- Joined
- Dec 19, 2009
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Like most other med students in here, I'll say Step 1 was much more stressful, for all the reasons people have already said. The stakes are much, much higher. If you can't pass it, you are cooked - far more so than if you can't get a competitive score on the MCAT. The stats on how many students fail Step 1 don't matter once you are in the middle of it - you, the individual, still have to pass. I do think the remarks about them being different styles of test are very true, although as usual SDN tends to exaggerate them. Step 1 requires no small amount of critical thinking, and the MCAT certainly requires the ability to retain formulas and mechanisms. After all, just because there aren't many med students posting who got straight As in basic sciences and then got a below average Step score doesn't mean that they aren't out there.
I scored well on both exams, similar percentiles on each relative to my cohort. But the performance required ~10x as much exam-specific effort for Step 1 as it did for the MCAT. Every year gets more difficult on this path, guys. Whether you enjoy the road depends on how much you enjoy the new challenges.
While we're on the subject, no one I know in med school studied for the MCAT for more than a few weeks. Some people take it without having taken all the pre reqs and are med students now. Studying full time for months might be the norm on SDN, but not IRL. For that matter, the people I've known who studied for months on end were the ones more likely to do poorly and perhaps not make it.
I scored well on both exams, similar percentiles on each relative to my cohort. But the performance required ~10x as much exam-specific effort for Step 1 as it did for the MCAT. Every year gets more difficult on this path, guys. Whether you enjoy the road depends on how much you enjoy the new challenges.
While we're on the subject, no one I know in med school studied for the MCAT for more than a few weeks. Some people take it without having taken all the pre reqs and are med students now. Studying full time for months might be the norm on SDN, but not IRL. For that matter, the people I've known who studied for months on end were the ones more likely to do poorly and perhaps not make it.
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