1) Your individual scores and composite score
14 PS, 12 VR, 15 BS = 41R Composite
2) The study method used for each section
In general: master the content while you are taking the classes. You shouldn't just be getting As in your prerequisites for your GPA's sake; every minute you spend studying the material for class pays dividends later when you are preparing for the MCAT. I did not do a comprehensive content review aside from listening to EK Audio Osmosis in the car a few dozen times.
A word of warning: I chose this particular studying technique because I did very well on my diagnostic, AAMC #3. If you do poorly on your diagnostic, comprehensive content review is probably necessary.
My MCAT study time was related primarily to mastering the test itself. I tried very hard to replicate actual test conditions so that I knew what to expect and was used to the pace etc. On Saturday (at first every two weeks, then every week for about a month) I would take an official practice test. Immediately after the test I would go over all of my incorrect answers. During the following week I would try to improve the weaknesses that the practice test had revealed. About a week before the test I worked through all of the questions in the "Official Guide to the MCAT" while I was volunteering. That's pretty much it.
One of the principle tenets of my philosophy of learning is this: if you want to get good at something, practice
that thing, not something else. The closer you can make your practice tests resemble the actual test, the better off you will be.
A final note: I highly recommend taking physics and chemistry before you take biology and organic chemistry, if you can. A lot of the tough-to-understand trends make a lot more sense if you have a strong, intuitive understanding of thermodynamics.
3) What materials you used for each section(Kaplan, TPR, Examkrackers, AAMC, etc)
PS
Took calculus-based physics in college. I think this is better because it helps to develop physical intuition. There is a reason that calculus and classical mechanics were co-invented.
EK Audio Osmosis served as my comprehensive content review. Basically, it reminded me of the things that I had forgotten or never learned.
Khan Academy physics and chemistry videos to shore up on those items just mentioned.
Listened to and read the Feynman Lectures on Physics to obtain a deeper understanding of topics that interested me. He's the greatest teacher on the planet. I was able to answer one computation-heavy question on the actual MCAT from memory because Feynman had discussed the result and its implications explicitly in one of his lectures.
EK where I needed any additional help, after all of that. Probably was the most useful for fluid mechanics, titrations, and phase diagrams.
FYI, I thought that I completely failed the PS on the actual MCAT.
BS
I barely studied organic chemistry at all -- I took my last organic chemistry test two days after I took the MCAT. Organic chemistry for science majors in general goes in
way more depth than the MCAT, so taking the class was all that I really needed.
I can't decide if taking Cell Biology and Genetics helped with the BS section or not. I think that it probably did, if only because it kept most of the material fresh in my mind. I took a year of neuroscience -- that definitely helped, especially because my general bio class did not cover the nervous system at all. Taking a class on research methodology helped as well, I think.
My undergraduate biology class did not cover the musculoskeletal system or the immune system due to lack of time, so I read those chapters from my bio textbook a couple of times a few weeks before the actual test. I also re-read the chapters on the endocrine system and the excretory system. The bio text is by Freeman. I really like it and I highly recommend it.
In terms of official practice materials, I used EK Audio Osmosis and sort of flipped through the EK Biology review book. I found my bio textbook to be a lot more useful. Also Wikipedia, when I found myself wondering about some weird biological phenomenon.
After all that, I felt pretty good about biology. I remember thinking that the bio section on the actual MCAT was pretty easy. Like a healthy, rational person, I took this as evidence that I had completely failed the section. Obviously, I was wrong.
VR
I read the introduction to the EK Verbal book and ignored it. After that, I didn't use any practice materials to study VR.
4) Which practice tests did you use?
One thing that is apparent from these charts: I was lucky to score a 41. There is no real trend in improvement across time, especially if one discounts my diagnostic, which I took before starting Organic Chemistry II. Furthermore, the frequency distribution of my practice and MCAT scores is a pretty good approximation of a normal distribution, and my standard deviation (2 points) is essentially what the AAMC reports individual variability
should be. To what do I attribute my mean composite score of 38? Working hard in my prerequisite classes, being good at standardized tests, and reading about science for fun a lot.
5) What was your undergraduate major?
B.A. Music from Case Western Reserve University
Informal post-baccalaureate studies at the University of Alaska Anchorage
6) Any other tips you may have for those of us who still have this test lurking over us?
Get a good night's sleep, exercise moderately the morning of, eat a good breakfast, bring snacks and some sort of beverage with sugar in it to drink on your breaks, and make sure that you are adequately caffeinated. Be sure to time your caffeine so that it does not wear off mid-test. I had ~100 mg caffeine approximately one hour before the test and another ~100 mg immediately before the writing section.
In fact, I would practice this
exact routine every time you take a practice test, if you can. Google "state-dependent memory."
One thing that surprised me on the actual test day was that the breaks were much shorter due to the time it took to sign in and out of the test room. Good to be aware of.
7) How long did you study for the MCAT?
About four months. I was listening to EK Audio Osmosis regularly starting about a year before the test.