. You could also simulate a test if you wish, doing 52 PS questions, 7 VR passages, and 52 BS questions.

After every single test or quiz, it is imperative that you study the questions you got wrong and WHY you got them wrong. The simple mistakes (such as forgetting the formula to calculate Joules) go on flashcards. Your flashcards should have a single word or phrase on the front; on the other side, all the information you need to know about the term. For example:
Front: Newtons
Back: Mass*Acceleration. Measure of force. Newtons = kg*meters/seconds^2

You will also have a notebook for more complicated questions, or a passage which you did poorly at. For example, let’s say you get to a passage on the sympathetic nervous system and only get 3/6 correct. To prevent this from happening again, you will write a passage on the sympathetic nervous system in your notebook, containing as many questions as you feel you need. Alternately, if you mess up a complicated question, put it in your notebook with an in-depth answer explaining why the correct answer is actually the correct answer. (Don’t do this for VR—it is a whole separate section that requires special tactics to tackle.) Organize your notebook so the questions start on page one and answers start at the half-way point, so you can flip between them easily.

While doing your flashcards and notebook, engage in content review. I have a rather low opinion of content review, and only used it when struggling with a difficult concept.



=2. Verbal is Different=

Verbal is the bane of everyone’s existence. It is the most conceptual of the sections, and there is no benefit to be gained from writing flashcards for VR or including it in your notebook. Rather, I did a full section (7 passages) almost every day and treated it like the actual exam. The only difference I made between materials was to review any primary (AAMC) material with utmost detail, going over every single question with a fine-toothed comb during the post-test analysis. On quiz materials or secondary tests, the more important thing is to practice your method of reading, timing, and approaching questions logically.

Often, the writers of secondary tests will have… let’s say “interesting”… methods of reasoning out the correct answer to a single question. I say: ignore their reasoning. Don’t even read it. But, on the other hand, realize that the MCAT authors are always right. Why? Because they wrote the test. That makes them infallible when it comes to VR. Get that into your head right now. The MCAT authors are always right.

Reasoning behind AAMC Verbal answers = always right
Reasoning behind Secondary Verbal answers = virtually meaningless.



=3. Use Resources That Are Readily Available.=

Chances are you have a University library. Use it. Who knows what study material you might find on the shelves? And as a follow up, use your public library and see what they have available. I got a couple Kaplan and TBR books from my local public library. Get a library card and check! I can’t tell you how many times I’ve talked to classmates about some expensive textbook and when I ask if they checked the public libraries, they stare at me like I’m speaking Ukrainian.

For that matter, use Google and Wikipedia if you need help answering a specific question that does not appear to be in your content review books.



=4. Which Materials Are Best?=

It largely does not matter what materials you use. Obviously, the AAMC tests are the absolute best and you should use them in the most effective way possible. But, beyond that, the whole debate about TBR/TPR/EK/Kaplan/GS/Arco/Etc is largely moot. The value that can be obtained from each is dependent on how much effort YOU put into understanding the material and how well you do your post-game analysis.

In short, your own dedication to your success is the single most important factor to determining how much you can raise your score.

In the previous section, I said you should use libraries to find materials. That’s exactly what I did for the vast majority of the materials I used.

For the purpose of full disclosure:
—For tests, I used: AAMC (obviously), Kaplan, Arco, GS, and maybe TPR and TBR (Might have gotten an online test or two from these, but don’t remember).
—For quizzes, I used: Mostly just EK101 for Verbal, and the TPR Hyperlearning Science Workbook (~2000 questions in this book is equivalent to ~20 MCAT exams).
—For content review, I used: Kaplan, TPR, TBR, some GS videos, Arco, Wikipedia, Google, Youtube, and more.



=5. Get A Timer And Use It=

Preparing for the MCAT may be a marathon, but the actual test is not. The time you spend actually answering questions on the MCAT is, at most, 3 hours and 20 minutes. You also get two 10-minute breaks. Yet I have heard frequently of people doing 5… 6… 7… even 8 hour marathons of studying. In my mind, this is the single best way to wear yourself out and forget everything you went over by the following morning.

I used a timer any time I did something on paper. If it was a test, I gave myself 70 minutes for PS, 60 for VR, and 70 for BS. If a quiz day, I would do 75 minutes of PS or BS, and 60 for VR (I did a VR passage about ¾ of my quiz days, regardless. For BS and PS, the goal during quizzes was to answer as many questions as possible within the given time without getting reckless. For Verbal, it was more about the technique of reading the passages and reasoning through the 40 questions within 60 minutes.

Make sure to take a FULL 10 minute break between each section. When you’re done with 3 quiz sections, take a longer break (I usually grabbed lunch) and get refreshed. Then come back, correct, and review what you got wrong.

If you are really intense, you could try 4 hours of quizzes. If that works for you, fine. Just don’t get burned out.



=6. Do Something Every Day=

Don’t slack off.

If you have a dedicated “rest day” (mine was Sunday), you should at least do something slightly helpful toward the goal of studying for the MCAT. Review your flashcards or read through your notebook. You could even do some non-MCAT reading or play League of Legends. Anything to keep you sharp and active. Some people have said playing minigames on their iPhone keeps them sharp. Go with whatever works for you.

Don’t watch Amish Mafia, Ancient Aliens or Honey Boo Boo. If you do any of those, I think you deserve to lose points on your MCAT.



