hey guys, those that just took the boards and are done/close to done.........what do you think is the best source/combo source for the ABA exam?
thanks, gearing up for this final year.
thanks, gearing up for this final year.
RUSD8D said:hey guys, those that just took the boards and are done/close to done.........what do you think is the best source/combo source for the ABA exam?
thanks, gearing up for this final year.
foxtrot said:You should definitely use a book I found called "Random stats questions and obscure minutia you learned as a first year medical student." If I would have read that book, I would have maybe been able to answer the many questions on the students t test, carcinoid syndrome, and starlings law of oncotic forces in patients with liver failure.
Sorry for the smart ass answer but it really seems like the key to this exam is not how much you study but how well you learn how to answer their tricky questions. I think I am going to be taking a review course in the future.
SleepIsGood said:Wait a sec.
I thought the in training exam is the same as the ABA written board exam. It's just that those of us 'in training' still do not have our scores really 'count'?
tulAnesthesia said:is it really? didn't think it was. my bad.
Laryngospasm said:Its the same test, there is often someone sitting right next to you who is taking it for real.
foxtrot said:You should definitely use a book I found called "Random stats questions ...
Trisomy13 said:the stats questions are free points if you spend 20 minutes reviewing the most basic priniciples of study design statisitics in the week leading up to this exam. they are not tricky, and about as basic as they get, e.g. one on my exam was basically "a t-test is used to measure...". they aren't asking you to perform logisitic regression on categorical data.
and that's my smart-ass answer
seriously.. review the basics (pick up your crusty First Aid Step 1) of stats and you get 5 questions right out of the gates.