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So, what does everyone think about achieving a 40+ score on the mcat. Is this something you can study your way to, or is it alll natural ability?
Perhaps these people who got 40+ took higher level bio classes like physio, genetics, biochem, cell/molecular bio, etc? Or would this actually be harmful as one now has a whole year to forget everything learned in chem, bio, physics, and orgo?
Perhaps these people who got 40+ took higher level bio classes like physio, genetics, biochem, cell/molecular bio, etc? Or would this actually be harmful as one now has a whole year to forget everything learned in chem, bio, physics, and orgo?
I got a 39 and I think it was a mix of everything.
Plus a little caffeine/nicotine helped too
Nicotine helps in preparing for the mcats?
I think natural intellect is the deciding factor when scores reach a certain level. I wish it wasn't this way, and used to believe otherwise, but one of my friends recently took the MCAT, and he used Kaplan to prepare. He took 2 practice tests nonchalantly (only 1 AAMC), and got over a 40 on the real thing (I don't want to say his exact score, but it was higher than 40).
Here is the scary part...he got a 15 on verbal, and remembered the passages in detail a month later when he got his scores! I'm positive the only reason he didn't max out the other sections was because he missed some knowledge-based questions because he took his pre-reqs years ago. He had no "study plan", and didn't stress at all. He would probably laugh at the complicated strategies many of us have to resort to (myself included) to get a respectable score. I felt really stupid talking to this guy, but it made be believe that some people are on a whole other level cognitively.
Wait what? There is no possible way that a 10 is the national average for verbal. I'm pretty sure it is an 8 or slightly above an 8, like 8.2 or something.
Agreed...i too think that if you can get your AAMC range 37-42 you could end up with a 40. Tiger woods isnt tiger woods bc he gets lucky..he repeats his performancei would guess that most people who end up in the 40s did so consistently in practice.
LOL...good point....i guess what i was trying to say is that if your good enough to land in the 40 range your good enough to land in it more than once. Grant it there are ppl that have averaged 36ish on the AAMC's and made a 40 but that is the exception to the rule. It takes one helluva understanding of the material , a lot of test taking finesse, as well as the ability to perform on game day.But the terrain Tiger plays on doesn't shift violently and unpredictably every few weeks like an erupting volcano 🙁
LOL...good point....i guess what i was trying to say is that if your good enough to land in the 40 range your good enough to land in it more than once. Grant it there are ppl that have averaged 36ish on the AAMC's and made a 40 but that is the exception to the rule. It takes one helluva understanding of the material , a lot of test taking finesse, as well as the ability to perform on game day.
But the terrain Tiger plays on doesn't shift violently and unpredictably every few weeks like an erupting volcano 🙁
I think sufficient discipline and study can improve a person's conceptual understanding and critical thinking capability to the point that they could consistently score in the 36-42 range. I think almost anyone can make these kinds of improvements, but they don't know how to go about it. They mostly focus on memorizing more information, and so they see little improvement and assume the MCAT must require some innate "ability" they don't have. I took the Altius prep course, a small company in Utah, and scored a 40. I think they have approaches that truly help you improve in critical thinking and conceptual understanding. Two people in our group scored over a 40 and I know one person who did last year as well.
So, what does everyone think about achieving a 40+ score on the mcat. Is this something you can study your way to, or is it alll natural ability?
For the most part, pre-meds are the hardest working bunch, and they produce a combined average of 24/45. The average pre-med fails the MCAT.
I will say this, hardwork will get you an MCAT good enough for Medical school(low 30), but anything in the high 30s, and especially 40s range will require a great deal of natural intelligence. What I am reffering specifically to is absorption rate. Reading a passage, understanding to the fullest as you go along, and then destroying the questions, with very little need of reffering back to the passage(if ever)
For the most part, pre-meds are the hardest working bunch, and they produce a combined average of 24/45. The average pre-med fails the MCAT.
I will say this, hardwork will get you an MCAT good enough for Medical school(low 30), but anything in the high 30s, and especially 40s range will require a great deal of natural intelligence. What I am reffering specifically to is absorption rate. Reading a passage, understanding to the fullest as you go along, and then destroying the questions, with very little need of reffering back to the passage(if ever)
It's a bit of both.
Perhaps these people who got 40+ took higher level bio classes like physio, genetics, biochem, cell/molecular bio, etc? Or would this actually be harmful as one now has a whole year to forget everything learned in chem, bio, physics, and orgo?
Hi FishHungry, I've been seeing the flyers for Altius up here in Portland and have been thinking about using them. They seem a little sketchy though -- their contact email is a hotmail address, and I have no way to verify their statistics (average score of 33...?). How did you decide to use them? Was it really that much better than self-study?