=7. What I Suggest When You Need a Break=

Some days you wake up and have absolutely no drive to answer questions about capacitors. Or you may feel sick or have a headache. In that case, it is okay to put aside your plans for the day and do something easier. Turn a 3-part quiz day into a 1-part quiz day if you must. Don’t slack off just because you’re feeling lazy (that’s the single worst thing you can do while preparing for this test).

But when you do need a break, you should do something productive. I really like reading as a relaxing pastime (and it might increase your VR score slightly). If you are looking for a reading list, I would suggest:
—Maus by Art Spiegelman. The biography of Vladek Spiegelman, a Jew in Poland during WWII. The only graphic novel to win a Pulitzer Prize.
—Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke. Set in Napoleonic Wars England, this book tells the tale of the first two English magicians in several centuries. Although very long (1000 pages in mass market paperback), it received universal acclaim from critics in numerous genres.


Of course, you could also try something more stimulating. Whether this means a jog around the block, a hot shower, or an intense game of Starcraft is up to you.

TV is the last option, IMO. I hardly ever watch TV, but I know that there are some good, informational shows around. I like Antiques Roadshow and Mysteries at the Museum because I feel like I learn something with every episode. The Military Chanel is good if you like to study WWII, but it can be extremely depressing. Or you can find something for yourself—just make sure it will leave you smarter than before you tuned in.



=8. Earplugs=

Get some.

Short story: When I took the GRE a couple years ago, some woman a few tables down started crying. I don’t know if it’s because she was too stressed or had just seen her score, but she was sobbing and trying to be quiet about it. She was also failing, and I’m pretty sure everyone in the testing center could hear her. The only reason I could hear her was because I had forgotten my earplugs that morning.

Short Story #2:When I took the MCAT a couple months ago, I was randomly assigned to seat #1. Do you know which one that is? In my test center, it’s the one closest to the door. People were walking behind me and opening and closing that squeaky door the whole time. Gladly, I remembered to bring my earplugs this day, so the noise was practically indistinguishable.

Now, I realize that people have different size ear canals, so I have put together a quick list based on my own experiences with trying to find the perfect noise-blocking earplug:
—Very Small Ears: Mack’s Dreamgirl. Don’t laugh. Anyway, these things are tiny. Only small females and children would find these useful.
—Small Ears: 3M 1120. They look weird, but are actually soft and very easy to place. “3M” is the maker and “1120” is the model number.
—Medium Ears: Max Lite. This is the kind I use almost every night. :sleep: They are slightly hard to place, but are very comfortable when in right and cut sound amazingly well. I can wear these for 12+ hours without discomfort.
—Large Ears: Laser Lite. The same as Max Lite, but with a larger diameter. I can wear these for a short time, but they begin to irritate my ears after a couple hours.
—Very Large Ears: EARsoft FX. These have the absolute highest noise reduction rating, but are for huge ears only. I can wear these for a few minutes before they start bothering me.



=9. Find Something Which Helps You Concentrate=

No. I don’t mean Ritalin. And if that was the first thing to enter your mind, you might want to take a course in medical ethics. :slap:

I mean something like coffee, candy, or energy drinks. Something high in sugar, caffeine, or both. Something completely legal and ethical.

Caffeine has never really worked for me. Sugar does. I know, it’s unhealthy and predisposes one to diabetes and all that, but it’s what helps me when a major test is involved.

I started with peanut butter M&Ms. But these got rather boring after a while, so I tried some other candies and eventually settled on skittles. Yes. I’m serious. They have a variety of flavors, so they don’t get repetitive in taste. When you’re on a 10-minute break during a practice test take a couple handfuls and throw them back while you take some deep breaths and prepare mentally for the next section.

Every person is different. Figure out what works for you.



=10. Mark Questions And Review Them=

It sounds obvious, but so many people don’t do it!

While you’re taking a test (either primary or secondary), mark a question if you’re not sure about your answer. Do this in every single test, whether primary or secondary. Pretend each one is the actual MCAT. If you have time left at the end of the section, go back and review your marked questions one-by-one. Think about why you marked this question in the first place. Is it because some calculation confused you? Or did you mark it just to double-check your work? Is it because the question uses some vocabulary you aren’t familiar with? Try to reason it out. If you can’t, move on to the next marked question.

Fair warning: Be extremely careful what you mark in VR. After completing the seventh passage, it’s generally a very bad idea to jump back to passage #2 and try to recall the details of it. Your goal should be to go through VR once and finish with ~60 seconds left.

Only mark a question in VR if:
—It’s simply-worded.
—You can narrow it down to 2 answer choices beforehand.
—And you think you will remember enough of the passage to return to it and still answer questions.

Furthermore, use every second you have in each section. NEVER finish a section if there are some answers you’re unsure about. If you have even a minute left, go back to those questions and think about them. Maybe something will pop into your head. One more correct answer can make the difference between a 10 and an 11.



=11. Use Your Scratch Paper=

The MCAT rules allow you to scribble notes on your scratch paper during the tutorial and examinee agreement. Each of these allows you 10 minutes, but takes about 1. That gives you a good 18 minutes or so to scribble on your scratch paper before the first section: PS.

Over my two months of study, I developed a pool of 22 equations that I would write on scratch paper before every test. These were simple equations which I had a tendency to forget when they came up in the middle of full-length exams. On the actual test, I ended up using five of these.

(No, I won’t tell you what my 22 equations were. Come up with your own list.)

Also, get used to writing the following series of numbers in the corner of your scratch paper: “52-44-36-28-20-12”. This is a mark of how much time you should have remaining at the end of each of the first 6 verbal passages. If I was within 1-2 minutes of these times, I considered that fine. If I was more than two minutes ahead, I would try to slow down a little, because in all likelihood I was rushing either my reading or my question answering. If I was more than two minutes behind, I would start reading faster to get back in line. Notice this allows you ~8 minutes to finish each passage. Also note, it allows four minutes of leeway in case you get stuck on a very hard passage or have to read something over again.



=12. Set Aside A Quiet Place=

Okay, this sounds pretty obvious, but you’d be amazed how many don’t do it!

For paper materials: find a nice, clean desk you can use and push it up against a wall so whenever you look up, there is nothing interesting to see. Keep the desk clear except for your timer and whatever books and papers you are using at the moment.

For computerized tests: clear off the area around your computer so you have nothing but a mouse, your scratch paper, and computer screen. A keyboard is allowable, but since the removal of the WS section, completely unnecessary.

For both: Use your earplugs. Get used to them. Have your candy/coffee/energy drink nearby and only reach for it during scheduled breaks. Turn off your phone and put it in another room. Don’t check email/Facebook/Twitter/etc until you are ready to take your lunch break.

Short Story: I bombed one of my AAMC tests (#9). The reason? I forgot to mute my phone and had a family member call near the end of PS. I had to answer—I couldn’t just let it ring and pretend I was not home. I was stuck on the phone for several minutes. While I still answered every single question, the distraction was enough to drop my score SIX points from my previous AAMC. :scared: Seeing such a drop made me want to give up, but I told myself it was a fluke and scored much better on the next test.



=13. If You Can Find The Old “R” Tests, Use Them First=

The “R” version of the MCAT is an older version, from the early 1990’s. I’m not exactly clear on the details surrounding it, or when it was replaced with the current exam, but I can tell you that it covers all the same topics as the current MCAT. The only significant difference is the “R” test is longer. The following mini-chart compares the distribution of questions:

.......Current…..“R”
PS…..52………..77
VR…..40……….65
BS…..52……….77
Tot…144……...219

Simple math (219/144) shows that the “R” versions of the MCAT are 1.5 times as long as the current version. So each “R” test is like doing one and a half MCATs. I’m not sure how to time these exactly, so I did them without timing them, going at a normal pace. They took 4+ hours each (after breaks), which seemed about right.

If you can find AAMC #1, it is an “R” test. I don’t know about #2, as I never found a copy. Also, some old prep books have the longer tests. If you can find any “R” tests, do them first. They will help you build up stamina and test you on 50% more content simultaneously.

Finally, some books with “R” tests either don’t have a scoring scale, or have one that is bizarrely out of proportion. I created a scale which seems more accurate to me. This scale gave me a 30 on AAMC #1, which was bracketed by 32s on AAMC #3 and #4 (and each section was plus or minus 1) so I’d call it a decent estimation.

………......PS/BS…..VR
15………..76-77……65
14………..73-75……63-64
13………..70-72……60-62
12………..67-69……57-59
11………..64-66……54-57
10………..59-63……49-53
9…………55-58……44-48
8…………50-54……39-43
7…………46-49……34-38
6…………40-45……29-33
5…………33-39……23-28
1-4……….less………less

The method for creating this chart took a while, but basically involved taking all the scaled-score data from e-mcat.com, averaging the charts there, turning that into a ‘percent correct’ chart, and then turning those percentages into a # out of 77 or 65 correct.

I present it here so you don’t have to go through all the work. I only hope you can find some “R” tests to use it on. :xf:



=14. Pick Your Studying Time Carefully=

And by “time”, I mean “time of year”.

There are three times of year you can reasonably study for the MCAT:
—Christmas break.
—Summer break.
—Any term you are taking no classes.

Now, it has been said on this board innumerable times, but I feel I must repeat it here… Study at a time when you have no other commitments. No job. No research. No classes. I know it is hard to put your entire life aside to prepare for a single test, but that is what is required to get all you can out of your study time.

I could only manage 2 months over Christmas break (starting the day I had my last final of fall term, and running two weeks into classes during winter term). I wish I could have done it the previous summer, but I had to take a condensed chemistry course to complete my BS degree.

I know some of you work. I know some of you have families. You might be able to do your MCAT studying at night. Or do 2-hour quizzes instead of 3.

You could always review flashcards when you have a few minutes alone. Or read through your workbook if you take public transit.

If you have significant family or work obligations which you absolutely cannot escape. I must say that the 2-month plan is probably not for you. Sorry. You should give yourself more time. I would suggest using the same strategy of quizzing, testing, and careful analysis… but over a longer period. 3 months, or 4 months maybe. Whatever it takes for you to be comfortable with the material.



=15. Finish All Your Prereqs=

I cannot stress this one hard enough.

Occasionally I will see posts here (or elsewhere) asking “do I have to take Ochem before the MCAT?” :bang:

I always want to answer with something snarky along the lines of “Only if you want to score higher than the 20th percentile in BS.”