I've been assuming I'd just be a self-study for a while now, but the fact is I'm too old to risk not maximizing my chances because I'm too cheap to pay for a prep class that could help keep things structured and on track.
Eh, I am not fond of taking computer test since there are no paper trail.
I think reading is fundamental in the MCAT. It's not the IQ so no, probably not intellect.
In fact, this summer, the altius group I studied with at BYU in Utah had an average of 34 with a large majority scoring 36+.
Thanks to all the buyers so far! There's only one item left! I found listening to Jordan and Jon was far more engaging than any lecture.
All ten books in this Berkeley Review set including
Biology Part I&II
Chemistry Part I&II
Organic Chemistry Part I&II
Physics Part I&II
Verbal
Writing
are in pristine condition and current edition (2010). I bought them new, read the books, and made all marks on separate paper to study for the May 21 MCAT and it went quite well. (47Y, 110 percentile, which is all right, I guess, right?)😉
I'll offer to sell them for $295 including shipping if you live in the US.
I'm a little confused by your timeline. You were selling your materials (EK, PR, and BR) in late June, about 35 to 40 days after your May 21 MCAT which you did well on. That timing makes perfect sense, because it would have been right after you took the MCAT and having a good score clearly didn't need them any more.
But now you're posting that you studied this past summer at BYU. Why would you do that, having gotten a great score and having sold all of your materials right here on SDN?
Repeating the MCAT after getting a great score is not a good use of time, especially after selling all of your materials.
Sorry about the confusion. I think this warrants clearing up.
My roommate and I use the same account these days mostly to browse med school stuff on the other forums. I did indeed complete the may 21 mcat and tried to get him to buy my books for his test, but he took altius instead (and did just as well as me, too) so I ended up selling them in the classified forums. He must have happened across and responded to some questions about altius on the mcat forums last night I guess.
Reminds me! About those BR books, I ended up selling them to some gal in Connecticut, and USPS media mail LOST THEM ALL, and I didn't insure them. I ended up refunding her, but I was so miffed at my roommate because if he had just used my books I wouldn't have been out over two hundred bucks!😱
Moral of this protracted post:
Whether you self-study with BR and EK, or whether you take Altius it doesn't matter; you'll get a 47Y. Just for the love of all that's holy, get your media mail insured!
C'mon dude. Really now? FAIL. Thanks to BerkReviewTeach for busting this guy.
So, what does everyone think about achieving a 40+ score on the mcat. Is this something you can study your way to, or is it alll natural ability?
It's all about hard work, and then getting lucky as hell. I started studying June 1st for an August 24th exam this year. First practice test, got a 22. Ended up getting a 36 on the real thing, and was scoring higher on my last AAMCs. I consider myself, while getting a great score, to have gotten unlucky with my exam and that if my PS section wasn't such a train wreck, probably would have hit 40.
There is very little on the MCAT that you could just get without studying, the people that do well while studying very little probably just studied like a son of a bitch when they first learned the material in OChem, GChem, Bio and Physics and just held on to it.
I've been seeing the flyers for Altius up here in Portland and have been thinking about using them. They seem a little sketchy though -- their contact email is a hotmail address, and I have no way to verify their statistics (average score of 33...?).
First, their email is [email protected] (I don't know what this hotmail address is you're talking about)
And yes, their average score is that high. In fact, this summer, the altius group I studied with at BYU in Utah had an average of 34 with a large majority scoring 36+. If you don't trust the flyer, call the number, and I'm betting Lauren (the owner) will direct you to some students who took it last year, and I promise they will heavily recommend the program! Apparently what altius is doing works, unlike the lecture based programs like kaplan.
I decided to go with them because they were the only program that offered not just twenty hours with a personal tutor, but altius also provided bucketloads of real AAMC questions and passages every week! By halfway through the program we (in my group) were all writing our own MCAT questions. Kaplan bases their program on questions written by kaplan, not AAMC, and my friends in kaplan were not writing their own mcat questions at any point. I feel bad that I didn't persuade those friends to join me in altius because they paid the same price for an inferior and fundamentally flawed program.
Edit: There are way more reasons why this program rocks! There's admission advisement, scientifically proven learning methods, concept based lessons; I could go on. Trust me, after you graduate six figures in debt, an $1800 program that gets you into the school of your choice is worth it. PM me or visit www.altiustestprep.com
I'm a little confused by your timeline. ... But now you're posting that you studied this past summer at BYU. Why would you do that, having gotten a great score and having sold all of your materials right here on SDN? ... Repeating the MCAT after getting a great score is not a good use of time, especially after selling all of your materials.
C'mon dude. Really now? FAIL. Thanks to BerkReviewTeach for busting this guy.