But seriously. The MCAT tests on four subjects in science: Physics, GenChem, OChem, and Biology. You absolutely NEED to take the basic prereqs to do well on the MCAT.

I would even suggest more courses. Mammal Physiology, Intro to Biochem, and Human Genetics (aka Clinical Genetics) were the most beneficial to me. But then, I am a biology major, so people of other majors may have other opinions.

I’ve also heard that Calculus-Based Physics and Physical Chemistry (or Analytical Chemistry) can be extremely beneficial for the PS section (if you can survive them—I didn’t take any of them). As for Ochem, I led an Ochem workshop for a year, which was extremely helpful with refreshing all those finicky reactions.

In short, take your prereqs. Pay attention. And study hard in each of them—you never know what insignificant piece of knowledge will come up on the MCAT.




=16. Read The 30+ Thread Here On SDN=

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=503250

That’s the link to the thread. Read it; it contains words of advice from others who slew this minotaur of a test.

To elaborate, this was actually the very first thing I did in preparing for the MCAT. I read every single post—yes all 1200+!. Everything I found helpful or inspirational was scribbled in my workbook, on the very last page. Over time, I added and removed ideas. What remains are the points you are reading here.



=17. Get A Good Night Of Sleep=

Every single night.

Nothing is worse than trying to think about total internal reflection and the molecular causes of Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome on 4 hours of sleep. Heck, it’s hard enough with a full night of sleep behind you.

While engaged in the Spinach Method, you should try to go to bed at the same time every night and wake up only when you feel rested and ready to start the day.

Furthermore, I believe that sleep deprivation is most detrimental to VR—the section which people generally have the hardest time with. Sleep deprivation wrecks the mind’s ability to focus and work on detail-oriented tasks. The most detail-oriented section of the MCAT is VR!

If you suffer from insomnia, don’t schedule yourself for a morning test!

If you aren’t convinced that a good night of sleep is important, read this article:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_sleep_deprivation_on_cognitive_performance



=18. Don’t Be Afraid To Cancel If You’re Not Ready=

You should set a realistic “goal” score, based on your GPA, ECs, and which schools you hope to get into. Are you alright with DO? Or is Harvard the only school for you? All of these things will effect your goal score.

I can’t tell you what your goal should be, but the lower your GPA and ECs, the higher your goal should be. Look at the MSAR to figure out which schools admit applicants with stats near yours.

When you look at the schedule below, you will see that every Friday you will be doing an AAMC test. These are spaced out regularly so you can use them to assess how well you are advancing in your studies.

You will also notice #3 is the very first test you will take. Many advise against this, but I think it is a great idea because it allows you to assess where you stand before you truly start studying. Thus, it allows you to track your advances more carefully. Also, AAMC #11 is the very last test you will take, completing your preparation and giving the best possible prediction of what your actual MCAT score will be.

If you get within a few weeks of test day and are still nowhere near your goal, you must realize that massive gains on test day are exceedingly rare. Most people are within 1 on each individual section (plus or minus). Getting +2 on a section over your last practice test is a fluke.

So if you get near test day (say, when you take AAMC #9 according to the schedule below), and find your score is far below your goal, you have 4 options:
—Change your goal.
—Change your test date.
—Take the test anyway and pray.
—Take the test anyway and immediately void.

My suggestion is to delay your test date. It allows you the chance to work on your weaknesses and bring your score up towards your goal. Also, you would have saved AAMC #10 and #11 for later use.




=19. Know Everything=

This is in reference to PS and BS specifically.

There are some subjects which appear more frequently on the MCAT, and some which appear less frequently. For examples, let’s say… radioactivity appears on most tests in one way or another, while capacitors can appear, but less frequently. (Once you’ve done all the AAMC tests, you will get a feel for what is more frequent.)

That does not mean you need to know about radioactivity, but can ignore capacitors. No. You must know everything that might show up on the test. That’s how to do well in the sciences. You must know how to calculate the capacitance of parallel and series capacitors. You must know what variables affect the capacitance of a capacitor. You don’t need to know these things because it will be on the test, but because it might be on the test.

Realize that at the very top scores (11+), raising your score 1 point can mean as little as 1-2 questions. So the fact that you know how to find the overall capacitance of a series of capacitors might make that difference!
:prof:
If you can’t know everything, you need to do your absolute best to know as much as possible



=20. Don’t Get Burned Out=

I feel like I’m repeating myself here, but I think this is the second most important thing on this list (behind only #1, The Overall Idea).

:beat:

Seriously, this is a problem I think most people face during their MCAT preparation. The constant days of questions and questions and tests after tests wears on people. Regardless of what some gunners say, it is mentally exhausting.

That’s why my schedule allows for a Free Day on every Sunday. If you are feeling over-taxed, relax. Do nothing MCAT-related. This conflicts directly with #6 on my list, but if you feel absolutely drained, then just relax. I made some suggestions in #7, which gives a few things you can do during rest days.

But, if none of those work for you, do whatever.

I am not going to yell at you for not following the schedule. I’m providing the schedule to you. I’m not demanding you follow it to the word.

Short Story: Even I took a few unscheduled days off. That’s what happens when you do your test prep over Christmas break. I had family meetings to attend… and classes started two weeks before my test day. So, for a couple of those days, I accomplished nothing MCAT-related.

Regardless of the couple days I took off, I still raised my score 10 points in 2 months. I would suggest you stick closer to the schedule, but it’s all up to your dedication and how much you want to succeed.

So take the minotaur by the horns and kick its ass!

That’s all for now

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Hey Spinach, I've been following your method and so far it has been working. My problem is that I can't finish things on time! In the PS, I can sometimes take 3 min on a question because I know I can figure out the question if I just had more time, but then it messes the entire section up. What should I do? Also, why didn't you focus very much on content review? It seems to me that that is that content review should be thoroughly completed first, and then your method second to ensure a maximum score. Were you just confident in the retention of your science knowledge? ((And can you please fill in the BS section!))

(P.S. I've been rereading this post for over half a year now and I made a folder on my internet browser of the link to this page. I have it labelled GOAL. You inspire me..)
 
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I am really curious to know about people's experience following this schedule. Did you feel like you were able to approach the exam with the content review that you had? :)
 
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I am really curious to know about people's experience following this schedule. Did you feel like you were able to approach the exam with the content review that you had? :)

After re-reading this thread, I believe that Spinach's method is based on further studying techniques after completing or having recently finished pre-reqs. When I first read his method, I was much too far out of classes to jump into this without some pretty thorough content review. I started doing things my own way (content reviewing, taking notes, reading my notes and taking full-lengths every week), which didn't work out too well. I was making 23-24 consistently right up until 2 weeks before the exam. After rescheduling my MCAT to this upcoming January (before it changes, hehe), I've already done the majority of my content review and will start on his method in August to prepare for about 5 months.

I did have a question for Spinach though. Kind of different from others in the fact that I LOVE verbal reasoning. It's the only thing that I honestly enjoy when it comes to MCAT studying. However, I avoid doing quizzing for PS/BS like the plague and find myself rushing through questions on the full-length exams just to get through it. I find that I have trouble analyzing passages/graphs to answer the questions. I suppose the best advice is to focus more on the PS/BS sections and maybe content review to be more comfortable with the material. Any other advice?
 
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Hey Spinach,

Was wondering if you had any advice for the Biological Sciences section. Wasn't sure when you were going to update!
Thanks.
Premed_2014
 
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Hey, I was wondering how long did you study for the first time you took mcat? 3 months?
Also, were you working when you studied for mcat#1 and mcat#2?
How do you suggest people with full-time work should approach your strategy? Will the 2 month schedule still apply to them?
Ahh I am writing my mcat in 10days.. I studied for roughly 2months with full time work.
I haven't done many practice exams.. I did a few and trying to do more now.. but scoring poorly.
I wonder if some miracle can happen in 10days? :hungover:
ps. I just ordered the earplugs you mentioned in your post from ebay :)
And also wanted to say that your post is just amazing! and your score is even more amazing! Just super congrats on getting the score you deserved and thanks for helping all the people out here with your post! :clap:
 
Hey, I was wondering how long did you study for the first time you took mcat? 3 months?
Also, were you working when you studied for mcat#1 and mcat#2?
How do you suggest people with full-time work should approach your strategy? Will the 2 month schedule still apply to them?
Ahh I am writing my mcat in 10days.. I studied for roughly 2months with full time work.
I haven't done many practice exams.. I did a few and trying to do more now.. but scoring poorly.
I wonder if some miracle can happen in 10days? :hungover:
ps. I just ordered the earplugs you mentioned in your post from ebay :)
And also wanted to say that your post is just amazing! and your score is even more amazing! Just super congrats on getting the score you deserved and thanks for helping all the people out here with your post! :clap:

What do you consider scoring poorly?
 
Does anyone know where I can buy or find the Princeton Review, Kaplan, or Exam Krackers full length tests without purchasing a course?

Also, are these full lengths online or on paper?
 
What do you consider scoring poorly?

Poorly as in everyone's standard poorly.
Getting low 20s.
And yes I have only 10 days remaining.
And I cannot postpone it. And I dont want to void it.
Lots to cram and lots to study.
But I just keep finding myself tired and sleepy and unable to cover as much as I am hoping for.
All I am praying for is breaking that 30.
Dont know if I can do this. -- But I guess I just have to try now and I will soon find out...
 
Poorly as in everyone's standard poorly.
Getting low 20s.
And yes I have only 10 days remaining.
And I cannot postpone it. And I dont want to void it.
Lots to cram and lots to study.
But I just keep finding myself tired and sleepy and unable to cover as much as I am hoping for.
All I am praying for is breaking that 30.
Dont know if I can do this. -- But I guess I just have to try now and I will soon find out...

Try your best, I think high 20s are possible and 30 on a good day.
 
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Just wanted to take the time to say thank you so much for this elaborately long post, Spinach! It's important for all of us to understand that any advice people provide on SDN should be received gratefully and gracefully, since they may just as easily have not given any advice at all.

Take the parts of the advice that you think will help you, and for the rest of it use your own devices (as you should be, in any case).

Thank you for having the thought to share what worked well for you with the rest of us! I definitely learned from your experience. :)
 
Made some great points, just wanted to give some feedback though. It may just be my test center, but both times I took the MCAT they took my scratch away from me during the tutorial and told me we aren't allowed to write anything and if I did it again they would consider me to be cheating. Beside that, I found this method extremely helpful during my studying. Thanks!!
 
I've been scoring similarly so far and also bombed AAMC 9 because of distractions! I also thought it was substantially harder than previous tests. I was just wondering if you noticed any differences on your real exam compared to the practice ones. I'm mostly curious if there have been more passage-based apply the logic questions or if there have been more "discrete" apply the content questions. I'm seriously hoping it's the former...
 
I just found this thread and I find it very helpful. I took the MCAT and I failed it, so I am trying to read on what work for others it may work for me. When you took the AAMC exams, were they computer based as the real MCAT? or were they in pdf files? While taking my AAMC practice tests I was averaging 30-33, I took them in pdf files, and I only practiced AAMC #3 as the real computer based MCAT, and I found myself lost when I took the exam because of them being maybe in a different format written vs computer based...Do you have any advice, insight or anything that might help me to handle the "computer based challenge"?
I will greatly appreciate if you have a chance to answer this question
PS Thank you for taking the time to write ways to succeed on the exam
 
I just found this thread and I find it very helpful. I took the MCAT and I failed it, so I am trying to read on what work for others it may work for me. When you took the AAMC exams, were they computer based as the real MCAT? or were they in pdf files? While taking my AAMC practice tests I was averaging 30-33, I took them in pdf files, and I only practiced AAMC #3 as the real computer based MCAT, and I found myself lost when I took the exam because of them being maybe in a different format written vs computer based...Do you have any advice, insight or anything that might help me to handle the "computer based challenge"?
I will greatly appreciate if you have a chance to answer this question
PS Thank you for taking the time to write ways to succeed on the exam

Practice like you play. Practice with real FL CBT exams. Why would you prepare with the pdf versions anyways? Did you time yourself appropriately?

Gold Standard, TBR, and AAMC all have CBTs. Practice with these... perhaps you will not 'fail' your next MCAT. Good luck!
 
Does anyone has a time breakdown for the PS and BS sections? I have been practicing with the time breakdown for the VR section suggested by this post and it works really well for me. I will appreciate any comments.
 
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The Spinach Method
-or-
How I Added 10 Points To My MCAT Score In 2 Months
By: Spinach Dip
Posted on Student Doctor Network



3
=PHYSICAL SCIENCES=



Remember:
—This article is copyright by ME, Spinach Dip, posted here on the Student Doctor Network for the benefit of all. You may NOT, in any circumstance, claim that you authored it in part or in whole, NOR may you post it in part or in whole on any other website whatsoever. PLEASE do not print it off to share with your friends, pre-med club, or anyone else. I would APPRECIATE it if you gave out direct links to this article so others could read it, in its entirety, for themselves.




=PS is the most memory-based of the three MCAT subjects=

Read the above line again. K. Got it? :idea:

I believe that PS is the one section that can truly be mastered. For someone who has done their homework (aka, their studying), it should not be too difficult to consistently score well on the PS section.

This is the complete opposite of the VR section, which requires you to know nothing beforehand. In VR, the trick is to understand every detail of what the author is saying. In VR, a lot depends on personal interpretation and being able to assess what answer the test writer is looking for. (see my VR post for more thoughts.) In PS, you need to know the equations for finding newtons, and amperes; you need to know how light acts when it enters water or glass. In PS, there is only one right answer.



=KNOW THE MATERIAL=

It is my opinion that your score in PS, more than any other section, can be increased solely through memorizing a handful of equations, physical properties, and understanding how to apply them. Thus, to master PS, you must first understand all the topics which might appear.:prof:



Memorize Your Equations

First question you are going to ask: Which equations do I need to memorize?

The answer is: Any one on which, on an AAMC test, they do not provide you with in the passage or question text.

There are some equations that you do not need to memorize. But if in doubt about a certain equation, you should probably memorize it anyway. Finally, you can’t merely memorize the letters on each side of an “=” sign—you must know what each letter resembles and when the equation can be used and how it can be manipulated.

Now, let’s give you three equations which you will be expected to know from day1.

x = ( a t2 ) / 2
The displacement equation. I also call it the acceleration equation because it measures distance (x) based on acceleration (a) and time elapsed (t).

P = I V
The electric power equation. Power in watts (P) is equal to the current (I) times the voltage (V).

V = I R
Ohm’s Law. Voltage (V) is equal to the current (I) times the resistance (R).

If you do not understand any of the terms above, or how to use them to solve questions...well....you have some work to do.

For the chemistry questions, you must know things like reaction kinetics, and how to solve solubilities, electrochemistry, and nuclear decay. These can be just as complex, but may involve scientific notation, giving them one extra consideration.:scared:



Know How to Manipulate Equations

The MCAT is a hard test. A freaking hard test. There’s a reason why 55% of takers get an 8 or less on PS. (That’s about 35 / 52 correct.) Why do the majority get only 2/3rds of the questions right? Well, it’s my belief is that it’s because they understand the basics of the section, such as the three equations above (clearly—they got 2/3rds correct!) but they fail to understand the more intricate aspects. Things like equation manipulation and understanding the less-frequent topics. Or maybe they neglect topics like radioactivity all together.

To illustrate equation manipulation, I will put three MCAT-like questions below. Answers are in the quote boxes immediately after. PLEASE try to answer them before you look at the answers. Use scratch paper if you must. If you aren’t ready right now, come back to them later.

1. A boulder rolls down a hill under constant acceleration of 4m/s. The total distance traveled before the boulder hit the bottom and began to decelerate was 800m. How long did it take for the boulder to reach the bottom?

A. 5 seconds
B. 20 seconds
C. 50 seconds
D. 200 seconds





2. An electrician measures a power of 6 Watts over a certain circuit over a period of 5 seconds. He then measures a current of 3 Amps over the following 5 seconds. What is the voltage of the circuit?

A. 0.4 Volts
B. 2.0 Volts
C. 10.0 Volts
D. 18.0 Volts





3. A circuit has a constant current of 6 Amps and a resistance of 4 Ohms. Find its Power.

A. 1.5 Watts
B. 24 Watts
C. 48 Watts
D. 144 Watts



So how’d you do?



Know How to Approximate

Frequently, the MCAT will give you two numbers which are not easily divisible/multipliable. If you do anything with the Pythagorean theorem, or a question like #1 above, where you have to find the value of a number squared, you may have to find the squareroot of a weird number. In this case, you have two choices. Either do it longhand, or approximate. Most equations can be solved with relatively simple math. You just need to know how to apply it.

I hope you know your multiplication tables. Every bit of math on the MCAT can be treated as addition, subtraction, or multiplication. (You can think of division as reverse-multiplication.) And square roots are a combination of division and multiplication.

Let’s try these three. No cheating!

1. 300 / 7 =

2. 5000 * 33 =

3. Squareroot 18 =

4. Squareroot 679 =

You can check your answers with a calculator. Within the quote below, I give my reasoning on how to figure these out without paper:



If you want to go further with square roots, you can use these values as well to allow you to divide by some (common) non-square numbers:
SQRT ( 2 ) = 1.4
SQRT ( 3 ) = 1.7
SQRT ( 10 ) = pi.

Did the squareroot of 10 blow your mind? Well, it’s almost right. The actual squareroot of 10 is 3.16. Pi is 3.14. It’s a darn good estimation.

Also, note that SQRT ( 2 * 2 ) = SQRT ( 4 ) = 2

There's a lot of short-cuts. Just be careful you do them all correctly.



Understand Scientific Notation and the Characteristics of Exponents

Okay, I’m tired of writing mini-quizzes. And I'm sure you're tired of reading them. Time for a break. :sleep:

I’m also not going to give you all the answers, just a few rules you need to know.

Now, exponents are most likely to be encountered on the chemistry sections, when solving for solubility products and equilibrium constants. But you can also find them any time the speed of light is part of the question, or sometimes when working with odd quantities like the force of the gravitational attraction between a planet and a star.

Please take note of the following:
( x5 ) ( x3 ) = x( 5+3 ) = x8

( x5 )3 = x( 5*3 ) = x15

( x5 ) / ( x3 ) = x( 5-3 ) = x2


And in scientific notation:
( x*103 ) ( y*105 ) = ( x*y*10( 3+5 )) = x*y*108

( x*103 ) / ( y*105 ) = ( ( x / y ) *10( 3-5 )) = ( x / y ) *10-2


As for addition and subtraction, I’ll leave those up to you.



Trial by Exhaustion

I do not favor this method, but it can be useful for some (complex) equations. Basically, you take the information provided in the passage, then input the value of answer A and see if it works out. Repeat for B. Then C. And finally D. Whichever one gives the best equation is correct.

I’d suggest against this method, unless you are otherwise completely stumped. It can take a long time. And you can still make mistakes.



=UNDERSTAND THE FORMAT OF THE PS SECTION=

Equal in importance to knowing all the material is knowing how that material is going to be asked on the test and how to study to gain the most from your time.



Know How Questions are Going to be Asked

You need to read every question carefully. The MCAT writers like to add in extraneous details, or ask questions in an awkward way. To answer most PS questions, you need to determine what you are being asked, what information you need to determine the answer, and where that information can be found in the passage (or from previous knowledge). If you ever get confused or lost, just take a deep breath and go through it step-by-step.

Each PS section has a couple questions which sound like they are asking for an opinion, but I guarantee you: the answers to these questions are based on facts! One such question might ask “What is the most likely reason the emitted light is violet?” It sounds like they are looking for an opinion, but the correct answer is based completely on facts concerning the actions of light, and material presented within the passage. Also, in these pseudo-opinion questions, you should be able to eliminate 2 answers right off the bat—either because they are blatantly wrong, or because they have nothing to do with the question being asked.



PS Requires a Shallow Knowledge of a Large Number of Topics

This is an important distinction to understand. You need to study and understand topics as varied as magnetic fields, refraction, buoyancy, reduction potentials, reaction orders, and radioactivity.

So what’s the good side? Well, you have to know about a lot of subjects, but you only need a basic knowledge of each topic. You are not being asked to give a 3-hour lecture on the dynamics of electrochemistry. You are being asked to answer 4-5 questions on the topic, the majority of which are rather easy if you have done enough practice problems and have some previous knowledge of the topic.

So, how many practice problems is enough? Well, I think that if you can do a primary (AAMC) passage and know how to solve all the questions, and get all of them right, you should be good to go. But if you still feel a little shaky on the topic, do some practice problems until you have an intuitive understanding of the topic and what questions you are likely to see.

I'm sorry, I can't give you a percentage to shoot for. Every person and subject is different. But I wish you all the best of luck. :luck:



Mark and Come Back

This is important for PS especially. If you are unsure on a question, mark it and make your best guess. If you can exclude an answer or two immediately, cross them out before moving on. Come back to it after you complete the whole section.

Use every second available to you.

Never fail to answer a question, even if you are guessing randomly. If you run out of time to review all your marked questions, you will at least have a chance you got it correct. Guessing is never ideal, but it's better then leaving a question blank.



Use Your Scratch Paper

You are given scratch paper for a reason—so you can USE IT! If you are one of those who can’t do math in your head, or needs to draw out lens diagrams to determine where the focal point will be, USE your scratch paper.

I also mentioned in the first post of this thread that you are allowed to write on your scratch paper during the opening minutes of the test. No problem. So if there are a couple equations you have trouble recalling during the high-stress environment of the test, you should scribble them down before the test actually starts.



Flashcards Flashcards Flashcards!

Question: Forget an equation? Forget what the First Law of Thermodynamics says? Forget how to calculate the overall capacitance of a series of parallel capaciators? :wtf:

Answer: Flashcards! :prof:



Use Your Notebook.

Let’s say you do poorly on a passage. Say, 2 or more wrong. You need to determine WHY. Was it because you misunderstood the questions? In that case, you should read the questions more carefully from now on. Was it because you misunderstood something within the passage? Perhaps you should slow down and read more carefully next time.

Or was it because you didn’t understand what the passage was talking about, or because you couldn’t fully grasp some concept? Well, in that case, it’s notebook time. Write the passage in your own words (keeping all important details) and include every question you got wrong, as well as any you were uncertain on. You can even add a question or two from secondary sources if it helps you understand the concept better.



=KNOW EVERYTHING=

This should be the mantra of the PS section. Know everything. And if you can’t know everything, you should try your best to know as much as possible.

Remember: You are not studying all these things because they WILL be on the test; you are studying them because they MIGHT be on the test.

There is no guarantee that you will have to answer a question concerning parabolic mirrors on the test, but you should try to understand them so you can grab some free points if it does appear. Meanwhile, all your test-mates will be scratching their noses, muttering to themselves “I didn’t know THAT was going to be on the test.”

Everyone knows that 1 question can mean 1 point on your scaled score. A 10 can become an 11 by getting one more question right.

But think of this: Especially after scaled scores get over 10, one score is the equivalent of 2-3 questions (and, sometimes, 1). See where I’m going with this? Let’s say you get 44 / 52 right. That is an 11 on most iterations of the test. One more correct can push that to 12. But let’s say you can increase that 44 to a 47. That could get you a 13.

A lot of people would be happy with an 11. But why would anyone want to stop there? Study the bits and pieces. Go for that elite 13.

:highfive:
 
For someone who took all their prereqs over a year ago and doesn't remember much would you recommend this guide or S2Ned's?
 
For someone who took all their prereqs over a year ago and doesn't remember much would you recommend this guide or S2Ned's?

Definitely go with SN2ed's guide. Most student's do not realize this guide is written for people who have already taken the exam in the past and have done a solid content review. Without the content knowledge you will consistently score within the same range as the practice exams as they test a wide range of science concepts. Using this approach without having done your content prior will significantly increase the time it takes you to assimilate the knowledge needed to do well on this exam. That being said I believe this guide is excellent for retakers who have a solid content foundation.
 
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For all the ones that have taken the AAMC Practice exams, the scores that are shown on this thread were the ones from taking the practice exams the first time or averages?
 
When should I include content review days?

Lmao!!

Content review is in the first 4 days of the schedule... which is why this schedule is meant for someone who is super fresh out of their pre-reqs.
 
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Don’t watch Amish Mafia, Ancient Aliens or Honey Boo Boo. If you do any of those, I think you deserve to lose points on your MCAT.

57000895.jpg
 
This looks dope. Anyone have an updated version like this for the new MCAT?

I implemented a similar strategy when studying for my MCAT (which I ended up voiding because CARS). I'd say a better way to implement something like this is to break it up into phases and incorporate a more thorough content review in between.

1. Cursory content review using EK

2. 3-4 practice FL with detailed review

3. Detailed content review with TBR

4. 3-4 practice FL with detailed review

5. AAMC

One thing I learned from taking the MCAT is that they could literally test you on anything and that means it can test you on matters that may not have been tested on particular FLs you have practiced with. This is why I think a detailed content review can help after seeing how questions are asked because it can help build up your knowledge and get out of a plateau.
 
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2. 3-4 practice FL with detailed review

3. Detailed content review with TBR

4. 3-4 practice FL with detailed review

Thanks for the update! Where did you get your FL exams? I see 4 are available from EK. Where did you get the other 4? I purchased the official AAMC kit too, I think there are a few in there as well. Thanks @FueledByRamen
 
raising your score by 10 marks is 100% doable. i have raised my score from a 489 to a 499 so far. my best suggestion is to go over every question you got right and wrong and each answer choice to make sure you get why you got it wrong.
 
Thank you Spinach Dip!

I came across your post when I was 10 weeks from my exam, I used a modified 2 exams per week method that fit my work schedule and did well (518) your review was super helpful! I was doing content review for about 10 weeks before hand as well.
 
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